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  1. Frederick was born in Karlsruhe, Baden, on 9 September 1826. He was the third son of Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden and Princess Sophie of Sweden. He became the heir presumptive to the grand duchy upon the death of his father in 1852 [1] and the accession of his brother as Grand Duke Louis II. Due to his brother's mental ill-health, he was regent ...

  2. 2 de ene. de 2024 · Following Frederick's death in 1105, Agnes married Leopold III (born 1073; died 15 Nov. 1136) the Margrave of Austria(1095 till 1136). Leopold was the son of Margrave Leopold II and Ida of Formbach-Ratelnberg.

  3. Albert was the second son of Margrave John Frederick and his first wife, Johanna Elisabeth of Baden-Durlach. Due to the untimely death of his older brother, Leopold Frederick at the age of two, Christian Albert was designated as heir apparent in 1676, succeeding his father as Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach upon his death in 1686.

  4. Frederick I Friedrich I: 21 September 1371 30 April 1415 – 20 September 1440 20 September 1440 Electorate of Brandenburg: Elisabeth of Bavaria-Landshut 18 September 1401 ten children Originally Burgrave of Nuremberg as Frederick VI. Appointed by King Sigismund in 1415 and enfeoffed in 1417. 1417–1426: Margraviate of Brandenburg

  5. When his brother Frederick William died in 1771, Frederick Henry inherited the Lordship of Schwedt-Wildenbruch. As "Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt", he was a patron of the arts, especially theater. In 1755 he acquired the Prinzessinnenpalais in Berlin and in 1785, he contracted the actress Henriette Hendel-Schutz to perform in his Court Theater.

  6. Albert Leopold Friedrich Christian Sylvester Anno Macarius, Prince of Saxony, Duke of Saxony, Margrave of Meissen (31 December 1893 – 9 August 1968) was the second son of Frederick Augustus III, the last reigning king of Saxony before the abolition of the monarchy in 1918. Upon his father's death in 1932, he became the head of the Royal House of Saxony. He was Captain à la suite in the ...

  7. In 1663 Emperor Leopold I made St Leopold patron of Austria ‘above and below the Enns’ (Upper and Lower Austria), a status retained by the saint to this day. In the course of time the Babenbergs’ power centres shifted increasingly to the east, with Margrave Leopold III’s son Henry ‘Jasomirgott’ making Vienna the seat of his court.