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  1. The first part of the Golden Bull, known as the Nuremberg code of law (German Nürnberger Gesetzbuch), was composed at the Imperial Diet of Nuremberg and promulgated on 10 January 1356. During this diet the city of Metz was announced as the next meeting place for the king and the rulers.

  2. The city was the scene of numerous Imperial Diets and in 1356 Emperor Charles IV’s "Golden Bull" named Nuremberg as the place where every newly elected ruler had to hold his first Imperial Diet. Nuremberg thus became one of the centres of the empire – in addition to Frankfurt where the kings were elected and Aachen where they were crowned.

  3. Imperial City of Weißenburg im Nordgau. Weißenburg in Bayern, formerly also Weißenburg im Nordgau, Weißenburg am Sand, is a town in Middle Franconia, Germany. It is the capital of the district Weißenburg-Gunzenhausen. In 2020 its population was 18,578. Weißenburg was a free imperial city for 500 years.

  4. 1: Until 1806, Frankfurt was known as the "Free Imperial City of Frankfurt" Freie Reichsstadt Frankfurt. With the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, the imperial part of the name was dropped upon the city-state's restoration in 1815. For almost five centuries, the German city of Frankfurt was a city-state within two major Germanic ...

  5. File:Flag of Nuremberg.svg. Size of this PNG preview of this SVG file: 600 × 600 pixels. Other resolutions: 240 × 240 pixels | 480 × 480 pixels | 768 × 768 pixels | 1,024 × 1,024 pixels | 2,048 × 2,048 pixels | 1,000 × 1,000 pixels. This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. Information from its description page there is shown below.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AugsburgAugsburg - Wikipedia

    Augsburg was granted the status of a Free Imperial City on 9 March 1276 and from then until 1803, it was independent of its former overlord, the Prince-Bishop of Augsburg. Frictions between the city-state and the prince-bishops were to remain frequent however, particularly after Augsburg became Protestant and curtailed the rights and freedoms of Catholics .

  7. Nuremberg’s splendid reception for the city’s lord and master, the Emperor Matthias, 1612. Nuremberg was one of the most powerful imperial cities of the Holy Roman Empire. The castle, which was probably constructed under Heinrich III (1039-1056), was one of the political centers of the mediaeval empire and the starting point for the city's development.