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  1. Ulrich was born in 1413, the youngest child of Count Eberhard IV and his wife Henriette, Countess of Mömpelgard. [5] Eberhard died unexpectedly of illness on 2 July 1419, while Ulrich and his older brother Ludwig were both minors. [6] Consequently, Henriette became their guardian, together with a regency council of 32 Württembergers.

  2. County of Württemberg: Count Ulrich V (1433-1480); Count Ulrich V (1442-1480) » See 3 coins. 1 Pfennig - Ulrich V; Pfennig - Eberhard V, Ulrich V and Christian from Baden (Jagdhornpfennig) 1 Pfennig - Ulrich V

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  4. County of Württemberg (German States) Count. Ulrich V (1433-1480) Type. Standard circulation coin. Year. 1469. Value. 1 Pfennig.

    • Ulrich V (1433-1480)
    • Standard circulation coin
    • County of Württemberg (German States)
    • 1469
  5. Apr 12, 2024 · Ulrich (born Feb. 8, 1487, Reichenweier, Alsace—died Nov. 6, 1550, Tübingen, Württemberg) was the duke of Württemberg (1498–1519, 1534–50), a prominent figure in the German religious Reformation. A grandson of Ulrich V, count of Württemberg, he succeeded his kinsman Eberhard II as duke of Württemberg in 1498, being declared of age in ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Hermann, of which very little is known, is probably a son of Hartmann, Count of Württemberg . Ulrich is believed to have been a cousin to Hartmann II, Count of Grüningen, and to have a paternal relation with Albert IV, Count of Dillingen. He was twice married. From his marriage to Mechthild of Baden, daughter of Hermann V, he had two ...

  7. The County of Württemberg was a historical territory with origins in the realm of the House of Württemberg, the heart of the old Duchy of Swabia. Its capital was Stuttgart. From the 12th century until 1495, it was a county within the Holy Roman Empire. [1] It later became a duchy and, after the breakup of the Holy Roman Empire, a kingdom .

  8. nal owner, Count Ulrich V of Württemberg (1413–1480), as well as the year in which it was made, 1460—information rarely known for any !fteenth-century object. The crossbow !rst received scholarly attention when its owner at the time, the noted British arms and armor scholar and collector Charles Alexander, baron de Cosson (1846–

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