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  1. The (Younger) House of Welf is the older branch of the House of Este, a dynasty whose earliest known members lived in Veneto and Lombardy in the late 9th/early 10th century, sometimes called Welf-Este. The first member was Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, also known as Welf IV.

  2. Welf III never married and had no children when he died at his castle in Bodman on Lake Constance on 13 November 1055. [6] He bequeathed his property to Weingarten Abbey in Altdorf, where his mother was abbess. [7] She in turn gave the property to Duke Welf I of Bavaria, the son of Welf III's sister Kunigunde and Margrave Albert Azzo II of ...

  3. The siege of Weinsberg took place in 1140 in Weinsberg, in the modern state of Baden-Württemberg, Germany, which was then part of the Holy Roman Empire. The siege was a decisive battle between two dynasties, the Welfs and the Hohenstaufen.

    • 21 December 1140 [1][2]
    • Weinsberg, Württemberg
  4. Welf Dynasty, dynasty of German nobles and rulers who were the chief rivals of the Hohenstaufens in Italy and central Europe in the Middle Ages and who later included the Hanoverian Welfs, who, with the accession of George I to the British throne, became rulers of Great Britain.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. O segundo foi Welf I, Conde em Schussengau, e considerado o primeiro Conde de Altdorf, que casou com Hedwig, Duquesa da Baviera, filha de Isembart de Thürgau ou Isanbart, Saxão, Conde e Mestre do Palácio de Altdorf.

  6. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › WelfenWelfen – Wikipedia

    Mit Welf III., Herzog von Kärnten und Markgraf von Verona, starb die Familie 1055 im Mannesstamm aus. Daraufhin heiratete seine Schwester Kunigunde in die oberitalienische Familie d’Este ein, von der die jüngeren Welfen abstammen.

  7. Weingarten had been founded by Welf III, Duke of Carinthia, c. 1053 near the Welfs’ castle of Ravensburg, north of Lake Constance, after the family’s earlier monastic foundation, a nunnery at Altdorf (founded in 935) had been destroyed by fire. (The History occasionally still refers to Weingarten as Altdorf).