Conrad I (bishop Of Osnabrück)
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Conrad I (bishop Of Osnabrück)
Conrad I or Konrad I may refer to: * Conrad I, Count of Auxerre (died c. 864), French count of several counties, including Paris 859–862/4 * Conrad I of Germany (881–918), Duke of Franconia and King of Germany in 911–918 * Conrad of Constance (900–975), German bishop and saint * Conrad I, Duke of Swabia (915/920-997), ruled 983–997 * Conrad, Duke of Lorraine (c. 922 – 955) * Conrad I of Burgundy (925–993) * Conrad I of Spoleto, or Conrad of Ivrea (died 997) * Conrad I, Duke of Carinthia (975–1011) * Conrad I of Italy (989/990–1039), ruled as Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor 1027–1039 * Conrad I, Duke of Bavaria (1020–1055), ruled 1049–1053 * Conrad I, Duke of Bohemia (c. 1035–1092), Duke of Bohemia in 1092 * Conrad I, Count of Luxembourg (1040-1086) * Conrad I of Salzburg (c. 1075–1147), Archbishop of Salzburg 1106–1147 * Conrad I, Count of Württemberg (born before 1081), ruled 1083–1110 * Conrad I of Raabs (died 1143), Burgrave of Nuremberg c. 1105– ...
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Conrad I, Count Of Auxerre
Conrad the Elder (died about 864) was a prominent Nobility, noble in the Carolingian Empire, and member of the Elder House of Welf. He was count of several County, counties in Alamannia, most notably the counties of Argengau and Linzgau, north of the Lake Constance. Conrad was son of count Welf (father of Judith), Welf I and countess Heilwig. Both of Conrad's sisters married into the Carolingian dynasty: the elder Judith of Bavaria (795-843), Judith was second wife of emperor Louis the Pious, while younger Emma, Queen of East Francia, Emma was wife of king Louis the German of East Francia. In 853-858, Conrad's sons left East Francia, and went over to king Charles the Bald of West Francia, who was Judith's son and thus Conrad's nephew. Since Conrad already held some lands in the West-Frankish County of Auxerre, including the position of a lay abbot of Abbey of Saint-Germain d'Auxerre, Saint-Germaine in Auxerre, his son Conrad the Younger, Count of Auxerre, Conrad the Younger was a ...
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Conrad, Margrave Of Meissen
Conrad I ( – 5 February 1157), called the Great (), a member of the House of Wettin, was Margrave of Meissen from 1123 and Margrave of Lusatia from 1136 until his retirement in 1156. Initially a Saxon count, he became the ruler over large Imperial estates in the Eastern March and progenitor of the Saxon electors and kings. Life Conrad was the son of the Saxon count Thimo of Wettin and his wife Ida, a daughter of Count Otto of Nordheim. Both his father and maternal grandfather had been involved in the Saxon Rebellion against the Salian king Henry IV in 1073–75. Thimo was the first to call himself a Count of Wettin after the ancestral seat on the Saale river, while his elder brother Dedi ruled in the Saxon March of Lusatia ( Eastern March). His son Henry the Elder also became the first Wettin margrave in Meissen in 1089. Upon the early death of his father, Conrad succeeded him as Count of Wettin and Brehna. When his cousin Henry the Elder died in 1103, he hoped ...
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Conrad, Margrave Of Brandenburg-Stendal
Margrave Conrad I of Brandenburg ( – 1304) was a member of the House of Ascania and a co-ruler of Brandenburg. Life Conrad I was the fourth of six children of Margrave John I of Brandenburg and his wife Sophia, daughter of King Valdemar II of Denmark. He was 26 years old when, in 1266, his father died and he and his elder brothers John II and Otto IV became co-rulers of Brandenburg. Conrad went on to rule in the newly acquired Neumark part of Brandenburg east of the Oder River, though he rarely appeared on the political scene. On one occasion, he assisted his brother Otto IV, when they allied with Duke Mestwin II of Pomerelia according to the 1269 Treaty of Arnswalde, occupying the Pomerelian city of Gdańsk and gaining the Pomeranian territory around Rügenwalde. He died in 1304 and was buried beside his wife in Chorin Abbey. There is an entry in the register at Chorin as follows: Marriage and issue Conrad was married to Constance of Poznań (d. 1281), daug ...
