Charles 825 830 4 June 863 was the second son of Pepin I of Aquitaine and Engelberga. He lived at the court of his uncle Lothair I Lothair until 848, when, hearing of the deposition of his brother, he set out in March 849 with a band of followers to claim the Aquitainian realm. He was captured by Vivian, count of Maine at the Loire and sent to Charles the Bald . He was put in the monastery of Corbie as either a monk or a deacon. He escaped in 854 to recruit an army to fight for his brother. He had little success and fled to the court of Louis the German , who made him the Archbishopric of Mainz archbishop of Mainz and archchancellor on 8 March 856. He made a respectable bishop and died on 4 June 863 and was buried in St. Alban s Abbey, Mainz . Sources Dictionnaire de Biographie Fran aise . Roman d Amat and R. Limousin Lamothe ed . Paris , 1967. s start s bef before Rabanus Maurus s ttl title Archbishop of Mainz years 856&ndash 863 s aft after Liutbert, Archbishop of Mainz Liutbert end ahnentafel top width 100 ahnentafel compact5 style font size 90 line height 110 border 1 boxstyle padding top 0 padding bottom 0 boxstyle 1 background color fcc boxstyle 2 background color fb9 boxstyle 3 background color ffc boxstyle 4 background color bfc boxstyle 5 background color 9fe 1 1. Louis V of France 2 2. Pepin I of Aquitaine 3 3. Ingeltrude of Madrie 4 4. Louis the Pious 5 5. Ermengarde of Hesbaye 6 6. Theodobert of Madrie 7 8 8. Charlemagne 9 9. Hildegarde 10 10. Ingerman of Hesbaye 11 11. Hedwig of Bavaria 12 13 14 15 16 16. Pepin the Short 17 17. Bertrada of Laon 18 18. Gerold of Vintzgau 19 19. Emma of Alamannia 20 20. Rodbert 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 center ahnentafel bottom Carolingians footer Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Charles ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 863 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Charles Category Franks Category Frankish people Category Frankish bishops Category 9th century births ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Pilgrim died 25 August 1036 was the archbishop of Cologne 1021 1036 and archchancellor of Italy from 1031 in the Holy Roman Empire , a dignity he obtained for all his successors. His origins are not known with certainty, he either descends from the counts of Isengau or Margrave Aribo of Austria . He was a warrior prelate and accompanied both Emperors Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor Henry II and Conrad II, Holy Roman Emperor Conrad II on their expeditions to the Mezzogiorno , even being given command of a division of the imperial army on its march south through the Italian Peninsula in 1024. From 1016 to 1021, Pilgrim was provost religion provost in the Bamberg Cathedral Cathedral of Bamberg . On 29 June 1021, Henry II appointed him archbishop of Cologne and, on Easter 1028, he crowned Henry, son of Conrad II, Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor Henry III as king of Germany in Aachen . On the 1024 campaign, he travelled with his army along the western coast through the Papal States . Charged with arresting the abbot of Montecassino , Atenulf, and the prince of Capua , Pandulf IV of Capua Pandulf IV , he besieged Capua after bypassing the great Mediterranean abbey, which Atenulf had abandoned in haste. As Pandulf no longer had the loyalty of the populace and the Normans Norman mercenaries, the city gates were soon thrown open to the archbishop and Pandulf was forced to submit. Instead of immediately turning eastwards to Troia, Italy Troia , where the rest of the imperial host was massing, he turned to Salerno and began a siege. The fear he struck in the heart of the Duke of Naples , Sergius IV of Naples Sergius IV , caused him too to submit, without even the threat of a siege. After only a month besieging Salerno, he let up in exchange for hostages and joined the rest of Emperor Henry s army. The emperor almost executed Pandulf, but the archbishop intervened to save Pandulf s life. The subsequent siege was a failure and the armies returned to Germany ... more details
