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  1. It was only for the Nuremberg patriciate that a council seat in the city and membership in the free imperial knighthood could be combined in one person. However, in order to be able to take office with the knightly canton, patricians had to give up their citizenship, such as Johann Philipp Geuder (1597-1650), who even became director of the imperial knighthood in Franconia , Swabia and on the ...

  2. Nuremberg City Hall. Coordinates: 49°27′18.7″N 11°04′39.2″E. West facade of the Old Town Hall from the northwest, 2006. Nuremberg City Hall ( German: Nürnberger Rathaus) is located in the old town of Nuremberg, Germany, just east of the choir of the Sebalduskirche. It is part of the Historic Mile of Nuremberg as one of the city's ...

  3. Objets utilitaires › Jeton de compte. Laiton • 1,3 g • ⌀ 22 mm. N# 182627. Jeton de Nuremberg pour le Dauphiné. ND (1612-1651) Objets utilitaires › Jeton de compte. Cuivre • 6,1 g • ⌀ 28,5 mm. N# 243995. Henri IV jeton de compte - 1614 H L.

  4. Nuremberg’s splendid reception for the city’s lord and master, the Emperor Matthias, 1612. Nuremberg was one of the most powerful imperial cities of the Holy Roman Empire. The castle, which was probably constructed under Heinrich III (1039-1056), was one of the political centers of the mediaeval empire and the starting point for the city's development.

  5. The Free Imperial City of Nuremberg (German: Freie Reichsstadt Nürnberg) was a free imperial city – independent city-state – within the Holy Roman Empire.After Nuremberg gained piecemeal independence from the Burgraviate of Nuremberg in the High Middle Ages and considerable territory from Bavaria in the Landshut War of Succession, it grew to become one of the largest and most important ...

  6. View of the Heilig-Geist-Spital from the west. The Heilig-Geist-Spital (English: Holy Spirit Hospital) in Nuremberg was the largest hospital in the former Free Imperial City of Nuremberg. It was used as a hospital and nursing home. Its chapel was also the depository of the Imperial Regalia, the crown jewels of the Holy Roman Empire, between ...

  7. In 1289, King Rudolf of Habsburg granted special privileges to the settlement in the river valley, making it an Imperial City. In 1525 the last property rights of the abbots in the Imperial City were sold in the so-called "Great Purchase", marking the start of the co-existence of two independent cities bearing the same name next to each other.