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Konrad I, Duke Of Głogów
Konrad I of Głogów (; – 6 August 1273/74), a member of the Silesian Piasts, was Silesian duke of Głogów from 1249/50 until his death. Life Konrad was the fourth son of Henry II the Pious, Duke of Silesia and High Duke of Poland from 1238, by his wife Anna, daughter of the Přemyslid king Ottokar I of Bohemia. At the time of his father's death in the 1241 Battle of Legnica against the Golden Horde, he and his younger brother Władysław were placed under the guardianship of their eldest brother Duke Bolesław II Rogatka. After Henry's sudden death, the Silesian Piasts were not able to maintain their dominant position: Bolesław II tried to succeed his father on the Polish throne at Kraków, but eventually could not prevail against his Piast cousin Konrad I of Masovia. In order to avoid further fragmentation of the paternal lands, the elder duke, with the approval of their mother, sent Konrad to study in Paris, where he was to be educated with the intention of becom ...
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Conrad I Of Sicily
Conrad (25 April 1228 – 21 May 1254), a member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty, was the only son of Emperor Frederick II from his second marriage with Queen Isabella II of Jerusalem. He inherited the title of King of Jerusalem (as Conrad II) upon the death of his mother in childbed. Appointed Duke of Swabia in 1235, his father had him elected King of Germany (King of the Romans) and crowned King of Italy (as Conrad IV) in 1237. After the emperor was deposed and died in 1250, he ruled as King of Sicily (Conrad I) until his death. Early years He was the second child, but only surviving son of Emperor Frederick II and Isabella II (Yolanda), the queen regnant of Jerusalem. Born in Andria, in the South Italian Kingdom of Sicily, his mother died shortly after giving birth to him and he succeeded her as monarch of the Crusader state of Jerusalem. By his father, Conrad was the grandson of the Hohenstaufen emperor Henry VI and great-grandson of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. He lived i ...
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Konrad I Of Meissen
Konrad von Wallhausen otherwise Konrad I of Meissen or Konrad I von Wallhausen (died 6 January 1258) was Bishop of Meissen from 1240 to 1258.Eduard Machatschek: ''Geschichte der Bischöfe des Hochstiftes Meissen in chronologischer Reihenfolge (...)'', pp. 172–190. Dresden 1884 His episcopate, about which there is little information, coincided with the Interregnum and the War of the Thuringian Succession The War of the Thuringian Succession (German: ''Thüringisch-hessischer Erbfolgekrieg'') (1247–1264) was a military conflict over a successor to the last Landgrave of Thuringia for control of the state of Thuringia (now in modern-day Germany). .... References Roman Catholic bishops of Meissen 1258 deaths Year of birth unknown {{Germany-RC-bishop-stub ...
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Conrad I Of Sanneck
Conrad I of Sanneck (, ; ? – before 1255), Lord of Žovnek (Sanneck, in German), was a free noble in the March of Savinja in the Holy Roman Empire, in what is now Slovenia. He was an ancestor of the House of Celje, founded by his grandson Frederick. He was born to the free noble (roughly equivalent to a baron) Gebhard II of Sanneck. Little is known of his youth. He flourished between 1220 and 1241, when his name is present in various sources,Fugger Germadnik Romanda et al. (2001): ''Razstava Grofje Celjski (1999; Celje)''. Celje, Pokrajinski muzej Celje, p. 13. showing that he was the owner of large allods in the Savinja Valley, then part of the March of Carniola. In 1237, the Patriarch of Aquileia Berthold of Andechs-Merania invested him with several fiefs in Carniola and in the Windic March. Sources show that Conrad had a relatively large number of vassals, among whom the Auersperg family. It was Conrad who first used the traditional coat-of-arms of the House of Sanneck, ...
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Conrad Of Thuringia
Conrad (; c. 1206 – 24 July 1240) was the landgrave of Thuringia from 1231 to 1234 and the fifth Grand Master of the Teutonic Order from 1239 to 1240.Nicolaus von Jeroschin, ''A History of the Teutonic Knights in Prussia 1190-1331'', transl. Mary Fischer, (Ashgate Publishing, 2010), 120. He was the first major noble to join the military order. Conrad was the youngest son of Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia, and Sophia, a daughter of Otto I, Duke of Bavaria. His elder brother Louis IV of Thuringia was married to Saint Elisabeth of Hungary. When Louis died in 1227 during the Sixth Crusade, his brother Henry Raspe became regent for Louis' minor son Herman II, and Conrad took on the title of Count of Gudensberg in Hesse, assisting his brother in ruling the area. On Elisabeth's death in 1231, Henry Raspe took Thuringia for himself, and together with Conrad, worked to consolidate power. Conrad engaged in battle a number of times with Siegfried III, Archbishop of Mainz, at one p ...
