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Confessional affiliation becomes a political issue, determining the relationship between countries as well as between princes and the Estates. Confessional division also underlies the Thirty Years' War (1618-48); the Peace of Westphalia marks the end of hostilities and establishes a new international order.
- From The Hutterites to The Amish
Doubts promoted by the Reformation about the organization of...
- Of Breweries and Vineyards
Licences to sell beer or wine were granted either to persons...
- Rudolf II
The emperor gathered a circle of artists around him, the...
- Sympathetic Towards Protestants: Maximilian II
Maximilian II stands out as an exception amongst the...
- Minor
Habsburg against Turkey and France. A new great power in...
- Philip Ii: Youth and Influences
Born in Valladolid on 21 May 1527, the prince was an...
- From The Hutterites to The Amish
Matilda of Habsburg or Melchilde (1253 in Rheinfelden [citation needed] – 23 December 1304 in Munich, Bavaria) was, by marriage, a duchess of Bavaria. She was regent of Upper Bavaria during the minority of her younger son, Louis IV in 1294-1301.
- 1273–1294
- Habsburg
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Matilda of Habsburg (1251–1304) 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 ...
After his death in 1745, the office fell back into Habsburg hands, or more correctly into the hands of the new family of Habsburg-Lorraine in the person of Maria Theresa’s husband Franz Stephan. Maria Theresa was only ‘Empress’ by virtue of being the emperor’s wife – as a woman she was not permitted to be head of the Roman-German Empire.
First-party persistent cookie, 30 minutes. Maximilian’s wife was the Spanish infanta Maria (b. 1528), a daughter of Emperor Charles V and Isabella of Portugal. The marriage was concluded in 1548 as the result of pressure from Spain and was intended to emphasize the political and genealogical union between the two lines.
The legal Age of Consent varies from 11 to 21 years old from country to country around the world. In some countries, there is no legal age of consent but all sexual relations are forbidden outside of marriage. Choose any country for more details about local laws. Find Age of Consent laws in the United States.
SHOW ALL QUESTIONS. Matilda of Habsburg or Melchilde (1253 in Rheinfelden [citation needed] – 23 December 1304 in Munich, Bavaria) was, by marriage, a duchess of Bavaria. She was regent of Upper Bavaria during the minority of her younger son, Louis IV in 1294-1301. Marriage.