Raino , also Rayno , Ranulf , or Reginulf died after 1179 , was the last count of Tusculum from an unknown date when he was first associated with his elder brother, Jonathan of Tusculum Jonathan , to his own death. His father, Ptolemy II of Tusculum Ptolemy II , died in 1153. His mother was Bertha, illegitimate daughter of Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor . He appears first in 1147, mortgaging Castrum Algidi to Pope Eugene III for 200 pounds. Pope Adrian IV granted the fortress of Tusculum, which mortgage had bought from Oddo Frangipani , who in turn had purchased it from Oddo Colonna after Ptolemy was forced to mortgage it, to Jonathan in 1155. The Commune of Rome Senate of Rome , however, refused to ratify the grant of the fortress to the count. In 1167, Raino appears for the first time as sole count. Pope Alexander III tried at that time to dissuade the citizens from attacking Tusculum, but to no avail. Raino called in the aid of Rainald of Dassel , the archchancellor of Italy and archbishop of Cologne . Raino and Rainald were besieged by the Romans in the old fortress of Tusculum. Help was requested from Christian of Mainz Christian , archbishop of Mainz , then in Ancona . With 1,300 Germans and Brabantines and the men of Robert II of Bassunvilla , Christian encamped beside Monte Porzio outside the city. The Romans spurned all attempts at diplomatic resolution and marched an army of 40,000 on Tusculum. This was the largest army of Romans in many centuries to march into the field. The leader may have been Oddo Frangipani. The momentous Battle of Monte Porzio took place on May 29, 1167. The Romans were defeated and Tusculum preserved. In 1169, Raino traded Tusculum to the Prefect John for Monte Fiascone and S. Flaviano . When John left the city, Raino tried to reenter, but was refused by the citizens, who gave the city to the pope on 8 August 1170. In 1171, Raino finally renounced the city to the papacy. The last count of Tusculum was thus removed from his office and e ... more details
Emmanuel Maximilien Joseph Guidal 1764 1812 was a French people French general known for his role in the Malet coup of 1812 Malet Conspiracy which was aimed at toppling Napoleon I , who was away from Paris when the events of it occurred. Life Guidal was born on December 31, 1764. ref http www.napoleon series.org research frenchgenerals c frenchgenerals15.html ref He may have been the General Guidal who, using treachery, lured Chouan rebel Louis de Frott to Alen on, where the man was seized and executed. A supporter of the French Republic , Guidal disagreed with Napoleon I and, after conspiring with the United Kingdom British , ref http www.microsofttranslator.com bv.aspx?ref SERP&br ro&mkt en US&dl en&lp FR EN&a http 3a 2f 2fwww.histoire empire.org 2farticles 2fmalet 2fmalet.htm ref was incarcerated in La Force prison. During Malet coup of 1812 Malet s coup in 1812, Guidal was released from prison, along with General Victor Lahorie , by Claude Francois de Malet , a former general and leading conspirator in the coup. Guidal, with a detachment of National Guards, was to arrest Henri Clarke , the Minister of War, and Jean Jacques R gis de Cambac r s , the Archchancellor. Instead, Guidal accompanied Lahorie and participated in the arrest of Anne Jean Marie Ren Savary the Duke of Rovigo , the French police minister, who was a personal enemy of Guidal. ref http www.napoleonicsociety.com english scholarship98 c clarke.html ref The coup was eventually foiled, and, along with Malet and Lahorie, Guidal was tried by a council of war. The three generals were shot by a firing squad on October 29, 1812. References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Guidal, Emmanuel Maximilien Joseph ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION General known for his role in the Malet coup of 1812 DATE OF BIRTH 1764 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1812 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Guidal, Emmanuel Maximilien Joseph Category French generals Category French commanders of the Napoleonic W ... more details
in a bid to become Archchancellor Discworld Archchancellor . Trymon assassinates several faculty members but is thwarted by the incumbent Archchancellor, Galder Weatherwax, and his superior magical knowledge of the Octavo. Trymon knows there is no point in deposing the Archchancellor until he learns ..., the Archchancellor reveals his intention to use the Death Discworld Rite of AshkEnte Rite of AshkEnte ... Tower of Art and becomes Archchancellor in his place. The red star grows steadily larger, and the worried ... Archchancellor of the Unseen University. Nicolas Tennant as Librarian Discworld Head Librarian ... such as Trymon s murder of the Archchancellor were moved across the break for dramatic effect. The first ... more details