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Konrad I Of Masovia
Konrad I of Masovia (ca. 1187/88 – 31 August 1247), from the Polish Piast dynasty, was the sixth Duke of Masovia and Kuyavia from 1194 until his death as well as High Duke of Poland from 1229 to 1232 and again from 1241 to 1243. Life Konrad was the youngest son of High Duke Casimir II the Just of Poland and Helen of Znojmo, daughter of the Přemyslid duke Conrad II of Znojmo (ruler of the Znojmo Appanage in southern Moravia, part of Duchy of Bohemia). His maternal grandmother was Maria of Serbia, apparently a daughter of the pre- Nemanjić ''župan'' Uroš I of Rascia. After his father's death in 1194, Konrad was brought up by his mother, who acted as regent of Masovia. In 1199, he received Masovia and in 1205 the adjacent lands of Kuyavia as well. In 1205, he and his brother, Duke Leszek I the White of Sandomierz, had their greatest military victory at Battle of Zawichost against Prince Roman the Great of Galicia–Volhynia. The Ruthenian army was crushed and R ...
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Conrad I, Burgrave Of Nuremberg
Conrad may refer to: People * Conrad (name) * Saint Conrad (other) Places United States * Conrad, Illinois, an unincorporated community * Conrad, Iowa, a city * Conrad, Montana, a city * Conrad Glacier, Washington Elsewhere * Conrad, Alberta, Canada, a former unincorporated community * Conrad Mountains, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica * Mount Conrad, Oates Land, Antarctica * Mount Conrad (Canada), Purcell Mountains, British Columbia Businesses * Conrad Editora, a Brazilian publisher * Conrad Electronic, a German retailer * Conrad Hotels, the global luxury brand of Hilton Hotels * Conrad Models, a German manufacturer of diecast toys and promotional models Other uses * ''Conrad'' (comic strip) * CONRAD (organization), an American organization that promotes reproductive health in the developing world * ORP ''Conrad'', name of the cruiser HMS ''Danae'' (D44) while loaned to the Polish Navy (1944-1946) See also * Conradi * Conradin * Conradin ...
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Conrad I, Duke Of Spoleto
Conrad of Urslingen (died 1202) was the Duke of Spoleto on two occasions: first from 1183 to 1190 and then from 1195 to 1198. Conrad began his career as count of Assisi, which was given him after its 1174 conquest by Christian of Mainz. Frederick Barbarossa, the emperor, invested Conrad as count and granted him the Rocca as his seat of power. During his countship, Saint Francis was born at Assisi. In 1183, Frederick appointed him duke of Spoleto. In 1190, he was chased from Spoleto by the ascendant Guelph powers, but he regained his duchy in 1195. He briefly sheltered the young Emperor Frederick II at the Rocca and acted as the vicar of the Kingdom of Sicily, but in 1198 he was ordered to render Spoleto to the Pope and during his absence, Assisi rebelled and declared a commune. His son was Rainald of Urslingen, Duke of Spoleto The Duke of Spoleto was the ruler of Spoleto and most of central Italy outside the Papal States during the Early and High Middle Ages (c. 500 – 13 ...
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Conrad Of Wittelsbach
Conrad of Wittelsbach (c. 1120/1125 – 25 October 1200) was the Archbishop of Mainz (as Conrad I) and Archchancellor of Germany from 20 June 1161 to 1165 and again from 1183 to his death. He was also a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. The son of Otto IV, Count of Wittelsbach, and brother of Otto I of Bavaria, he studied in Salzburg Salzburg is the List of cities and towns in Austria, fourth-largest city in Austria. In 2020 its population was 156,852. The city lies on the Salzach, Salzach River, near the border with Germany and at the foot of the Austrian Alps, Alps moun ... and Paris. At the Council of Lodi in 1161, Frederick Barbarossa appointed him archbishop of Mainz to end a schism between Rudolf of Zähringen and Christian I, Archbishop of Mainz, Christian von Buch in that see. At that same council, Barbarossa appointed Antipope Victor IV (1159-1164), Victor IV antipope in opposition to Pope Alexander III. After Victor's death in 1164, Rainald of Dassel, the ar ...
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