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Landgrave ( German: Landgraf, Dutch: landgraaf, Swedish: lantgreve, French: landgrave; Latin: comes magnus, comes patriae, comes provinciae, comes terrae, comes principalis, lantgravius) was a rank of nobility used in the Holy Roman Empire, and its former territories. The German titles of Landgraf, Markgraf ("margrave"), and Pfalzgraf ("count ...
Life He was born in 1128, the son of Louis I, who in 1131 became the first landgrave of Thuringia, and his wife, Hedwig of Gudensberg.[1] When Louis I died in 1140, King Conrad III of Germany enfeoffed the 12-year-old Louis II with the landgraviate.
Louis I of Hesse (German: Ludwig ) (6 February 1402 - 17 January 1458), called the Peaceful, was Landgrave of Lower Hesse (Hesse) from 1413 to 1458.
Sophie of Thuringia, Duchess of Brabant. Gertrude of Aldenberg. Father. Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia. Mother. Sophia of Wittelsbach. Louis IV the Saint was a term of the Ludovingian dynasty. He was Landgrave of Thuringia and Saxon Count palatine from 1217 to 1227. He was born on October 28, 1200 and died on September 11, 1227.
Louis III, Landgrave of Thuringia, nicknamed Louis the Pious or Louis the Mild (1151/2 – 16 October 1190, in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, near Cyprus) was a German nobleman. He was a member of the Ludowingians dynasty and was the ruling Landgrave of Thuringia from 1172 until his death.
Conrad of Thuringia. Grave of Konrad von Thüringen at Elisabethkirche, Marburg. Conrad ( German: Konrad von Thüringen; c. 1206 – 24 July 1240) was the landgrave of Thuringia from 1231 to 1234 and the fifth Grand Master of the Teutonic Order from 1239 to 1240. [1] He was the first major noble to join the military order .
Louis II dit de Fer (en allemand : Ludwig II. der Eiserne), né en 1128 et mort le 14 octobre 1172 à Neuenburg, fut landgrave de Thuringe de 1140 à sa mort. (fr) Ludwig II, Landgrave of Thuringia, nicknamed Louis the Iron (1128 – 14 October 1172 at Neuenburg Castle in Freyburg). (en)