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  1. Rhenish Franconia ( German: Rheinfranken) or Western Franconia ( German: Westfranken) denotes the western half of the central German stem duchy of Franconia in the 10th and 11th century, with its residence at the city of Worms. The territory located on the banks of Rhine river roughly corresponded with the present-day state of Hesse and the ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › WürzburgWürzburg - Wikipedia

    Würzburg ( German: [ˈvʏʁtsbʊʁk] ⓘ; Main-Franconian: Wörtzburch) is, after Nuremberg and Fürth, the third-largest city in Franconia located in the north of Bavaria. Würzburg is the administrative seat of the Regierungsbezirk Lower Franconia. It spans the banks of the Main river .

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BabenbergBabenberg - Wikipedia

    1246. The House of Babenberg was a noble dynasty of Austrian Dukes and Margraves. Originally from Bamberg in the Duchy of Franconia (present-day Bavaria ), the Babenbergs ruled the imperial Margraviate of Austria from its creation in 976 AD until its elevation to a duchy in 1156, and from then until the extinction of the line in 1246 ...

  4. The duchy is split into its two main constituent regions, West or Rhenish Franconia (Francia Rhenensis, essentially meaning Franconia near the Rhine), and East Franconia (Francia Orientalis). The eastern half is formed of several counties and bishoprics that that are answerable directly to the German king, while portions of the western half gradually coalesce into an early form of the state of ...

  5. March of Merseburg: created in 965; sometimes referred to as part of the Saxon East March, gradually seen as separate. Gau Chutizi [ de]: along the lower White Elster and Mulde, around Leipzig. March of Zeitz: created in 965; sometimes referred to as part of the Saxon East March, gradually seen as separate.

  6. Czech Republic. Germany. The Margraviate of the Nordgau ( German: Markgrafschaft Nordgau) or Bavarian Nordgau ( Bayerischer Nordgau) was a medieval administrative unit ( Gau) on the frontier of the German Duchy of Bavaria. It comprised the region north of the Danube and Regensburg (Ratisbon), roughly covered by the modern Upper Palatinate ...

  7. Franconia. (in Germany, Franken), a historic region in Germany, now part of the Federal Republic of Germany. Franconia was named for the Franks, who settled there in the middle of the first millennium A.D. From the late ninth century it was a tribal duchy in the kingdom of Germany. In 939 it was conquered by Otto I, who abolished it as a duchy.