Italic title Infobox Discworld id 10th novel 2nd individual story Image moving pictures cover.jpg 185px center characters Victor Tugelbend br Theda Withel br Discworld characters Cut Me Own Throat Dibbler C.M.O.T. Dibbler br Unseen University Unseen University staff br Gaspode br Mustrum Ridcully locations Ankh Morpork br Holy Wood motifs Film Movie s and Hollywood, Los Angeles, California Hollywood the Cthulhu Mythos Atlantis year 1990 publisher Victor Gollancz Corgi ISBNH ISBN 0 575 04763 1 ISBNP ISBN 0 552 13463 5 awards notes Uncountable references to classic Hollywood, Los Angeles, California Hollywood movies and anecdotes. Moving Pictures is the name of the tenth Discworld novel by Terry Pratchett , published in 1990. ref Fantastic Fiction http www.fantasticfiction.co.uk p terry pratchett moving pictures.htm Moving Pictures Discworld, book 10 Terry Pratchett Retrieved 2009 05 9 ref The book takes place in Discworld world Discworld s most famous city, Ankh Morpork and a town called Holy Wood . It is the first Discworld novel to feature Mustrum Ridcully , Archchancellor of Unseen University , as a character. Plot introduction The Alchemy alchemists of the Discworld have invented moving pictures. Many hopefuls are drawn by the siren call of Holy Wood, home of the fledgling film clicks industry among them Victor Tugelbend Can t sing. Can t dance. Can handle a sword a little. , a dropout from Ankh Morpork s Unseen University and Theda Ginger Withel, a girl from a little town you never ever heard of , who become stars, and the Discworld s most infamous salesman, Discworld characters Cut Me Own Throat Dibbler Cut Me Own Throat Dibbler , who introduces commerce to the equation and becomes a successful producer. Meanwhile, it gradually becomes clear that the production of movies is having a deleterious effect on the structure of reality. Ginger is possessed by an unspecified entity and she and Victor find an ancient, hidden cinema, complete with portal to the Dungeon D ... more details
Prince Primate F rstprimas in German language German , hercegpr m s in Hungarian language Hungarian is a rare prince ly title held by individual prince archbishops of specific sees in a presiding capacity in an august assembly of mainly secular princes, notably the following Germany Confederation of the Rhine The Rheinbund or Confederation of the Rhine was founded in 1806 , when several German states seceded from the Holy Roman Empire and allied themselves with Emperor Napoleon I of France , who assumed the position of a protector title protector of the Confederation. Its highest office was held by Karl Theodor von Dalberg , first Archbishop of Mainz and then Bishop of Regensburg of Regensburg , who had been the first among the princes of the Holy Roman Empire and styled its Archchancellor , was given the first rank among the princes of the new Confederation and the title of F rstprimas , Prince Primate . As such he presided over the College of Kings and the Diet of the Confederation , a senate like assembly which never actually assembled. During his term as Prince Primate, Dalberg was Archbishop of Regensburg in Bavaria and at first F rst ruling Prince of Aschaffenburg . Since September 19, 1806 his territories included the former Reichsstadt and on February 16, 1810 Dalberg was promoted to the strictly secular rank of Grand Duchy of Frankfurt Grand Duke of Frankfurt , in chief of another former Reichsstadt on the lower Main river Main , enclaved in the electorate of Kurmainz , now in Hessen . At the same time, Napoleon appointed his stepson Eug ne de Beauharnais excluded from the French imperial succession as heir to the Grand Duchy. At the eve of the collapse of the Napoleonic Empire, Dalberg resigned his secular positions and Beauharnais succeeded him as Grand Duke, though this had no practical effect, as the dissolution of the Confederation carved up into a revised set of monarchies also rendered the position moot. Hungary In virtue of his dignity as Primate re ... more details
Blessed Gebhard of Salzburg about 1010 spaced ndash 15 June 1088 , also occasionally known as Gebhard of Helfenstein , was Archbishopric of Salzburg Archbishop of Salzburg from 1060 until his death. He was one of the fiercest opponents of King Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV during the Investiture Controversy . Image Hohensalzburg12.JPG right thumb 200px Hohensalzburg Castle Of Gebhard s origins, all that is known for certain is that he was born in the German stem duchy of Duke of Swabia Swabia . Although he appeared in a 17th century genealogy by Gabriel Bucelin as a scion of the comital House of Helfenstein , this lineage is entirely speculative. Gebhard assumedly studied in Paris , was