Frederick ii Sentence Examples

frederick ii
  • In November 1274 it was decided by the diet at Nuremberg that all crown estates seized since the death of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Louis accompanied the Crusaders to Damietta in 1221, and governed Germany as regent from 1225 until 1228, when he deserted Frederick II.

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  • He was attached to the Hohenstaufen by the marriage of his daughter, Elizabeth, with Conrad, son of Frederick II.

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  • The fruitless siege of Parma in 1248 was the last effort of Frederick II.

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  • The thirty years which elapsed between Frederick Barbarossas death in 1190 and the coronation of his grandson Frederick II.

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  • It was not, however, till late in the 12th century (1172-1176) that the city was surrounded with walls by order of the emperor Frederick I., to whom (in 1166) and to his grandson Frederick II.

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  • So far as there ever was a Sicilian nation at all, it might be said to be called into being by the emperor-king Frederick II.

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  • Such tenets were destructive not only of Catholicism but of Christianity of any kind and of civil society itself; and for this reason so unecclesiastical a person as the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Greeks; lastly, there are the Crusades waged by the papacy against revolted Christians - John of England and Frederick II.

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  • They show the lay aspect of the Third Crusade; they anticipate the Crusade of Frederick II.

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  • This was practically the aim of Richard I.'s negotiations; and this was what Frederick II.

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  • That, at any rate, was the view Frederick II.

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  • The 1 It may be argued that the Crusade against a revolted Christian like Frederick II.

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  • An opportune storm, however, gave the king an excuse for returning home, as Frederick II.

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  • The Secreta fidelium Crucis of Marino Sanudo, a history of the Crusades written by a Venetian noble between 1306 and 1321, is also of value, particularly for the Crusade of Frederick II.

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  • The pope and the emperor befriended this foundation; Frederick II.

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  • In 1202 he was again in Italy and published his great work, Liber abaci, which probably procured him access to the learned and refined court of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Dominicus had presented Leonardo to Frederick II.

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  • So serious indeed was the situation that Frederick II.

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  • From the 12th to the 14th century it was very frequently at war, and strongly supported the Guelph cause against Frederick II.

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  • A few years later he incurred the royal disfavour for gross malversation in the administration of public property, and failing to compromise matters with the king, fled to Germany and engaged in political intrigues with the adventurer Wilhelm von Grumbach (1503-1567) for the purpose of dethroning Frederick II.

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  • Dietrich married Jutta, daughter of Hermann I., landgrave of Thuringia, and was succeeded in 1221 by his infant son Henry, surnamed the Illustrious; who on arriving at maturity obtained as reward for supporting the emperor Frederick II.

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  • In 1211 Henry abdicated in favour of his son Henry, who died in 1214, when the Palatinate was given by the German king Frederick II.

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  • His later years were spent in strife with his son Frederick, and he died in 1230 at San Germano, whither he had gone to arrange the peace between the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Rudolph of Habsburg, elected king of the Romans in 1273, having come to terms with Pope Nicholas III., Charles was obliged in 1278 to give up his title of imperial vicar in Tuscany, which he had held during the interregnum following on the death of Frederick II.

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  • To prevent undergound intrigues, Bestuzhev now proposed the erection of a council of ministers, to settle all important affairs, and at its first session (14th-30th of March) an alliance with Austria, France and Poland against Frederick II.

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  • In June 1874 he was found guilty of a libel on Prince Bismarck, whom he had compared to Frederick II.

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  • In 1228 the Pisans met and defeated the united forces of Florence and Lucca near Barga in the Garfagnana, and at the same time they despatched fifty-two galleys to assist Frederick II.

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  • The pope had excommunicated Frederick II.

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  • An annual festival, with a procession of children, which is still held, is referred to an apocryphal siege of the town by the Hussites in 1432, but is probably connected with an incident in the brothers' war (1447-51), between the elector Frederick II.

