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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. In 1511 Ulrich had married Sabina, a daughter of Albert IV, Duke of Bavaria, and niece of the Emperor Maximilian. The marriage was a very unhappy one, and having formed an affection for the wife of a knight named Hans von Hutten, a kinsman of Ulrich von Hutten, the duke killed Hans in 1515 during an altercation. Hutten's friends now joined the ...

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  4. Ulrich von Württemberg’s crossbow has two main parts, each with additional components: the bow (which presum-ably was originally accompanied by its bowstring, as well as an iron loop, or stirrup, to assist in the spanning, or draw-ing back of the bowstring, but both parts were already miss-1. Probably Heinrich Heid von Winterthur (recorded

  5. WÜRTTEMBERG. Ulrich von Württemberg (1487–1550) is undoubtedly one of the most prominent, but also most controversial figures in Württemberg's history. His fate is closely tied to that of his duchy, which he temporarily lost. He brought the Reformation to Württemberg and dissolved the Hirsau Monastery.

  6. When Ulrich "Der Vielgeliebte" von Württemberg V was born in 1413, in Waiblingen, Württemberg, Germany, his father, Conde Eberhard von Württemberg IV, was 25 and his mother, Henriette von Mömpelgard de Montbéliard d'Orbe-Montfaucon, was 26. He married Margareta von Kleve on 11 November 1435, in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.

    • Male
    • Elisabeth Von Bayern, Margherita Wittelsbach
  7. Summarize this article for a 10 year old. Ulrich V (1413 – 1 September 1480), nicknamed the Much-Loved ( German: der Vielgeliebte ), was Count of Württemberg from 1419 and then count of Württemberg-Stuttgart until his death in 1480.

  8. Jan 1, 2009 · The Crossbow of Count Ulrich V of Württemberg. In 1904 the Metropolitan Museum acquired the arms and armor collection of Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord, due de Dino (1843-1917), one of the foremost arms collec tors in nineteenth-century Paris.1 Among the highlights of almost five hundred objects was the collection's only cross bow, dating from ...