ordained a priest at Salzburg in 1055 and became court chaplain to Emperor Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor Henry III . Then a loyal supporter of the Salian dynasty , he also travelled as an ambassador to the Byzantine Empire Byzantine court at Constantinople and held the office of an Imperial Archchancellor chancellor between 1057 and 1059. On 30 July 1060 he was consecrated bishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Salzburg Archdiocese of Salzburg . He reorganized the tithe s paid by the Carantanians Carantanian peasants and the parish system in Duchy of Carinthia Carinthia , where he in 1072 dissolved the double monastery of Gurk Abbey , founded by Hemma of Gurk Saint Hemma in 1043, and replaced it by the suffragan Roman Catholic Diocese of Gurk Diocese of Gurk . Gebhard also established Admont Abbey in 1074, vested with Hemma s estates in the Carinthian March of Styria . Besides this, he had the fortresses of Hohensalzburg Castle Hohensalzburg , Burg Hohenwerfen Hohenwerfen and Friesach built. Yet in 1075, Gebhard had backed the German king Henry IV struggling with the Great Saxon Revolt . In the following Investiture Controversy however, he was on the side of Pope Gregory VII . Like his friend Bishop Altmann of Passau he did not attend the 1076 Synod of Worms held by the ... more details
Other people2 Richardis given name Richardis given name Infobox saint name Saint Richardis birth date c. 840 death date 18 September, c. 895 feast day 18 September venerated in Roman Catholic Church imagesize caption birth place death place Andlau , Alsace titles Holy Roman Empress beatified date beatified place beatified by canonized date canonized place canonized by attributes dressed in Imperial robes with crown and palm, and surrounded by flames dressed as a nun, with crown laid aside, and burning pieces of wood, as well as a bear and a ploughshare patronage Andlau protection against fire major shrine Andlau Abbey suppressed date issues Saint Richardis , also known as Richgard and Richardis of Swabia c. 840 &ndash 18 September, between 894 and 896 , was the Holy Roman Empress as the wife of Charles the Fat . She was renowned for her piety. Life She was born in Alsace , the daughter of Erchanger, count of the Nordgau Alsace Nordgau , of the family of the Ahalolfinger . She married Charles in 862 and was crowned with him in Rome by Pope John VIII in 881. The marriage was childless. ref both Richardis and Charles stated in 887 under oath at the time of the charge of adultery that their marriage was unconsummated ref In the crisis of 887, in an effort to bring down the over powerful and hated Liutward , Charles archchancellor, he and Richardis were accused by Charles and his courtiers of adultery. She was put to the ordeal by fire , which she passed successfully. She then withdrew to Andlau Abbey , which she had founded on her ancestral lands in 880, and where her niece Rotrod was abbess. Richardis herself was previously lay abbess of religious houses at S ckingen Abbey S ckingen and Zurich . She died at Andlau on 18 September and was buried there. Cultus Richardis was later canonised by the Roman Catholic Church and her remains were translated in November 1049 by Pope Leo IX to a more impressive tomb in the newly rebuilt abbey church. The present tomb dates from 13 ... more details
cousin to Galder Weatherwax, a former Archchancellor of the Unseen University . As a young ..., but why go to that much trouble? During a duel with the Archchancellor of UU Equal Rites , Granny ... for the Archchancellor. In Wyrd Sisters she unleashed considerably explosive magic on a cart ... more details
Saint Willigis c. 940 February 23, 1011 was Archbishopric of Mainz Archbishop of Mainz from 975 until his death as well as a statesman of the Holy Roman Empire . Life Born at Sch ningen in Duchy of Saxony Saxony , the able and intelligent Willigis received a good education, and was recommended by Bishop Volkold of Meissen Volkold of Roman Catholic Diocese of Dresden Meissen Meissen to the service of Emperor Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor Otto I . From 971 onwards, Willigis held the office of a Chancellor and Emperor Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor Otto II in 975 made him Archbishop of Mainz and Archchancellor for Kingdom of Germany Germany . Soon he started to build the great Mainz Cathedral Cathedral of Mainz . Willigis demanded solid learning in his clergy too. He was known as a good and fluent speaker. In March 975 he received the pallium from