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  • Padua has long been famous for its university, founded by Frederick II.

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  • He died at Mainau on the 28th of September 1907, and was succeeded by his son, the grand-duke Frederick II.

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  • Messina was the birthplace of Dicaearchus, the historian (c. 322 B.C.); Aristocles, the Peripatetic; Euhemerus, the rationalist (c. 316 B.C.); Stefano Protonotario, Mazzeo di Ricco and Tommaso di Sasso, poets of the court of Frederick II.

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  • In the struggle between church and empire it always held with the former; and it defied the forces of Frederick II.

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  • Fifty years later they were transferred by order of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • His, election was largely owing to the efforts of Adalbert, archbishop of Mainz, and the papal party, who disliked the candidature of Henry's nephew and heir, Frederick II.

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  • The Franconian branch of the Hohenzollerns was represented in 1227 by Conrad, burgrave of Nuremberg, whom the emperor Frederick II.

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  • The influence of the Swabian branch of the Hohenzollerns was weakened by several partitions of its lands; but early in the 16th century it rose to some eminence through Count Eitel Frederick II.

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  • The first, on the 3rd of May 1241, was fought between the fleet of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Champion of the papacy and in secret league with the Lombard cities he was able to defy the common enemy, Frederick II.

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  • In it stands a marble statue of the landgrave Frederick II.

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  • In 1762 Cassel was captured by the Germans from the French; after this the fortifications were dismantled and New Cassel was laid out by the landgrave Frederick II.

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  • Hardly had this contest been brought to an end favourable to the papacy (May 1235) when Gregory came into fresh conflict with Frederick II.

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  • He died on the 22nd of August 1241, while Frederick II.

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  • This Louis, who is celebrated in story, destroyed many robber-castles in Thuringia and died at Otranto while accompanying the emperor Frederick II.

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  • In 1242 Thuringia had been promised by Frederick II.

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  • By two of Frederick's sons it was divided into Hesse-Homburg and Hesse-Homburg-Bingenheim; but these parts were again united in 1681 under the rule of Frederick's third son, Frederick II.

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  • The lordship of Horn was a fief of the counts of Loon, and after 1361 of the bishop of Liege; but in 1450 it was raised to a countship by the Emperor Frederick II.

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  • Far from submitting to the papal breve, the ex-Jesuits, after some ineffectual attempts at direct resistance, withdrew into the territories of the free-thinking sovereigns of Russia and Prussia, Frederick II.

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  • In south Germany, inclusive of Austria and Bavaria, their annals since their restoration have been uneventful; but in north Germany, owing to the footing Frederick II.

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  • The barons, always chafing against the royal power, were encouraged to revolt by Pope Adrian IV., whose recognition William had not yet sought, by the Basileus Manuel and the emperor Frederick II.

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  • He did much to conciliate the enemies made by his predecessor Boniface VIII., notably France, the Colonnas and King Frederick II.

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  • The castle from which it takes its name, on the hill to the south of the town, was built by the emperor Frederick II.

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  • The Order of the Golden Lion was founded in 1770 by the landgrave Frederick II.

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  • The price he had to pay, however, was the occupation of Bavaria itself by Austrian troops; and, though the invasion of Bohemia in 1744 by Frederick II of Prussia enabled him to return to Munich, at his death on the 20th of January 1745 it was left to his successor to make what terms he could for the recovery of his dominions.

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  • In 1470 Albert, who had inherited Bayreuth on the death of his brother John in 1464, became elector of Brandenburg owing to the abdication of his remaining brother, the elector Frederick II.

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  • It was soon a place of importance; it became a free imperial city in 1209 and was surrounded with walls by order of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • He died in 1740, and within six months, when Frederick II.

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  • The traditional loyalty to the emperors, which was cemented by several marriages between the imperial house and the Babenbergs, was, however, departed from by the margrave Leopold II., and by Duke Frederick II.

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  • Very similar was the result of the conflict between the emperor Frederick Frederick II.

