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  1. 1 de jul. de 2024 · Albert II. In the absence of a male heir, Sigismund had named his son-in-law Albert of Habsburg, duke of Austria, as his successor. Albert was able and vigorous, and the union of the territories of the two dynasties enabled him to exert considerable leverage in German politics.

  2. Há 1 dia · When the Přemysl family died out in 1306, Albert aspired to the Bohemian throne. He had his eldest son, Rudolf III, elected Bohemian king, but Rudolf died the following year. Albert was preparing for a new campaign when he was murdered by his nephew John and some accomplices in 1308.

  3. Há 2 dias · During the Habsburg Duchy, there were 13 consecutive Dukes, of whom four were also crowned King of Germany, Rudolf I, Albert I, Frederick the Fair, and Albert V (Albert II as King of Germany), although none were recognised as Holy Roman Emperors by the Pope.

  4. Há 3 dias · Albert succeeded his father as Duke of Bavaria in 1550. Anna and Albert had seven children together, of which five children lived to adulthood: William (born 1548), Ferdinand (born 1550), Maria Anna (born 1551), Maximiliana Maria (born 1552), Ernst (born 1554), She was a strict mother and did not shy away from corporal punishment. 3 Anna kept a ...

  5. 20 de jun. de 2024 · Leopold III 1351–1386 Duke of Austria: Albert III of Austria 1349–1395 Duke of Austria: Adolf of the Palatinate 1300–1327: Louis IV 1282–1347 Holy Roman Emperor: Elizabeth of Pomerania c. 1347 –1393: Anna of Świdnica-Jawor 1339–1362: Charles I 1316–1347–1378 King of Bohemia r. 1346–1378 also Holy Roman Emperor: Blanche of ...

  6. Há 6 dias · Austria - Central Europe, Alps, Danube: Rudolf was succeeded in 1365 by his two brothers, Albert III and Leopold III. After some years of joint rule, however, they quarreled and in 1379, by the Treaty of Neuberg, partitioned the family lands. Albert, as the elder brother, received the more prosperous countries on the Danube (Upper ...

  7. Há 4 dias · With the death of his grandfather Maximilian I and the accession of his now 19-year-old brother, Charles V, to the title of the Holy Roman Emperor in 1519, Ferdinand was entrusted with the government of the Austrian hereditary lands, roughly modern-day Austria and Slovenia. He was Archduke of Austria from 1521 to 1564.