Pope Benedict VII . In January 976 Willigis probably consecrated the first Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Prague Bishop of Prague , D tmar Thietmar D tmar at Brumath in Alsace, whose diocese was put under his jurisdiction. At the 983 Reichstag Holy Roman Empire Reichstag of Verona , Otto II vested him with large territories in the Rheingau region, thereby laying the foundations for the Mainz Electorate. Upon the Emperor s death, Willigis as Primas Germaniae , on Christmas 983 crowned his three year old son Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor Otto III King of the Romans Rex Romanorum at Aachen . After the Dowager Empress Theophanu had died in 991, Willigis became guardian of the minor, thus making him, together with Otto s grandmother Adelaide of Italy , de facto regent of the Empire until Otto III reached his majority in 994. In 996 he was in the retinue of the king on his journey to Italy, together with Otto III he pushed the election of Pope Gregory V against the resistance of the Rome Roman nobility led by Crescentius the Younger and was present at the consecration and at the synod convened a few days later. In this council Willigis str ... more details
Image Friedrich Carl von Erthal.jpg right thumb Friedrich Karl Joseph Reichsfreiherr von Erthal, painting by Georg Anton Abraham Urlaub , 1786 Friedrich Karl Joseph Reichsfreiherr von Erthal 3 January 1719 25 July 1802 was prince elector and Archbishopric of Mainz archbishop of Mainz from 18 July 1774 to 4 July 1802, shortly before the end of the archbishopric in the Reichsdeputationshauptschluss . ref CathEncy url http www.newadvent.org cathen 05526a.htm title Friedrich Karl Joseph, Freiherr von Erthal ref Erthal was born in Lohr am Main . His younger brother, Franz Ludwig von Erthal , was the Prince Bishop prince bishop of Diocese of W rzburg W rzburg and Diocese of Bamberg Bamberg . Election Erthal s predecessor, archbishop Emmerich Joseph von Breidbach zu B rresheim , had introduced some ideas of the Age of Enlightenment Enlightenment , and had been a popular figure. After his death, the Chapter religion Domkapitel was split in two fractions, one representing the openness to reform of the Enlightenment, the larger one advocating immediate restoration . Directly after the death of archbishop Emmerich Joseph, Friedrich von Erthal, then Domkustos , was charged with reducing the influence of the Enlightenment in the schools and monasteries of the archbishopric. After his election on 18 July 1774, and his election as Bishopric of Worms Bishop of Worms , he assigned many opponents of the Enlightenment to important positions. Both the papal nuncio and the emperor Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II had expected Erthal s election to improve relationships with the Archbishopric. However, Erthal, in his position as Archchancellor wanted to have an important role in the politics of the Holy Roman Empire himself, opposing the dynastical tendencies of the Emperor. In 1785, he even joined the Prussian led mostly Protestant F rstenbund , a coalition of princes organized to oppose Joseph s scheme to exchange Bavaria for Belgium. Relationship to the Enlightenment Erthal did ... more details
Conrad of Wittelsbach ca. 1120 1125 25 October 1200 was the Archbishop of Mainz as Conrad I and Archchancellor of Germany from 20 June 1161 to 1165 and again from 1183 to his death. He was also a Cardinal Catholicism cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church . The son of Otto IV, Count of Wittelsbach , and brother of Otto I Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria Otto I of Bavaria , he studied in Salzburg and Paris . At the Council of Lodi in 1161, Frederick Barbarossa appointed him archbishop of Mainz to end a schism between Rudolf of Z hringen and Christian I, Archbishop of Mainz Christian von Buch in that see. At that same council, Barbarossa appointed Antipope Victor IV 1159 1164 Victor IV antipope in opposition to Pope Alexander III . After Victor s death in 1164, Rainald of Dassel , the archbishop of Cologne , chose as antipope Antipope Paschal III Paschal III at Lucca . Conrad refused to support the new antipope and consequently fell out with Barbarossa. He fled to France and then Rome in 1165 and his see was bestowed on Christian von Buch, though Alexander III still recognised him as legal archbishop. On 18 December, the pope made him cardinal priest of San Marcello al Corso and then cardinal bishop of Sabina . The pope later created him bishop of Sora, Lazio Sora in