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  1. Wittelsbach on eurooppalainen hallitsijasuku, alun perin kotoisin Saksan Baijerista. Kaksi Pyhän saksalais-roomalaisen keisarikunnan keisaria kuului sukuun: Ludvig IV Baijerilainen 1300-luvulla ja Kaarle VII 1700-luvulla. Suvun jäsenet hallitsivat Baijeria yli seitsemänsadan vuoden ajan (1180–1918), [1] ensin herttuoina, vuodesta 1623 ...

  2. Otto V, Count of Wittelsbach ( c. 1083 – 4 August 1156), also called Otto IV, Count of Scheyern, was the second son of Eckhard I, Count of Scheyern and Richardis of Carniola and Istria. [1] Otto named himself Otto of Wittelsbach, after Wittelsbach Castle near Aichach. He served Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, in his first Italian Expedition in ...

  3. Duchess Helene in Bavaria (Helene Caroline Therese; 4 April 1834 – 16 May 1890), nicknamed Néné, was the Hereditary Princess of Thurn and Taxis as the wife of Maximilian Anton Lamoral. She was a Duchess in Bavaria by birth as the daughter of Duke Maximilian Joseph and Princess Ludovika. She was temporarily the head of the Thurn and Taxis ...

  4. Otto I (1117 – 11 July 1183), called the Redhead ( German: der Rotkopf ), was Duke of Bavaria from 1180 until his death. He was also called Otto VI as Count Palatine of Bavaria from 1156 to 1180. He was the first Bavarian ruler from the House of Wittelsbach, a dynasty which reigned until the abdication of King Ludwig III of Bavaria in the ...

  5. According to tradition, the Falkenstein estates in the Inn valley comprised vast lands that had been abandoned during the Hungarian invasions in the 10th century. Throughout the 12th century, the counts of Falkenstein rapidly extended their influence. By marriage they merged with the comital Weyarn-Neuburg dynasty in 1125.

  6. Website. www.fuerstenhaus.li. The House of Liechtenstein ( German: Haus Liechtenstein ), from which the principality takes its name, is the family which reigns by hereditary right over the principality of Liechtenstein. Only dynastic members of the family are eligible to inherit the throne.

  7. Life. Elizabeth was a daughter of the Duke Albert the Pious of Bavaria-Munich (1401–1460) from his marriage to Anna of Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Einbeck (1420–1474), daughter of the Duke Eric I of Brunswick-Grubenhagen. She married on 25 November 1460 in Leipzig [1] with the prince who later became the Elector Ernest of Saxony (1441–1486).