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  1. Burkhard I, Lord of the House of Hohenzollern (Latin: Burchardus, Burcardus; born c. before 1025; killed as part of a feud in 1061) is considered the first well-documented ancestor of the Hohenzollern dynasty.

  2. 5 de dic. de 2022 · Son of Friedrich, count of Sülichen and Irmentrud von Nellenburg. Husband of Anastasia Von Zollern and Hedwig von Büren, Gräfin von Zollern. Father of Friedrich I "Maute" von Zollern, Graf von Zollern; Berthold Von Zollern and Burkhard Von Zollern.

    • circa 1038
    • Zollern, Wessingen, Hohaenzollern, Prussia
  3. Burchard I, the first recorded ancestor of the dynasty, was count of Zollern in the 11th century. In the third and fourth generation from him two lines were formed: that of Zollern-Hohenberg, extinct in all its branches by 1486, and that of the burgraves of Nürnberg, from which all the branches surviving into modern times derived.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Burkhard I, Lord of the House of Hohenzollern ( Latin: Burchardus, Burcardus; born c. before 1025; killed as part of a feud in 1061) is considered the first well-documented ancestor of the Hohenzollern dynasty.

  5. Zollern, from 1218 Hohenzollern, was a county of the Holy Roman Empire. Later its capital was Hechingen . The Hohenzollerns named their estates after Hohenzollern Castle in the Swabian Alps. The Hohenzollern Castle lies on an 855 meters high mountain called Hohenzollern. It still belongs to the family today.

  6. Burchard I, the first recorded ancestor of the dynasty, was count of Zollern in the 11th century. In the third and fourth generation from him two lines were formed: that of Zollern-Hohenberg, extinct in all its branches by 1486, and that of the burgraves of…. Read More.