Bavaria | St. Louis | St. Louis Cardinals | Duke University | Louis Armstrong | Duke Ellington | Louis Vuitton | Robert Louis Stevenson | Duke | Louis XIV of France | Duke of Wellington | St. Louis County, Minnesota | Joe Louis | Prince William, Duke of Cambridge | Louis IX of France | Louis Pasteur | Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma | Duke of York | Saint Louis University | Washington University in St. Louis | Jacques-Louis David | Louis XIII of France | Ludwig I of Bavaria | Louis XV of France | St. Louis Rams | Duke of Norfolk | Saint Louis | Louis XVI of France | Louis Agassiz | Duke of Edinburgh |
He was defeated at Novara by Raginpert and exiled during the subsequent war over the succession, fleeing to the court of Theudebert, duke of Bavaria, in 702.
Subsequently, he participated in all the campaigns in Flanders directed by Philippe le Bel and his son Louis X (in 1303, 1304, 1313 and 1315).
Certain kings were unable to reduce their importance (Louis X, Philip VI, John II, Charles VI), while others were more successful (Charles V, Louis XI, Francis I).
Hermann I, died probably in 1082, Count of Calvelage; after 1070 he married Ethelinde von Northeim, daughter of Otto of Northeim, 1061-1070 Duke of Bavaria, after he had been deposed and his daughter had been repudiated by his son-in-law and successor, Welf I, Duke of Bavaria 1070-1101 (Welf).
Louis was born in Creuzburg to Hermann I, Landgrave of Thuringia, and Duchess Sophia, a daughter of Otto of Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria.
title=Duke of Bavaria-Landshut|
Louis X (German: Ludwig X, Herzog von Bayern), (Grünwald, 18 September 1495 – 22 April 1545 in Landshut) was Duke of Bavaria (1516–1545), together with his older brother William IV, Duke of Bavaria.
Erlanger appears on the Robert Palmer-produced Fat Possum Records album by CeDell Davis entitled Feel Like Doin' Something Wrong (1994).
Druon describes her as the poisoner of Louis X and his baby child, to be later poisoned the same way by her female slave, who originally helped with the King's poisoning.
Notable cases of the application of this maxim include John I of France, the short-lived posthumous son of King Louis X, who inherited the throne in utero and, once born, reigned for the five days of his life.