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  1. Rudolph I, Count Palatine of Tübingen. Rudolph I, Count Palatine of Tübingen (1160 – 17 March 1219) was the eldest son of Count Palatine Hugo II of Tübingen. Around 1183, he founded the Premonstratensian Bebenhausen Abbey as a burial place for his family. He married Matilda, Countess of Gleiberg and heir of Giessen (d. 1206).

  2. Rudolph II inherited the County Palatine of Tübingen when his elder brother Hugo III died in 1216. From 1224 onwards, he is described as Count Palatine in many imperial documents, while his younger brother William is merely styled as Count. Rudolph II supported Bebenhausen Abbey, which his parents had founded.

  3. Estates of Württemberg. The Treaty of Tübingen was a treaty signed in the Duchy of Württemberg between its Duke, Ulrich, and the Estates of Württemberg. The treaty concluded the Poor Conrad revolt against Ulrich and annulled his recent taxes on the populace of the Duchy, while the Estates of his realm agreed to liquidate his substantial debts.

  4. The Stiftskirche is a church located in Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is a late Gothic structure built by Peter von Koblenz in 1470. The stained glass windows were designed by Peter Hemmel of Andlau who also designed windows in Ulm, Augsburg, Nuremberg, Munich and Strasbourg. It is the central landmark of Tübingen and, along with ...

  5. Archivo:Tübingen, Neckar, Hölderlinturm IMG 5192.JPG. Archivo. Historial del archivo. Usos del archivo. Uso global del archivo. Metadatos. Tamaño de esta previsualización: 800 × 533 píxeles. Otras resoluciones: 320 × 213 píxeles · 640 × 427 píxeles · 1024 × 683 píxeles · 1280 × 853 píxeles · 2560 × 1707 píxeles · 3888 × ...

  6. Tübingen Hoplitodromos Runner. The Tübingen Hoplitodromos Runner ( German: Tübinger Waffenläufer, i.e. literally: "Tübingen weapons runner") is a statuette of an Ancient Greek athlete wearing a helmet, made in Attica around 485 BC. It is exhibited in the Museum Alte Kulturen (Ancient Cultures Museum) of the University of Tübingen.

  7. Tübingen, Baden-Württemberg. Germany. Corps Rhenania Tübingen is a German fraternity and member of the Kösener Senioren-Convents-Verband (KSCV), which is among the oldest fraternity associations. The Corps commits itself to a traditional kind of sport called academic fencing. It associates students and graduates of the University of Tübingen.