Campania . Conrad fled before Christian took Rome with an imperial army. By the Treaty of Venice of 1177, the pope was constrained to recognised Christian as the legitimate archbishop of Mainz, but Conrad was compensated with the archdiocese of Salzburg as Conrad III . Conrad never, however, ceased to regard himself as anything but the rightful archbishop of Mainz. When Christian died in 1183, Conrad could again assume his archiepiscopal responsibilities in that city, which, in 1160, had been deprived by the emperor of its charter for the murder of the archbishop Arnold of Selenhofen . The fortifications had then been levelled, but Conrad rebuilt them and renovated Mainz Cathedral . In April or May 1187, at the Diet ... more details
Unreferenced date January 2007 Image Trier Balduinbrunnen Balduin von Luxemburg.jpg thumb Baldwin in the Balduinbrunnen, Trier. Baldwin of Luxembourg c. 1285 &ndash 21 January 1354 was the Archbishop of Trier Archbishop Electorate of Trier Elector of Trier and Archchancellor of Kingdom of Burgundy Burgundy from 1307 to his death. From 1328 to 1336, he was the diocesan administrator of the archdiocese of Mainz and from 1331 to 1337 with interruptions of those of Bishopric of Worms Worms and Bishopric of Speyer Speyer . He was one of the most important German prelates of his age. Born in Luxembourg to the count Henry VI of Luxembourg Henry VI , he was intended for an ecclesiastic career at an early age. He studied theology and canon law at the University of Paris , for his family was on good terms with the House of Capet Capetian court of Kingdom of France France . He was only twenty two years of age when elected Archbishop of Trier in 1307. In 1308, he was consecrated bishop by Pope Clement V in Poitiers . He quickly became one of the most influential princes in Germany, influencing the election that year of his brother Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII as King of Germany King and Holy Roman Emperor . From 1310 to 1313, Baldwin accompanied Henry in Regnum Italicum Italy , where he was crowned emperor in Rome on 29 June 1312. In the election which followed Henry s early death the next year, Baldwin lent his support to Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor Louis the Bavarian . He later repudiated the Bavarian, however, and moved to support his great nephew Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV in 1346. He was Charles s greatest supporter in the west of the realm. From 1324 to 1326, he was one of the four lords in the Four Lords War against Metz . In 1328, he was lured into Starkenburg castle on the Moselle by Loretta von Sponheim . He was only released after a ransom was paid and concessions made. Likewise in that year, he was put forward by his own cathedral chapter ... more details
Infobox German location Wappen Wappen Kleinkahl.png lat deg 50 lat min 7 lon deg 9 lon min 16 Lageplan Kleinkahl in AB.svg Bundesland Bayern Regierungsbezirk Unterfranken Landkreis Aschaffenburg Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Sch llkrippen H he 242 Fl che 11.86 Einwohner 1880 Stand 2006 12 31 PLZ 63828 Vorwahl 06024 Kfz AB Gemeindeschl ssel 09 6 71 135 Gliederung 5 Ortsteil e Adresse Marktplatz 1 br 63825 Sch llkrippen Website http www.gemeinde kleinkahl.de www.gemeinde kleinkahl.de B rgermeister Angelika Krebs Partei Kleinkahl is a community in the Aschaffenburg district Aschaffenburg district in the Regierungsbezirk of Lower Franconia Unterfranken in Bavaria , Germany , and a member of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Administrative Community of Sch llkrippen. Geography Location Kleinkahl lies in the Bavarian Lower Main Bayerischer Untermain . The community has the following Gemarkungen traditional rural cadastral areas Edelbach, Gro kahl, Gro laudenbach, Kleinkahl, Kleinlaudenbach, Bamberger M hle. History Part of the current municipal area lay within the Archbishopric of Mainz and in 1803, on orders given by the Archchancellor of Dalberg, it was Secularization secularized . The rest lay within Krombach over which the Counts of Sch nborn held sway and passed with mediatization in 1806 to the Principality of Aschaffenburg , with which it passed in 1814 to Bavaria. In the course of administrative reform in Bavaria, the current community came into being with the Gemeindeedikt Municipal Edict of 1818. Population development Within the municipal area, there were 1,608 inhabitants in 1970, 1,582 in 1987 and 1,842 in 2000. Politics Community council The council is made up of 13 council members, counting the parttime mayor. border 0 cellpadding 2 cellspacing 0 width 60 bgcolor eeeeee align center Christian Social Union of Bavaria CSU W hlergemeinschaft Total align center 2002 13 13 seats as at municipal election held on 3 March 2008 Coat of arms The community s Coat of arms arms mig ... more details
