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  1. The Haus der Geschichte Baden-Württemberg is open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday to Sunday, with extended hours until 9 p.m. on Thursdays. The museum is closed on Mondays. Admission is free for children and school-age students. Admission for adults to the Permanent Exhibition is 5 Euros (discount tickets: 2.50 Euros) and 5 Euros for the ...

  2. Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Württemberg, 1806-1817. This is a list of monarchs of Württemberg, containing the Counts, Dukes, Electors, and Kings who reigned over different territories named Württemberg from the beginning of the County of Württemberg in the 11th century to the end of the Kingdom of Württemberg in 1918.

  3. Barbara of Württemberg (4 December 1593 — 18 May 1627) was margravine of the historical German territory of Baden-Durlach. The daughter of Frederick I, Duke of Württemberg and his wife, Sibylla of Anhalt , she was born a Duchess of Württemberg and became margravine after marrying Frederick V, Margrave of Baden-Durlach , in 1616.

  4. The courtyard and its arcades are considered one of the most beautiful courtyards of the Renaissance. One wing of the castle was chosen to house the castle church, the first Protestant church in Württemberg, consecrated in 1562. Outwardly, the building has retained its medieval character despite the many alterations.

  5. When the Stuttgart-Line of the House of Württemberg vanished out in 1593 Frederick I. from the Mömpelgard-Line became duke. The heraldry of Mömpelgard (now Montbéliard) appeared now in the ducal coat of arms, and the colours red and gold have since then been mentioned as the house colours of the of the House of Württemberg.

  6. The house laws of 1473-1492. The first of these treaties was concluded on July 12, 1473 between Eberhard V (senior) of the Urach line, and Ulrich V and his two sons Eberhard (junior) and Heinrich, of the Stuttgart line. Heinrich was given Mömpelgard to rule, with reversion to his father and older brother and his agnatic line, and then to ...

  7. Early life. Born as Wilhelm Karl Florestan Gero Crescentius, Count of Württemberg, he was the elder son of Wilhelm, 1st Duke of Urach (the head of a morganatic branch of the Royal House of the Kingdom of Württemberg), and his second wife, Princess Florestine of Monaco, occasional Regent of Monaco and daughter of Florestan I, Prince of Monaco.