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  1. Frederick I (German: Friedrich Wilhelm Karl; 6 November 1754 – 30 October 1816) was the ruler of Württemberg from 1797 to his death. He was the last Duke of Württemberg from 1797 to 1803, then the first and only Elector of Württemberg from 1803 to 1806, before raising Württemberg to a kingdom in 1806 with the approval of Napoleon I .

  2. House. Württemberg. Father. Duke Friedrich of Württemberg. Mother. Princess Marie of Wied. Religion. Catholic. Wilhelm Friedrich Carl Philipp Albert Nikolaus Erich Maria Herzog von Württemberg (born 13 August 1994) is the head of the House of Württemberg and a German businessperson.

  3. Federico de Wurtemberg ( Friedrichshafen, 1 de junio de 1961 - Ebenweiler, 9 de mayo de 2018) fue un empresario y el duque heredero de la casa real de Wurtemberg, una de las familias más ricas de Alemania. 2 . Biografía. Fue el hijo mayor de Carlos, duque de Wurtemberg y de su esposa la princesa Diana de Francia, tuvo cinco hermanos.

  4. Traditionally, anti-French, the Duke (he had become so on the death of his father in 1797) and his wife fled to Vienna in 1800 when the French army occupied Württemberg. The following year, Duke Friedrich concluded a private treaty ceding Montbeliard to France and receiving Ellwanger in exchange two years later.

  5. Friedrich I of Württemberg (19 August 1557 – 29 January 1608) was the son of George of Mömpelgard and his wife Barbara of Hesse, daughter of Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse . Several references are made to him in Shakespeare 's The Merry Wives of Windsor, in which a series of anti-German jokes start with a horse theft, several references are ...

  6. 10 de may. de 2018 · 10th May 2018. Duke Friedrich of Württemberg was killed in a head-on car crash on Wednesday (9 May) afternoon on county road 7962 between the towns of Ebenweiler and Fronhofen in Germany....

  7. Contents. Frederick. duke of Württemberg. Learn about this topic in these articles: reign. In Württemberg. Duke Frederick (1593–1608) secured the duchy’s release from Habsburg overlordship and was a pillar of the Evangelical Union of Lutheran and Calvinist Princes (1608).