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  1. Frederick III was the longest-reigning emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, ruling for 53 years. He is also famous for his device composed of the letter sequence ‘AEIOU’, although it has never been conclusively decoded. Frederick was born in 1415 to Ernest ‘the Iron’ and Cymburgis of Masovia. His father died when Frederick was only nine ...

  2. Frederick (III) (born c. 1286—died Jan. 13, 1330, Gutenstein, Austria) was a German king from 1314 to 1326, also duke of Austria (as Frederick III) from 1308, the second son of the German king Albert I. After his father’s murder (1308) Frederick became the head of the House of Habsburg and duke of Austria but did not succeed him as king ...

  3. Frederick William III ( German: Friedrich Wilhelm III.; 3 August 1770 – 7 June 1840) was King of Prussia from 16 November 1797 until his death in 1840. He was concurrently Elector of Brandenburg in the Holy Roman Empire until 6 August 1806, when the empire was dissolved. Frederick William III ruled Prussia during the times of the Napoleonic Wars.

  4. The Kaiser Friedrich III equestrian statue is on the west bank of the Rhine at the Hohenzollernbrücke bridge. Friedrich III (1831 – 1888) was the German emperor and king of Prussia for 99 days.

  5. Walter Fellmann: Sachsens letzter König, Friedrich August III., Berlin 1992; Die Albertinischen Wettiner, Geschichte des sächsischen Königshauses 1763/1932, Albert Prinz von Sachsen/ Herzog zu Sachsen, Gräfelfing 1995; Albert Herzog zu Sachsen: Die Wettiner in Lebensbildern. Styria-Verlag Graz/Wien/Köln 1995, ISBN 3-222-12301-2

  6. Photograph of Emperor Frederick III of Germany. Photographed September 1, 1887 at Buckingham Palace, in the room occupied by H.I.M 35 years ago, and before his marriage with the Princess Royal of England. This photograph has been signed Frederick IR 1888 and shows him seated and writing with a quill pen.

  7. Article Friedrich III., Kaiser Friedrich III. Tagebücher 1866–1888. Hrsg. u. bearb. v. Winfried Baumgart. Red. Mathias Friedel. Paderborn/München/Wien, Schöningh 2012 was published on April 1, 2013 in the journal Historische Zeitschrift (volume 296, issue 2).