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  1. Detailed information about the coin Brûlé of 12 sols, Ernest of Bavaria (titles reverse), Prince-bishopric of Liege, with pictures and collection and swap management: mintage, descriptions, metal, weight, size, value and other numismatic data

  2. enwiki Ernest of Bavaria; eowiki Ernesto de Bavario (Kolonjo) eswiki Ernesto de Baviera; frwiki Ernest de Bavière (1554-1612) itwiki Ernesto di Baviera; nlwiki Ernst van Beieren (1554-1612) nowiki Ernst von Bayern (1554–1612) plwiki Ernest Wittelsbach; ptwiki Ernesto da Baviera, Eleitor de Colónia; ruwiki Эрнст Баварский

  3. Biography. Ernest was a son of John II and ruled the duchy of Bavaria-Munich together with his brother William III. He restrained uprisings of the citizenry of Munich in 1396 and 1410 and forced his uncle Stephen III to confine his reign to Bavaria-Ingolstadt in 1402. Afterwards Ernest still fought several times successfully against the dukes ...

  4. William V's spending on Church-related projects, including funding missionaries outside Bavaria—as far away as Asia and the Americas—put tremendous strain on the Bavarian treasury. The Italian confidence man Marco Bragadino who was promising to make copious amounts of gold to erase the Dukes's debts was called upon by William V in 1590, and executed after he had failed.

  5. Monarch of Bavaria. This page was last edited on 6 May 2024, at 12:58. All structured data from the main, Property, Lexeme, and EntitySchema namespaces is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; text in the other namespaces is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  6. William IV, Duke of Bavaria. William IV ( German: Wilhelm IV; 13 November 1493 – 7 March 1550) was Duke of Bavaria from 1508 to 1550, until 1545 together with his younger brother Louis X, Duke of Bavaria . He was born in Munich to Albert IV and Kunigunde of Austria, a daughter of Emperor Frederick III .

  7. Ernest of Bavaria (1554–1612) was elected prince-bishop of Liège on 28 January 1581. He became prince-elector of Cologne and Bishop of Munster and Hildesheim in 1585 and was one of the most important rulers in the Holy Roman Empire. His curriculum vitae was remarkable: pupil of the Jesuits, inflexible catholic, prosecutor of witches ...