X-Nico

unusual facts about Emperor Maximilian I



Dmitry Gerasimov

These languages he put to extensive use in his translations of religious texts (including Hieronymus' comments on the Vulgate, commentary on the Psalter compiled by Bruno of Würzburg, and some tracts aimed at combating the Sect of Skhariya the Jew), and as an interpreter on Muscovite embassies to Emperor Maximilian I, Prussia, Sweden and Denmark.

Frantz Jehin-Prume

In 1864 Jehin-Prume came to Mexico at the invitation of Emperor Maximilian I.

Pole baronets

Born Charles Van Notten, he was the son of Charles Van Notten, a merchant, of Amsterdam and London, (who was a descendant of Charles Van-Notten, who was created Lord of Ath and Van der Notten by Emperor Charles V, only son of Henry Van Notten, who was ennobled by Emperor Maximilian I in 1499).


see also

France–Mexico relations

In 1867, Emperor Maximilian I was captured and executed in Querétaro thus ending the Second Mexican Empire.

Portrait of Emperor Maximilian I

In the Spring of 1512, the newly elected emperor Maximilian I of Habsburg sojourned in Nuremberg, where he got acquainted with Dürer.

Reichspfennig

Common Penny, or Reichspfennig, an imperial tax agreed at the Diet of Worms in 1495 under Emperor Maximilian I

Treaty of Blois

Treaty of Blois (1509) (3rd Treaty of Blois), of December 12, 1509, an alliance between Ferdinand II of Aragon (and now regent of Castile), Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and King Louis XII of France in the War of the League of Cambrai in northern Italy.