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  1. The next month Rupert took England’s second largest city by storm. In 14 vicious hours of fighting on July 26, 1643, the 23-year-old Royalist commander, leading each well-coordinated major attack on the town’s defenses, captured Bristol, giving his king a major port and a vital bastion in the West Country.

  2. Prince Rupert of the Rhine (son of the exiled Frederick V of Bohemia) was one of the earliest practitioners of mezzotint, and a vital contributor to its development. Rupert met Ludwig von Siegen (the technique's inventor) in 1654, but did not attempt his own mezzotints until 1657. He made this impressive print the following year.

  3. "Some of the weaknesses of Rupert's character began to display themselves, however, when he quarrelled with his fellow infantry commander, Lindsey." The however should be at the start of the sentence or removed (otherwise it reads like the second clause contradicts the first). Done. Hchc2009 16:50, 2 August 2012 (UTC) Reply

  4. Uploaded a work by Prince Rupert of the Rhine, ... The following pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed):

  5. Ruprecht von der Pfalz (in England: Prince Rupert of the Rhine; * 17. Dezember jul. / 27. Dezember 1619 greg. [1] in Prag; † 29. November 1682 in London) aus der Linie Pfalz-Simmern des Hauses Wittelsbach war ein kurpfälzischer Prinz und ein deutsch-englischer Kavalleriegeneral und Admiral .

  6. The Stranger Prince. The Stranger Prince is a 1937 historical novel by the British writer Margaret Irwin. It is based on the life of Prince Rupert of the Rhine, the cavalry commander of his uncle Charles I during the English Civil War. It was a popular work in its era and remained influential for is portrayal of the Cavaliers during the era.

  7. 26 de sept. de 2023 · Prince Rupert of the Rhine, Charles’ first cousin (1619-1682), was Captain General of the Royalist Army from late 1644 and in command in July 1643 when the Royalists won Bristol from the Parliamentarians. It was at Rupert’s insistence that Charles was given a superior title to his own.