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  1. Matilda was the eldest daughter of Rudolf I of Germany and Gertrude of Hohenberg. She became the third wife of Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, on 24 October 1273 in Aachen. Matilda and Louis had the following children: Rudolf I (4 October 1274, Basel – 12 August 1319). Mechthild (1275 – 28 March 1319, Lüneburg ), married 1288 to Duke Otto II of ...

  2. Matilda of Habsburg (12511304) Duchess of Bavaria and countess Palatine . Name variations: Mathilda or Mathilde of Hapsburg. Born in 1251; died on December 22, 1304, in Munich; daughter of Rudolf I (1218–1291), king of Germany (r.1273), Holy Roman emperor (r. 1273–1291), and Anna of Hohenberg (c. 1230–1281); sister of Albert I (b. 1250 ...

  3. Jan 8, 2023 · Matilda of Habsburg or Melchilde (Rheinfelden, ca. 1252-Munich, Bavaria, 23 December 1304) was the eldest daughter of Rudolph I of Germany and Gertrude of Hohenburg. Her siblings included: Judith of Habsburg, Klementia of Habsburg and Albert I of Germany. Biography. On the 24 October 1273, Matilda married Louis II, Duke of Bavaria in Aachen ...

    • Habsburg, Switzerland
    • circa 1251
    • "Mathilde of Austria", "Melchilde"
    • Habsburg, Argau, Switzerland, Germany
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  5. Matilda was the eldest daughter of Rudolf I of Germany and Gertrude of Hohenberg. She became the third wife of Louis II, Duke of Bavaria, on 24 October 1273 in Aachen. Matilda and Louis had the following children: Rudolf I (4 October 1274, Basel – 12 August 1319). Mechthild (1275 – 28 March 1319, Lüneburg ), married 1288 to Duke Otto II of ...

  6. Once at sea, the captain received the order to take Karl and his family to Madeira, an island in the Atlantic under Portuguese sovereignty. At first the family took up residence at Reid’s Palace Hotel in Funchal, the capital city of the island. However, they were soon unable to afford this highly fashionable and expensive hotel.

  7. When Mathilde von Habsburg was born from 1251 to 1253, in Rheinfelden (Baden), Lörrach, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, her father, Rudolf I. von Habsburg, was 35 and her mother, Gertrud Anna von Hohenberg, was 28. She married Ludwig II. der Strenge von Bayern on 24 October 1273, in Aachen, Aachener Reich, Holy Roman Empire.

  8. The world power of the Habsburgs. Even before Frederick III’s time the house of Habsburg had won much of its standing in Germany and in central Europe through marriages to heiresses. Frederick’s son Maximilian carried that matrimonial policy to heights of unequaled brilliance. First he himself in 1477 married the heiress of Burgundy ...

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