Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Adolfo de Nassau (c. 1250 ou c. 1255 – Göllheim, 2 de julho de 1298) foi rei dos Romanos e rei da Germânia. [1] Era um dos quatro filhos de Adelaide de Katzenelnbogen e Walram II de Nassau, conde de Nassau-Wiesbaden, de Nassau-Weilburgo e Nassau-Idstein, em 1276, uma das mais antigas e prestigiadas famílias da Europa.

  2. Adolfo de Nassau foi rei dos Romanos e rei da Germânia. Era um dos quatro filhos de Adelaide de Katzenelnbogen e Walram II de Nassau, conde de Nassau-Wiesbaden, de Nassau-Weilburgo e Nassau-Idstein, em 1276, uma das mais antigas e prestigiadas famílias da Europa.

  3. A Dinastia Nassau ou Casa de Nassau é uma dinastia aristocrática de diversificadas casas reais na Europa. É nomeado após a senhoria associada com o Castelo de Nassau, localizado nos dias atuais em Nassau, Renânia-Palatinado, Alemanha.

    • Family
    • Career as Count of Nassau
    • Election as King of The Romans
    • Reign
    • Deposition
    • Election of Albert and Death of Adolf
    • Historical Legacy
    • Marriage and Children
    • Literature
    • External Links

    Adolf was the reigning count of a small German state. He was born about 1255 and was the son of Walram II, Count of Nassau and Adelheid of Katzenelnbogen. Adolf’s brother was Diether of Nassau, who was appointed Archbishop of Trierin 1300. Adolf was married in 1270 to Imagina of Isenburg-Limburg (died after 1313) and they had eight children. Agnes ...

    In 1276 or 1277, Adolf followed his father as Count of Nassau. From his father, he inherited the family’s lands south of the Lahn River in the Taunus Mountains. These included Wiesbaden and Idstein, as fiefdoms, and the Vogtship in Weilburg under the Bishopric of Worms. He also shared ownership of the family homelands around the castles of Nassau a...

    Rudolf I of Habsburg died on 15 July 1291. For many years before his death, Rudolf had tried to secure the election of his eldest son Albert (Albrecht) as his successor. He was thwarted, however, by the opposition of the Archbishop of Cologne, Siegfried II of Westerburg, and the King of Bohemia, Wenceslaus (Václav/Wenzel) II. Only the Count Palatin...

    At the start of his reign, Adolf had neither influence nor power, and was elected Rex Romanorumbecause of the electors' preference for a weak king. His power was limited from the outset because of the commitments he made. As he had agreed with the Archbishop of Cologne, Adolf remained in his dominion for four months after his election. The archbish...

    The electors probably did not plan from the beginning to depose the king, but as events unfolded this result became more inevitable. The reason for the clashes was Adolf’s Thuringia policy. On Pentecost1297 the elector of Brandenburg, duke of Saxony, and king of Bohemia joined together to enforce their interests. The elector of Mainz, Gerhard II, w...

    Following Adolf’s deposition came the election of Albert I of Habsburg as the new king. How this election took place is not very clear today, as the chroniclers have little to report. The question is open, for example, whether Albert actually initially did not want to accept the choice, as he would later assert against Pope Boniface VIII. To depose...

    On 29 August 1309, Albert I’s successor, Emperor Henry VII transferred Adolf’s remains to the Speyer Cathedral, where he was buried next to Albert, who had been murdered in 1308. In 1824, Duke William of Nassaubuilt a grave monument in the vestibule of the cathedral. Leo von Klenze was commissioned with the design, which shows King Adolf in armor k...

    He married Imagina of Isenburg-Limburg, daughter of Gerlach IV of Isenburg-Limburgand Imagina of Blieskastel. Their children were: 1. Henry (Heinrich), died young. 2. Robert (Ruprecht) (died 2 December 1304), betrothed to Agnes, daughter of Wenceslaus II of Bohemia 3. Gerlach I, Count of Nassau-Wiesbaden. 4. Adolf (1292–1294). 5. Walram III of Nass...

    Gerlich, Alois (1994). "Adolf von Nassau (1292–1298) – Aufstieg und Sturz eines Königs, Herrscheramt und Kurfürstenfronde". Nassauische Annalen (in German). Wiesbaden. 105: 17–78.
    Jeep, John M. (2001). Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 928. ISBN 0-8240-7644-3.
    Prietzel, Malte (2004). Das Heilige Römische Reich im Spätmittelalter (The Holy Roman Empire in the Late Middle Ages) (in German). Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. ISBN 3-534-15131-3.
    Media related to Adolph I, Count of Nassauat Wikimedia Commons
    Samanek, Vincenz (1948). "Adolf von Nassau 1291–1298". Regesta Imperii (in German). Innsbruck: Univ.-Verlag Wagner. 6 (2). Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved 7 February 2009..
    "Adolf, King of the Romans". Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German)..
  4. Adolphe of Nassau when he was Duke of Nassau 1860. Adolphe became Duke of Nassau in August 1839 at the age of 22, after the death of his father. Wiesbaden had by this time become the capital of the Duchy and Adolphe took up residence in the newly constructed Stadtschloss in 1841.

  5. Adolfo pode referir-se a: Adolfo I de Nassau — rei dos Romanos e da Germânia; Adolfo III, Conde de Mark; Adolfo I, Duque de Cleves — ou Adolfo IV, Conde de Mark; Adolfo, Grão-Duque de Luxemburgo — duque de Nassau e quarto grão-duque de Luxemburgo; Adolfo I de Schwarzenberg — príncipe de schwarzenberg da Austria