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  1. Príncipe Bartholomeus Welser (25 de junho de 1484 em Memmingen - 28 de março de 1561 em Amberg) foi um banqueiro alemão. Em 1528 assinou um acordo com Carlos V, imperador do Sacro Império Romano , concedendo uma concessão na Província da Venezuela , que se tornou Klein-Venedig até que a concessão foi revogada em 1546.

  2. Prince Bartholomeus Welser (25 June 1484 in Memmingen – 28 March 1561 in Amberg) was a German banker. In 1528 he signed an agreement with Charles V , emperor of the Holy Roman Empire , granting a concession in Venezuela Province , which became Klein-Venedig until the concession was revoked in 1546.

  3. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Bartholomäus V. Welser der Ältere (* 25. Juni 1484 in Memmingen; † 28. März 1561 in Amberg im Unterallgäu) war ein Augsburger Patrizier und Großkaufmann. Er wurde als Sohn Anton I. Welser, der zu dieser Zeit als Schwiegersohn von Hans Vöhlin d.J. in der Memminger Vöhlin-Gesellschaft arbeitete, geboren.

    • Augsburg, Bavaria
    • Felicitas Grander
    • Bavaria
    • June 25, 1484
  4. Bartholomeus V. Welser lent the Emperor Charles V a great sum of money for which, in 1528, he received as security the Province of Venezuela, developing it as Klein-Venedig (little Venice), but in consequence of their rapacious acts, the Welsers were deprived of their rule before the Emperor's reign was over.

  5. Príncipe Bartholomeus Welser foi um banqueiro alemão. Em 1528 assinou um acordo com Carlos V, imperador do Sacro Império Romano, concedendo uma concessão na Província da Venezuela, que se tornou Klein-Venedig até que a concessão foi revogada em 1546.[1]

  6. Bartholomeus V. Welser was the head of the banking firm of Welser brothers, who claimed descent from the Byzantine general Belisarius. They possessed great riches, and Bartholomeus was created a prince of the Empire and made privy councillor to the Emperor Charles V, to whom he lent large sums.

  7. Giovanna Montenegro. Abstract This article explores the mostly-forgotten history of the sixteenth-century colonization of Venezuela by the Welser Company, a German merchant family company from Augsburg, and its reinterpretation in Germany’s cultural memory in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.