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  1. Jobst (o Jost o Jodokus) de Moravia (en alemán: Jobst von Mähren; en checo: Jošt Lucemburský o Jošt Moravský; en francés: Josse de Luxembourg; 1351-Brno, Moravia [actual República Checa], 17 de enero de 1411) fue un margrave de Moravia y de Brandeburgo y durante 15 semanas rey de Alemania (1410-1411), que por su política y ...

  2. Jobst of Moravia (Czech: Jošt Moravský or Jošt Lucemburský; German: Jo(b)st or Jodokus von Mähren; c. 1354 – 18 January 1411), a member of the House of Luxembourg, was Margrave of Moravia from 1375, Duke of Luxembourg and Elector of Brandenburg from 1388 as well as elected King of Germany (King of the Romans) from 1410 until ...

  3. Jobst (o Jost o Jodokus) de Moravia ( en alemán: Jobst von Mähren; en checo: Jošt Lucemburský o Jošt Moravský; en francés: Josse de Luxembourg; 1351- Brno, Moravia [actual República Checa ], 17 de enero de 1411) fue un margrave de Moravia y de Brandeburgo y durante 15 semanas rey de Alemania (1410-1411), que por su política y maquinaciones milit...

  4. Bohemian state in the 10th century Jobst of Moravia, Margrave of Moravia and King of the Romans. Josef Leonard Weber, ca 1748. Following the defeat of the Magyars by Emperor Otto I at the Battle of Lechfeld in 955, Otto's ally Boleslaus I, the Přemyslid ruler of Bohemia, received Moravia.

  5. The Margraviate of Moravia ( Czech: Markrabství moravské; German: Markgrafschaft Mähren) was one of the Lands of the Bohemian Crown within the Holy Roman Empire and then Austria-Hungary, existing from 1182 to 1918. It was officially administered by a margrave in cooperation with a provincial diet.

  6. Jobst of Luxembourg (after 1402) The Moravian Margrave Wars were a turbulent period of fighting, skirmishes, robbery and lawlessness that took place especially in Moravia at the turn of the 14th and 15th centuries.

  7. Jobst (born 1351—died Jan. 17, 1411, Brno, Moravia [now in Czech Republic]) was a margrave of Moravia and Brandenburg and for 15 weeks the German king (1410–11), who, by his political and military machinations in east-central Europe, played a powerful role in the political life of Germany.