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  1. Gertrude Anne of Hohenberg (c. 1225 – 16 February 1281) was German queen from 1273 until her death, by her marriage with King Rudolf I of Germany. As queen consort, she became progenitor of the Austrian House of Habsburg .

    • Burkhard V, Count of Hohenberg
    • Hohenberg
  2. Hohenberg family. The House of Hohenberg is an Austrian and Czech noble family that descends from Countess Sophie Chotek (1868–1914), who in 1900 married Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria-Este (1863–1914), the heir presumptive to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As their marriage was a morganatic one, none of their children ...

    • 1900
  3. Gertrude Anne of Hohenberg ( c. 1225 – 16 February 1281) was German queen from 1273 until her death, by her marriage with King Rudolf I of Germany. As queen consort, she became progenitor of the Austrian House of Habsburg.

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  5. Anna of Hohenberg (c. 1230–1281)Holy Roman empress. Name variations: Gertrud of Hohenberg became Anna of Hohenberg at her crowning at Aachen in 1273. Born Gertrud of Hohenberg between 1230 and 1235; died on January 16, 1281, in Vienna; married Rudolph or Rudolf I of Habsburg (1218–1291), king of Germany (r. 1273), Holy Roman emperor (r ...

  6. Gertrude of Hohenburg (c. 1225 16 February 1281, Vienna) was the first Queen consort of Rudolph I of Germany. Family. She was born to Burchard V, Count of Hohenberg (d. 1253) and his wife Mechtild of Tübingen. Her paternal grandparents were Burchard IV, Count of Hohenberg and his unnamed wife.

  7. When Gertrud von Hohenberg was born in 1225, in Schwaben, Dürrenuhlsdorf, Kreis Chemnitzer-Land, Saxony, Germany, her father, Burkhard V. Graf von Hohenberg, was 25 and her mother, Mechthild von Tübingen, was 30. She married Rudolf I. von Habsburg römisch-deutscher König in 1251. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 7 daughters.

  8. Counts of Hohenberg. Coat of arms of the Hohenbergs in. the Scheibler Armorial of 1450. Place of origin. Swabia. Dissolution. 15th century. The Counts of Hohenberg (or Margraves of Hohenberg) were an ancient Swabian dynasty in the southwest of the present-day German state of Baden-Württemberg.

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