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  • The duchies of Austria and Styria were now claimed by the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Finding some support in Austria, Rudolph questioned the title of the Bohemian king to the three duchies, and sought to recover the imperial lands which had been in the possession of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Four generations only span the time from the birth of Count Roger, about 1030, to the death of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Yet more even than to felicitous circumstances, Denmark owed her short-lived greatness to the great statesmen and administrators whom Frederick II.

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  • Among works belonging to this period may be mentioned Thomas Carlyle, History of Frederick II.

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  • The old town on the left bank was founded by Frederick II.

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  • Its lords took advantage of the excommunication of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • Thus Fridank, for instance, in spite of his emphatic declaration that most pilgrims returned worse than they went, himself participated in the crusade of Frederick II.

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  • The other four crusades which took place from time to time down to 1272 are of no special importance, though there is a certain amount of interest in the fact that after the sixth crusade, in 1229, emperor Frederick II.

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  • To the south near the harbour is the massive Castell' Ursino, erected in 1232 by Frederick II.

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  • It was founded by the emperor Frederick II.

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  • It was the determination of Frederick II.

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  • The castle was built by Frederick II.

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  • It was raised to the status of a town and surrounded with walls by Wdlfelin, advocate (Landvogt) of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • The place of his burial is unknown, and the legend which says he still sits in a cavern in the Kyffhauser mountain in Thuringia waiting until the need of his country shall call him, is now thought to refer, at least in its earlier form, to his grandson, the emperor Frederick II.

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  • The town was specially favoured by the German monarchs, who frequently resided and held diets here, and in 1219 Frederick II.

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  • Here he received a demand from Frederick II.

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  • In 1307 the first attempt was made to combine the councils of K6lln and Berlin, but the experiment was abandoned four years later, and the two towns continued their separate existence till 1432, when the establishment of a common council for both led to disturbances of which the outcome was that Frederick II.

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  • Hypothecated by the emperor Frederick II.

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  • It afterwards joined the Lombard League; and the unsuccessful attack made by Frederick II.

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  • Durlach was bestowed by the emperor Frederick II.

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  • German princesbad fallen upon the new kingdom of Prussia and its sovereign Frederick II.

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  • English adventurers gave great trouble to the inhabitants in the 16th century, and the name of Magnus Heineson, a native of Stromb, who was sent by Frederick II.

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  • Rosa exhibits the embalmed body of that saint, a native of Viterbo, who died in her eighteenth year, after working various miracles and having distinguished herself by her invectives against Frederick II.

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  • The tradition that he was forced to flee from France along with other nominalists, and founded the university of Vienna in 1356, is unsupported and in contradiction to the fact that the university was founded by Frederick II.

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  • She managed also to keep out of the great quarrel between Frederick II.

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  • In 1755, the English having Years made a sudden attack upon the French at sea, and War, Frederick II.

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  • Nourished like Frederick II.

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  • The movement towards introducing Arabian science and philosophy into Europe, however, culminated under the patronage of the emperor Frederick II.

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  • It was at Teschen that Maria Theresa and Frederick II.

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  • On a tongue of land east of the town stands the castle of Kronberg or Kronenberg, a magnificent, solid and venerable Gothic structure built by Frederick II.

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  • Homburg consists of an old and a new town, the latter, founded by the landgrave of Hesse-Homburg Frederick II.

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  • The contemporary documents relating to the reign of Frederick II.

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  • The town, which stands upon a level plain, formerly had strong fortifications, of which only the citadel (Malmohus) remains; in it the earl of Bothwell was imprisoned by Frederick II.

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  • The town was a Saracen settlement, but a Lombard colony was introduced by Frederick II.

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  • It is not too much to say that the increased revenue derived from the appropriation of Church property, intelligently applied, gave Denmark the hegemony of the North during the latter part of Christian III.'s reign, the whole reign of Frederick II.

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