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  1. The House of Habsburg: Six Hundred Years of a European Dynasty. The House of Habsburg. : Adam Wandruszka. Doubleday, 1965 - Europe - 178 pages. History of the leading governing family of Central Europe, from King Rudolf I, who died in 1291 to Charles I, who died in exile in 1922.

  2. Charles V, The Holy Roman Emperor of the House of Habsburg, was at once King of Spain, Archduke of Austria, Lord of the Netherlands and Duke of Burgundy. With a lineage supposedly stretching back to Noah’s Ark, and a name born in Ancient Rome, the Habsburgs are one of the most influential dynasties in all of European history, shaping and changing the course of nations and empires.

  3. Issued from 1st (morganatic) marriage of Ferdinand II, Archduke of Further Austria. House of Habsburg-Tyrol. Archdukes of Further Austria. Counts of Tyrol. Issued from Leopold V, 5th son of Charles II, Archduke of Austria. Younger Tyrolean line. House of Habsburg-Lorraine. Holy Roman Emperors. Emperors of Austria.

  4. The history of the house of Habsburg for the century following the Congress of Vienna is inseparable from that of the Austrian Empire, a bastion of monarchical conservatism that the forces of nationalism—German, Italian, Hungarian, Slav, and Romanian—gradually eroded. The first territorial losses came in 1859, when Austria had to cede ...

  5. HAPSBURG (HABSBURG), HOUSE OF. The Hapsburg family (also the House of Hapsburg-Lorraine, the House of Austria) is the most European of the former ruling dynasties of Europe (it played a role in the history of Germany, Switzerland, the Danubian states, the Lowlands, and the Iberian Peninsula) and the one usually associated with Roman Catholicism and the Holy Roman Empire.

  6. The House of Habsburg is a European Royal House in Age of Empires III: Definitive Edition - Knights of the Mediterranean. Like all minor civilizations, they can be allied with by building a Trading Post at their Trading Post site. Mounted Infantry: Ranged heavy cavalry that can dismount to become a Skirmisher. Good against Infantry. Benefits from promotions. Line Infantry: Tactical Austrian ...

  7. The House takes its name from Habsburg Castle, a fortress built in the 1020s in present-day Switzerland, in the canton of Aargau, by Count Radbot of Klettgau, who chose to name his fortress Habsburg. His grandson Otto II was the first to take the fortress name as his own, adding "Count of Habsburg" to his title.