of War, and Archchancellor Jean Jacques R gis de Cambac r s Cambac r s Duke of Parma . Guidal ... as incompetent. ref name NapSoc One of Clarke s first actions was to inform Archchancellor Cambac r s ... more details
Italic title Unreferenced date March 2009 All plot date March 2009 In universe subject Discworld category Discworld date October 2009 Infobox Discworld novel id 17th novel 5th Rincewind story Image Interesting times cover.jpg 185px center characters Rincewind br Twoflower br The Luggage br Cohen the Barbarian locations Agatean Empire motifs Imperial era of Chinese history Imperial China , Communism year 1994 publisher Victor Gollancz ISBNH ISBN 0 575 05800 5 ISBNP ISBN 0 552 14235 2 awards notes 93rd in the Big Read Interesting Times is the seventeenth novel in the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett . The opening lines explain that the title refers to the phrase may you live in interesting times . Plot summary The events of the novel are a game between the Discworld gods Fate and The Lady Luck with the Discworld world Discworld as their game board. This novel marks Rincewind s reappearance on the Discworld world Discworld after the events of Eric novel Eric . The Havelock Vetinari Patrician of Ankh Morpork is sent a letter from the Agatean Empire on the Counterweight Continent commanding him to send us the Great Wizzard . The wizards of Unseen University , after some discussion, eventually realise the spelling of Wizzard can refer to only one man Rincewind . After using Hex Discworld Hex to assist in performing a spell to summon Rincewind, Archchancellor Ridcully convinces him to go to the Agatean Empire and speak to whoever sent the message. A second summoning spell is used, which exchanges the position of Rincewind with that of a live cannon. As usual, The Luggage is not far behind Rincewind, following him across the continents to its homeland. However, once there it gets the impression that Rincewind has relinquished ownership, and therefore the two are separated for a large portion of the book as The Luggage explores the land. Upon his arrival on the Counterweight Continent, Rincewind is reunited with a companion of his previous adventures, Cohen the Barbarian ... more details
Rainald of Dassel c. 1120 &ndash 14 August 1167 near Rome was archbishop of Cologne from 1159 to 1167 and archchancellor of Italy . He was preceded as archbishop by Friedrich II of Berg and succeeded by Philip I von Heinsberg . A younger son of a rich Saxony Saxon count, Reinold I of Dassel Reinold I , Count of Dassel , and destined as such to be an ecclesiastic, he was sent to the cathedral school at Hildesheim in 1146, where he started working as subdeacon . At a later date he probably went to Paris, France Paris . As early as 1130 he is said to have had a high reputation for classical learning, and to have been a member of the cathedral chapter of Hildesheim. According to documentary evidence he was provost in 1148, and in 1154 received the provost religion provostship of Petersberg at Goslar and of St. Moritz at Hildesheim. Soon after 1154 he was also provost of the cathedral chapter at M nster but declined the See of Hildesheim . In 1148, he attended the Council of Rheims 1148 Council of Rheims where he opposed a canon concerned with clerical dress. ref cite journal author Haring, Nicholas title Notes on the Council and the Consistory of Rheims 1148 journal Mediaeval Studies volume XXVIII year 1966 pages 39 59 ref As a member of the embassy sent by Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I in 1153 to Pope Eugene III at Rome he first revealed his political ability, and in 1156 the emperor appointed him chancellor of the empire. The Diet of Besan on October 1157 left no doubt as to the drift of his policy. He inaugurated a Germany German policy which insisted upon the rights and the power of the German kings, the strengthening of the Catholic Church in the German Empire, the lordship of Italy , and the humiliation of the papacy . Full of life, at times rough and blunt and again careful and calculating, Rainald, who, in spite of his ecclesiastical dignities, knew how to wield the sword, henceforth influenced the policy of his imperial masters. Though he did not ... more details