Results 171 to 180 of about 721 (206)
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Restless corpses: ‘secondary burial’ in the Babenberg and Habsburg dynasties
Antiquity, 2001The historically documented burial samples of the Babenberg and Habsburg dynasties allow a detailed analysis of the circumstances that led to dismemberment, evisceration, disturbance, exhumation and reburial over a millennium. The results may provide deeper and more broadly applicable insights into relevant cultural formation processes of élite burials.
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For the Love of Dynasty: Habsburg Wives, Widows and Nuns
The Court Historian, 2016Early Modern Habsburg Women presents a series of eleven essays divided into four sections, exploring influential Habsburg women — queens, princesses, regents, nuns and vicereines — who were either ...
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The Habsburgs: Dynasty, Culture and Politics, by Paula Sutter Fichtner
Canadian Journal of History, 2015The Habsburgs: Dynasty, Culture and Politics by Paula Sutter Fichtner. London, Reaktion Books, 2014. xvi, 288 pp. $39.00 US (cloth). In 2014, commodification rules in Vienna. The Empress Elisabeth ("Sisi"), the wife of Emperor Franz Joseph (1830-1916) is now the dominant Habsburg brand. The Hofburg has been Sissified.
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The Court Historian, 2020
Maria Anna of Inner Austria became the mother-in-law of King Sigismund III of Poland-Lithuania (1566–1632) twice due to the marriages of her two daughters, Anna and Constance.
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Maria Anna of Inner Austria became the mother-in-law of King Sigismund III of Poland-Lithuania (1566–1632) twice due to the marriages of her two daughters, Anna and Constance.
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Rudolf I of Germany (1218-1291), born into a modest comital family, marked a turning point in European history. As the first king from the House of Habsburg, Rudolf's reign laid the groundwork for the subsequent rise of this dynasty to preeminence in European politics.
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Journal of Early Modern History, 2016
The Spanish Habsburg Monarchy was a composite state that needed several individuals of royal blood other than the ruler to govern its constituent parts. Since the dynasty was one of few central institutions, the participation of relatives in rule can be seen as part of state building at an imperial level.
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The Spanish Habsburg Monarchy was a composite state that needed several individuals of royal blood other than the ruler to govern its constituent parts. Since the dynasty was one of few central institutions, the participation of relatives in rule can be seen as part of state building at an imperial level.
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The Counter-Reformation: The Roman Catholic Church and the Habsburg Dynasty Triumphant, 1550-1700
1996Abstract The idea of reform inspired Protestants and Catholics alike with an apocalyptic sense of urgency that led them to see the world as a battlefield for the agents of God and the devil. Even though religion was often misused as an ideological pretext for the cynical realization of pragmatic political objectives, spiritual conviction
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The Habsburgs: dynasty, culture and politics
European Review of History: Revue européenne d'histoire, 2015openaire +2 more sources

