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  1. Rudolf II ( c. 1270 – 10 May 1290), a member of the House of Habsburg, was Duke of Austria and Styria from 1282 to 1283, jointly with his elder brother Albert I, who succeeded him.

  2. Duke Rudolf IV, 1360/65 During the fourteenth century the Habsburgs succeeded in expanding their power base in the eastern Alpine region through a shrewd policy of alliances. The year 1335 saw Carinthia and Carniola coming under Habsburg rule, to be joined in 1365 by Tyrol.

  3. The Emperor Rudolf II of Austria (1552-1612) is sometimes called "The Mad Alchemist". He was an intelligent man with interests in mathematics, science and alchemy, but he sufferend from dark moods and uncontrollable rages that worsened over time. Gradually he became a recluse.

  4. Sep 13, 2024 · In 1281 he made his eldest son, Albert (later Albert I, king of Germany), governor of Austria and Steiermark; on Christmas, 1282, he invested his two sons, Albert and Rudolf II, with Austria, Steiermark, and Carniola, which they were to rule jointly and undivided.

  5. Rudolf II. Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (1576–1612) and ruler over parts of the Habsburg Monarchy (Hungary 1572–1608; the Bohemian Lands 1575/76–1608 and 1611; the Archduchy of Austria 1575/76–1608) Born in Vienna on 18 July 1552. Died in Prague on 20 January 1612.

  6. Jan 19, 2023 · Rudolf was part of the Habsburg dynasty, which ruled over a loose union of lands consisting of present-day Austria, Germany, Hungary, Croatia, and the Czech Republic between 1483 to 1806. He was born in Vienna in 1552 to Maximilian II and Maria of Austria. Collecting was a Habsburg family habit.

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  8. Contents. Rudolf II. duke of Austria. Learn about this topic in these articles: role in German history. In Germany: Rudolf of Habsburg. …on Rudolf’s sons Albert and Rudolf in 1282.

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