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  1. Margrave (Prince) Charles Gustav of Baden-Durlach (27 September 1648 in Durlach – 24 October 1703 at the Karlsburg Castle in Durlach) was a German general. He was the son of Margrave Frederick VI of Baden-Durlach and his wife Christina Magdalena of the Palatinate-Zweibrücken.

  2. El margrave (príncipe) Carlos Gustavo de Baden-Durlach (27 de septiembre de 1648 en Durlach - 24 de octubre de 1703 en el Castillo de Karlsburg en Durlach) [1] fue un general alemán. Era hijo del Margrave Federico VI de Baden-Durlach y de su esposa Cristina Magdalena del Palatinado-Zweibrücken .

  3. German general / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Margrave (Prince) Charles Gustav of Baden-Durlach (27 September 1648 in Durlach – 24 October 1703 at the Karlsburg Castle in Durlach) was a German general. He was the son of Margrave Frederick VI of Baden-Durlach and his wife Christina Magdalena of the Palatinate-Zweibrücken.

  4. El margrave (príncipe) Carlos Gustavo de Baden-Durlach fue un general alemán. Era hijo del Margrave Federico VI de Baden-Durlach y de su esposa Cristina Magdalena del Palatinado-Zweibrücken.

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    The Margraviate of Baden-Durlach encompassed an area on the middle Upper Rhine around the cities of Pforzheim and Durlach, as well as the Margraviate of Hachberg around Emmendingen, and an area known as Markgräflerland in the southern part of the Upper Rhine region, between Müllheim and Lörrach. In detail, the territorial components were as follows...

    In 1535, the Margraviate of Baden was split into the Margraviates of Baden-Baden and Baden-Durlach. Margrave Charles II chose to support the Protestant Reformation in 1556 and transferred his residence from Pforzheim to Karlsburg Castlein Durlach in 1565. In 1594, Baden-Durlach exercised control over Baden-Baden in what is known as the Oberbadische...

    The coat of armsunderwent changes over time. Here the coat of arms depicted on the seal of Margrave Charles II is described: The central shield contained the red Badian diagonal band on a golden background. In the upper left field was the crowned red lion of the Landgraves of Sausenberg. The upper right field showed the wing of the lords of Üsenber...

    According to the Imperial Register, the Margraviate was obliged to supply troops to the Swabian Circle. In addition to these troops, the Margraves also built up a force of household troops (a bodyguard). In 1770, the margraviate had a total of 807 soldiers in service (including both the circle troops and the household troops), consisting of four co...

    Before 1582, like the rest of the Empire, the Margraviate employed the Julian Calendar. In 1582, the Margraviate of Baden-Baden adopted the Gregorian Calendar, such that 4 October 1582 was followed directly by 15 October 1582, but Baden-Durlach, as a Protestant state, retained the Julian Calendar, since the new calendar had been promulgated by the ...

    Initially, the Margraviate was Roman Catholic, like the rest of the Holy Roman Empire, but on 1 June 1556, Margrave Charles II decreed a new Church Orderon the Württemberg (i.e. Lutheran) model and initiated the Reformation in his territory. Although his two oldest sons abandoned Lutheranism (Ernest Frederick converted to Calvinism in 1599 and Jame...

    Dialect

    Even in language, the Margraviate was not unified. The Landgraviate of Sausenberg and the Lordships of Badenweiler und Rötteln spoke High Alemannic, while the Margraviate of Hachberg used Low Alemannic and the Lower Margraviate (Karlsruhe-Pforzheim) employed a South Franconiandialect.

    Education

    The Margraviate never had a university. However, the level of the highest school, the gymnasium illustre in Karlsruhe, was at times equivalent to a university. Originally, the institution mainly served to educate orthodox priests to safeguard the Reformation. The school was established in Durlach in 1586 and transferred to Karlsruhe by Charles III William in 1724. It is now the Markgrafen-Gymnasium Karlsruhe.

    Music and theater

    The Badische Staatskapelle symphony orchestra is first attested in 1662. Its masters were: Enoch Blinzig (1707-1708), Giuseppe Beniventi (1712-1718), Johann Philipp Käfer (1718-1722), Johann Melchior Molter(1722-1733 and 1743–1765), and Giacinto Sciatti (1765-1776).

    From 1577 to 1584 and 1738 to 1746, there were regencies for underage rulers. These regents are mentioned in the text, but not listed asmargraves.

    Wolfgang Hug: Baden (D) in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.

  5. Frederick VII, Margrave of Baden-Durlach. Charles Gustav. Father. Friedrich V, Margrave of Baden-Durlach. Mother. Barbara of Württemberg. Frederick VI, Margrave of Baden-Durlach (16 November 1617 – 10 or 31 January 1677 [1]) was the Margrave of Baden-Durlach from 1659 until his death.

  6. BADEN-DURLACH, O.S.B., Bernhard Gustav von. Birth. December 24, 1631, Karlsburg, Baden-Durlach, Germany. Of the princes of Baden. Third of the eleven children of Margrave Friedrich V von Baden-Durlach and his second wife Eleonore, countess zu Solms-Laubach. His first name was Gustav Adolf.