Emperor | Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick the Great | Wilhelm II, German Emperor | Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick | Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor | Roman Emperor | Frederick II | Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick Russell Burnham | Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts | Frederick Law Olmsted | Emperor of Japan | emperor | Roman emperor | Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick Forsyth | Frederick Douglass | Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor | Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor | Frederick, Maryland | Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor | Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor | William I, German Emperor | Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany | Frederick III | Frederick I | Frederick Delius | Hongwu Emperor |
This work is written in a southern Italian dialect, with several continental influences: it represents a parody of the themes of the contemporary Troubador poetry of Provence, as well as of the language used in the "Magna Curia" of literates and scholars at the court of Emperor Frederick II at the time.
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.
In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries it was at constant war with the neighbouring cities, especially with Camerino, and always supported the cause of the emperors, particularly of Emperor Frederick II.
The name of the castle appears to come from the name of the castle founder Heinrich von Kalden also known as Bappenheim or Pappenheim, who was the Reichshofmarschall or Marshal of the Empire under Emperor Frederick II.
The War of the Lombards (1228–1242) was a civil war in the Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Kingdom of Cyprus between the "Lombards" (also called the imperialists), the representatives of the Emperor Frederick II, largely from Lombardy, and the native aristocracy, led first by the Ibelins and then by the Montforts.
In 1215 when the Emperor Frederick II sought to make his power effective in the Kingdom of Burgundy, he granted to William at Metz the whole "Kingdom of Arles and Vienne", probably referring to the viceroyalty of the kingdom.
Blanche then joined with Emperor Frederick II to besiege the castle of Amance.