Haus Cirksena - Stammliste Der Cirksena, Enno III., Ulrich I., Edzard II., Christian Eberhard, Carl Edzard, Georg Christian, Enno Ludwig (English, German, Paperback)


Kapitel: Stammliste Der Cirksena, Enno Iii., Ulrich I., Edzard Ii., Christian Eberhard, Carl Edzard, Georg Christian, Enno Ludwig, Georg Albrecht, Ulrich Ii., Johann Iii., Sabina Catharina, Edzard I., Johann Ii., Enno Ii., Enno I., Rudolf Christian, Johann I., Enno Cirksena, Ernst Christoph. Aus Wikipedia. Nicht dargestellt. Auszug: The Cirksena are noble East Frisian family descended from a line of East Frisian chieftains from Greetsiel. In 1439 in the wake of clashes between different lines of chieftains, the town of Emden was first placed by Hamburg under direct rule and then, in 1453, finally given to the Cirksena. The family administered and ruled the town until 1595. The Cirksena gained strength and succeeded the chieftain line of the tom Broks, after their opponent Focko Ukena was defeated and expelled by several allied chieftains, led by Edzard Cirksena. Ulrich Cirksena (d 1466) was elevated to the rank of imperial count by Emperor Frederick III and enfeoffed with the Imperial County of East Frisia. The most important rule from the House of Cirksena was Edzard the Great (1462-1528), under whose leadership the Imperial County of East Frisia reached its greatest extent. During his reign the Reformation spread throughout East Frisia. In 1654 the Cirksena were elevated to princes by the emperor. Carl Edzard, the last ruler from the House of Cirksena, died without issue during the night of 25/26 May 1744 (reportedly from a glass of buttermilk, which is said to have drunk after a hunt). Immediately thereafter, the state was taken over by Frederick the Great. The Cirksena provided the rulers of the County of Rietberg from 1581 to 1699. This initially happened as a personal union with East Frisia, after Count Enno III had married Rietberg's daughter-heir, Walburg von Rietberg. In the Treaty of Berum (1600) however he ceded the County of Rietberg to his daughters. In 1601 Enno's brother, Count John III, married his niece, Sabi...http://booksllc.net/?l=de

R350

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles3500
Delivery AdviceOut of stock

Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

Kapitel: Stammliste Der Cirksena, Enno Iii., Ulrich I., Edzard Ii., Christian Eberhard, Carl Edzard, Georg Christian, Enno Ludwig, Georg Albrecht, Ulrich Ii., Johann Iii., Sabina Catharina, Edzard I., Johann Ii., Enno Ii., Enno I., Rudolf Christian, Johann I., Enno Cirksena, Ernst Christoph. Aus Wikipedia. Nicht dargestellt. Auszug: The Cirksena are noble East Frisian family descended from a line of East Frisian chieftains from Greetsiel. In 1439 in the wake of clashes between different lines of chieftains, the town of Emden was first placed by Hamburg under direct rule and then, in 1453, finally given to the Cirksena. The family administered and ruled the town until 1595. The Cirksena gained strength and succeeded the chieftain line of the tom Broks, after their opponent Focko Ukena was defeated and expelled by several allied chieftains, led by Edzard Cirksena. Ulrich Cirksena (d 1466) was elevated to the rank of imperial count by Emperor Frederick III and enfeoffed with the Imperial County of East Frisia. The most important rule from the House of Cirksena was Edzard the Great (1462-1528), under whose leadership the Imperial County of East Frisia reached its greatest extent. During his reign the Reformation spread throughout East Frisia. In 1654 the Cirksena were elevated to princes by the emperor. Carl Edzard, the last ruler from the House of Cirksena, died without issue during the night of 25/26 May 1744 (reportedly from a glass of buttermilk, which is said to have drunk after a hunt). Immediately thereafter, the state was taken over by Frederick the Great. The Cirksena provided the rulers of the County of Rietberg from 1581 to 1699. This initially happened as a personal union with East Frisia, after Count Enno III had married Rietberg's daughter-heir, Walburg von Rietberg. In the Treaty of Berum (1600) however he ceded the County of Rietberg to his daughters. In 1601 Enno's brother, Count John III, married his niece, Sabi...http://booksllc.net/?l=de

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Books + Company

Country of origin

United States

Release date

July 2010

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

July 2010

Editors

Dimensions

152 x 229 x 4mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

66

ISBN-13

978-1-159-04149-6

Barcode

9781159041496

Languages

value, value

Categories

LSN

1-159-04149-0



Trending On Loot