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  1. Ludwig the Younger of Hesse ( German: Ludwig der Junker) (1305 – 2 February 1345) was a German nobleman. He was the third son of Landgrave Otto I of Hesse and his wife Adelheid, a daughter of Otto III of Ravensberg. Life. In 1326, Otto I and Adelheid visited Pope John XXII in Avignon with a large retinue.

  2. Luis el Junker de Hesse (1305-2 de febrero de 1345) fue un noble alemán. Era el tercer hijo del Landgrave Otto I de Hesse y su esposa Adelheid, una hija de Otto III de Ravensberg.

  3. 5 de ago. de 2009 · The Junkers, as popularly conceived today, are considered to have been die evil genius of the German people, prompting their authoritarianism, their statism and their militarism. The popular conception is faulty when it uses die term “Junker” to include all German or even all Prussian nobles and fails to recognize diat Junkers come only from the historic eastern provinces of Prussia. It ...

  4. Rulers of Hesse. This is a list of monarchs of Hesse ( German: Hessen) during the history of Hesse on west-central Germany. These monarchs belonged to a dynasty collectively known as the House of Hesse and the House of Brabant, [1] originally the Reginar. Hesse was ruled as a landgraviate, electorate and later as a grand duchy until 1918.

  5. Junker (Prussia) Paul von Hindenburg was born into a wealthy Junker family. The Junkers ( / ˈjʊŋkər / YUUNG-kər; German: [ˈjʊŋkɐ]) were members of the landed nobility in Prussia. They owned great estates that were maintained and worked by peasants with few rights. [1] These estates often lay in the countryside outside of major cities ...

  6. About: Louis the Junker. Louis the Junker of Hesse (1305 – 2 February 1345) was a German nobleman. He was the third son of Landgrave Otto I of Hesse and his wife Adelheid, a daughter of Otto III of Ravensberg.

  7. Louis I ( German: Ludwig; 6 February 1402 – 17 January 1458), nicknamed the Peaceful ( German: der Friedsame ), was Landgrave of Hesse from 1413 to 1458. [1] [2] Following Louis' death, his sons, Henry III and Louis II, divided Hesse into Upper and Lower sections. [3] [4]