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  1. 18 de nov. de 2019 · The reign of Maximilian I in many ways marks the start of a new era in the history of Bavaria. When he came to power in 1597, he inhertied a thousand years o...

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    • Kings and Things
  2. 5 de ene. de 2023 · From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Maximiliane Josepha Karoline (1810-1821) was a Bavarian princess who died of typhoid fever at the age of ten. Princess Maximiliana of Bavaria. youngest daughter of King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria and Caroline of Baden. image.

  3. Death and funeral. Caroline of Baden died 13 November 1841, outliving her husband by sixteen years and one month. Due to her Protestant religion, her funeral was conducted with so little royal dignity that there were public protests. By order of the Catholic archbishop of Munich, Lothar Anselm von Gebsattel, all participating Catholic clergy ...

  4. 17 de dic. de 2023 · El móvil Maximiliana se controla desde tu propio móvil, para que ellos no tengan que hacer nada. Prueba Maximiliana. El móvil para mayores más sencillo. Tarjeta SIM y accesorios incluidos. Cancela cuando quieras. 15 días de prueba. Envío GRATIS en 4 días.

  5. Back in Bavaria, Maximilian Emanuel focused on architecture projects to balance the failure of his political ambitions. It was bitter for him to witness the royal elevation of the German princes Augustus II the Strong (1697), Frederick I of Prussia (1701) and George I of Hanover (1714) as well as of his cousin Victor Amadeus of Sicily (1713) while his own political dreams could not be realized.

  6. 65 Maximiliana is the culmination of Ernst’s profound engagement with illustrated books. The project was a collaboration between the artist and Iliazd (Il’ia Zdanevich), a Georgian-born book designer and publisher. The title refers to a planetoid discovered in 1861 by the unsung German astronomer Ernst Wilhelm Tempel, who named it in honor of Maximilian II, then king of Bavaria. Ernst’s ...

  7. William V's spending on Church-related projects, including funding missionaries outside Bavaria—as far away as Asia and the Americas—put tremendous strain on the Bavarian treasury. The Italian confidence man Marco Bragadino who was promising to make copious amounts of gold to erase the Dukes's debts was called upon by William V in 1590, and executed after he had failed.