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  1. Graf von Wettin, Landgraf von Thüringen, Herzog von Sachsen on 20 June 1446, in Jena, Thuringia, Germany. They were the parents of at least 2 daughters. She died on 14 November 1462, in Eckartsberga, Burgenlandkreis, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany, at the age of 30, and was buried in Reinhardsbrunn, Friedrichroda, Gotha, Thuringia, Germany.

  2. Margaret of Sicily was a Princess of Sicily and Germany, and a member of the House of Hohenstaufen.

  3. The Reformation in Thuringia At the beginning of the 16th century, the expansion of the territorial rule and the establishment of modern-state structures in the territories of Wettin, Reuß, Schwarzburg and Henneberg were in full progress: the high justice was intertwined with the ‘Grundherrschaft’, the rule over

  4. Thuringia is a magical place of grand thinking, extraordinary medieval towns, fairytale forests – and sausages.

  5. Frederick the Peaceable, who succeeded him as Landgrave of Thuringia; Anna of Meissen (d. 4 July 1395), who married Rudolf III, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg; After Margaret's death, Balthasar married Anna of Saxe-Wittenberg (d. 1426), the widow of Duke Frederick I of Brunswick-Lüneburg. This marriage remained childless. Ancestry

  6. He married Margaret, daughter of the emperor Frederick II., in 1254, and in 1265 received from his father Thuringia and the Saxon palatinate. His infatuation for Kunigunde of Eisenberg caused his wife to leave him, and after her death in 1270 he married Kunigunde, who had already borne him a son, Apitz or Albert.

  7. Life. Born in Eisenach, Frederick was the son of Albert II, Margrave of Meissen and Margaret of Sicily.According to legend, his mother, fleeing her philandering husband in 1270, was overcome by the pain of parting and bit Frederick on the cheek: therefore he became known as the Bitten.