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  1. Bavaria-Munich: Bavaria-Munich was a duchy that was a constituent state of the Holy Roman Empire from 1392 to 1505. 1505–1623 Duchy of Bavaria: The Duchy of Bavaria was a frontier region in the southeastern part of the Merovingian kingdom from the sixth through the eighth century.

  2. The Duchy of Bavaria was a medieval German state that existed under the Holy Roman Empire from 555 to 1623, when it became the Electorate of Bavaria. Bavaria was established as a duchy by the Franks in approximately 555 as a frontier region of the Frankish Empire; the Franks fought against the Bavarii and other frontier tribes to retain control of the region. From 1070 to 1180, the House of ...

  3. History. The larger Duchy of Bavaria-Landshut between 1363 and 1392 (includes Munich and Ingolstadt but not Straubing) The creation of the duchy was the result of the death of Emperor Louis IV the Bavarian. In the Treaty of Landsberg 1349, which divided up Louis's empire, his sons Stephen, William, and Albert were to receive jointly Lower ...

  4. Italy. Slovenia. The Duchy of Bavaria ( German: Herzogtum Bayern) was, from the sixth through the eighth century, a frontier region in the southeastern part of the Merovingian kingdom and was ruled by dukes ( duces) under Frankish lordship. In the late ninth century a new duchy was created from this area.

  5. Duchy of Bavaria. The Duchy of Bavaria-Munich ( German: Bayern-München; also Upper Bavaria-Munich; German: Oberbayern-München) was a late medieval Bavarian partial duchy of the Wittelsbach dynasty. It was created by the division of the land in 1392 and existed until the reunification of Bavaria after the Landshut War of Succession (1504/05).

  6. Bavaria-Straubing denotes the widely scattered territorial inheritance in the Wittelsbach house of Bavaria that were governed by independent dukes of Bavaria-Straubing between 1353 and 1432; a map (illustration) of these marches and outliers of the Holy Roman Empire, vividly demonstrates the fractionalisation of lands where primogeniture did not obtain.

  7. When the Grand Duchy of Würzburg, the Archbishopric of Mainz and most other parts of Franconia became part of the Kingdom of Bavaria in 1814, the kings assumed the ducal title. The present head of the House of Wittelsbach , Franz, Duke of Bavaria (born 1933) is still traditionally styled as His Royal Highness the Duke of Bavaria, Duke in Swabia and Franconia, Count Palatine of the Rhine .