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  1. Philip I, also known as Philip of Saint Pol (25 July 1404 – Leuven, 4 August 1430), was the younger son of Anthony, Duke of Brabant and Jeanne of Saint-Pol.

  2. Philip I of Castile. Philip the Handsome [b] (22 July 1478 – 25 September 1506), also called the Fair, was ruler of the Burgundian Netherlands and titular Duke of Burgundy from 1482 to 1506, as well as the first Habsburg King of Castile (as Philip I) for a brief time in 1506.

  3. The Duke of Brabant ( Dutch: hertog van Brabant, French: duc de Brabant) was the ruler of the Duchy of Brabant since 1183/1184. The title was created by the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in favor of Henry I of the House of Reginar, son of Godfrey III of Leuven (who was duke of Lower Lorraine at that time).

  4. Philip I, also known as Philip of Saint Pol (25 July 1404 – Leuven, 4 August 1430), was the younger son of Anthony, Duke of Brabant and Jeanne of Saint-Pol. He succeeded his brother John IV as Duke of Brabant in 1427, while he had inherited Saint-Pol and Ligny as an appanage on the death of his maternal grandfather, Waleran III of Luxembourg ...

  5. When the family line died out in 1430, inheritance passed to Philip III the Good of Burgundy, an event that marked the end of the independent existence of the duchy of Brabant. The duchy passed to the house of Habsburg in 1477 upon the marriage of Philip’s granddaughter, Mary, to the archduke Maximilian.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Seven sheets, cut down from a larger table, containing 35 portraits of the rulers and Dukes of the land previously identified as the Frankish Empire and later as the Duchy of Brabant, dating from the legendary origins of the ancestors of Charlemagne to Philip I, Duke of Brabant who died in 1430 at which point the title passed to the Dukes of ...

  7. Hace 5 días · In the twelfth century, the term Brabant came to denote the possessions of the house of Louvain; in the thirteenth, the title ‘duke of Brabant’ replaced the designation ‘duke of (Lower) Lorraine’. W. Kienast, Der Herzogstitel in Frankreich und Deutschland (Munich, 1968), 395–404. 1106–1128.