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  1. Gertrude of Comburg (died 1130/1131) was the first queen consort of Conrad III of Germany. She was a daughter of Henry, Count of Rothenburg, and Gepa of Mergentheim. [citation needed] Marriage. Her marriage to Conrad of Swabia is estimated to have occurred c. 1115.

  2. 7 de ago. de 2023 · rom Wikipedia, Gertrude of Comburg (died 1130/1131) was the first queen consort of Conrad III of Germany. She was a daughter of Henry, Count of Rothenburg, and Gepa of Mergentheim. Her marriage to Conrad of Swabia is estimated to have occurred c. 1115. Her new husband was the second son of Frederick I, Duke of Swabia and Agnes of ...

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ComburgComburg - Wikipedia

    • History
    • Grounds and Architecture
    • Kleincomburg
    • References
    • Further Reading

    In 1078, Burkhardt II, Count of Rothenburg-Comburg[de], donated his family's ancestral castle, on a hill overlooking the Kocher river and the town of Schwäbisch Hall, to the Benedictine Order for the establishment of an abbey and joined the order. The Counts of Rothenburg-Comburg, who also owned Hall and its salt flats, became the vögte of the abbe...

    The Comburg monastic complex is perched on a hill just outside Schwäbisch Hall. At the top of the hill, forming the center of the complex, is the Church of St. Nicholas[de] the cloister attached to its west end,which are surrounded by dormitories. The ring wall enclosing the Comburg were built from 1560 to 1570. These were constructed on the order ...

    A mere 400 meters south of the Comburg, on a smaller hill, lies the former convent of Kleincomburg. The early history of this place is very poorly documented. Georg Widman, a chronicler from Hall, asserts that the convent was founded in 1108 by Count Heinrich of Rothenburg-Comburg, the brother of Burkhardt II, as a counterpart to the men's monaster...

    Meier, Friedrich Ernst (1867). Beiträge zur Geschichte von Comburg. Unger & Nissen.
    Schütz, Bernard (2004). Great Monasteries of Europe. Translated by Steven Lindberg. Abbeville Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-789-20829-3.
    1865. Zeitschrift des Historichen Vereins für das Wirtembergische Franken.Vol 7 Issue 1. Weinsberg. p. 100.
    Hause, Eberhard, 1981. Die Komburgen: ihre Bauwerke, Baumeister und Bauherren.Weinsberg.
    Jooß, Rainer, 1987. Kloster Komburg im Mittelalter. Studien zur Verfassungs-, Besitz- und Sozialgeschichte einer fränkischen Benediktinerabtei (Forschungen aus Württembergisch Franken; Bd. 4), 2nd...
    Kleiber, Gabriele, 1999. Groß- und Kleincomburg. Berlin: Staatliche Schlösser und Gärten Baden-Württemberg in Zusammenarbeit mit der Staatsanzeiger für Baden-Württemberg GmbH. ISBN 3-422-03061-1
  4. Gertrude of Comburg (died 1130/1131) was the first queen consort of Conrad III of Germany. She was a daughter of Henry, Count of Rothenburg, and Gepa of Mergentheim. [1] . Her marriage to Conrad of Swabia is estimated to have occurred c. 1115. Her new husband was the second son of Frederick I, Duke...

  5. Gertrude of Comburg was the first queen consort of Conrad III of Germany. Background. She was a daughter of Henry, Count of Rothenburg, and Gepa of Mergentheim. Her new husband was the second son of Frederick I, Duke of Swabia and Agnes of Germany. Career. Her marriage to Conrad of Swabia is estimated to have occurred c. Achievements.

  6. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.

  7. de.wikipedia.org › wiki › ComburgComburg – Wikipedia

    Die Comburg, auch Komburg geschrieben und Großcomburg genannt, ist ein ehemaliges Kloster der Benediktiner und späteres Ritterstift. Sie liegt heute auf dem Gebiet der Stadt Schwäbisch Hall im gleichnamigen Landkreis im nordöstlichen Baden-Württemberg.