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  1. Otto married Agnes, the daughter of Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine (a son of Henry the Lion) and Agnes of Hohenstaufen, in Worms in 1222. Their children were: Louis II, Duke of Bavaria (13 April 1229, Heidelberg – 2 February 1294, Heidelberg). Henry XIII, Duke of Bavaria (19 November 1235, Landshut – 3 February 1290, Burghausen.

  2. William VI. Holland, double groat or "Tuin", struck in Valenciennes under William. William II of Bavaria (5 April 1365—31 May 1417) was Duke of Bavaria-Straubing and count of Holland (listed as William VI ), Hainaut (listed as William IV) and Zeeland. He ruled from 1404 until 1417, when he died from an infection caused by a dog bite.

  3. Welf was the oldest son of Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, and his wife Judith of Flanders. In 1088 [4] or 1089, [5] when Welf was still a teenager, he married Matilda of Tuscany , [3] who was more than twenty years older than him, in order to strengthen the relation between his family and the pope during the Investiture Controversy between king and pope. [6]

  4. Kunsthistorisches Museum 09 04 2013 Medallion William V of Bavaria.jpg 1,824 × 2,500; 5.2 MB Kupferstich - München - Hochzeit Herzog Wilhelm V mit Renate 1568 - Wagner - 0005.png 1,383 × 883; 821 KB

  5. Henry I, Duke of Bavaria. Mother. Judith, Duchess of Bavaria. Henry II (951 – 28 August 995), called the Wrangler or the Quarrelsome ( German: Heinrich der Zänker ), a member of the German royal Ottonian dynasty, was Duke of Bavaria from 955 to 976 and again from 985 to 995, as well as Duke of Carinthia from 989 to 995.

  6. Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria. Maximilian I (17 April 1573 – 27 September 1651), occasionally called the Great, a member of the House of Wittelsbach, ruled as Duke of Bavaria from 1597. His reign was marked by the Thirty Years' War during which he obtained the title of a Prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire at the 1623 Diet of Regensburg .

  7. 14 de oct. de 2021 · English: Portrait of Wilhelm V, Duke of Bavaria (1548-1626) Deutsch: "Das Bildnis folgt einem zu Lebzeiten des bayerischen Herzogs verbreiteten Porträttypus. Als Vorbild diente Hans von Aachens ganzfiguriges Porträt Wilhelms V., das sich zusammen mit seinem Gegenstück, einem Bildnis seiner Gattin Renata von Lothringen, in der Sammlung des Bayerischen Nationalmuseums, München, befindet.