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  1. John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt (1383 – 14 March 1443) was the Count Palatine of Neumarkt from 1410 to his death. The son of Rupert III of the Palatinate, he married Catherine of Pomerania in 1407. He is mainly known for his crushing victory against the Hussites at the Battle of Hiltersried in 1433. His son, Christopher, later became king of ...

  2. Mar 28, 2008 · Summary. As scholars begin to gain a sense of historical perspective on art music in the twentieth century, it seems clear that the introduction and development of twelve-tone compositional procedures will remain one of the cardinal markers of musical modernism.

    • John Covach
    • 2002
  3. Apr 27, 2022 · John (German: Johann von Pfalz-Neumarkt; 1383 – 14 March 1443) was the Count Palatine of Neumarkt from 1410 until 1443.*. Pfoto Statue in Stadt Neumarkt. Life. John was born in Neunburg vorm Wald in 1383 as the second surviving son of Rupert III of the Palatinate, King of Germany. In 1407 he married Catherine of Pomerania-Stolp, daughter of ...

  4. John (German: Johann) (1383 - 14 March 1443) was the Count Palatine of Nuemarkt from 1410 until 1443. John was born in Neunburg vorm Wald in 1443 as the second surviving son of Rupert III of the Palatinate, King of Germany. In 1407 he married Catherine of Pomerania-Stolp, daughter of Duke...

  5. Palatinate-Neumarkt was first formed from the lineage of Rupert of Germany following his death in 1410. [1] The title was first granted to John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt in 1410. His son, Christopher of Bavaria, who would later become the monarch of the Kalmar Union, inherited the title in 1443. [2] Palatinate-Neumarkt ceased to exist after ...

  6. John (Johann von Pfalz-Neumarkt; 1383 – 14 March 1443) was the Count Palatine of Neumarkt from 1410 to his death. The son of Rupert III of the Palatinate, he married Catherine of Pomerania in 1407; his son . Christopher was king of the Kalmar Union. [1] References

  7. Quick Reference. In the later Roman Empire, a count ( comes) attached to the imperial palace, and having supreme judicial authority in all causes that came to the king's immediate audience; later, a feudal lord having royal authority within a region of a kingdom; a high official of the Holy Roman Empire with royal authority within his domain.

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