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  1. Albert I of Gorizia. Mother. Euphemia of Głogów. Albert II (died in 1327), [1] a member of the House of Gorizia ( Meinhardiner dynasty), ruled as governor of the County of Gorizia from 1323, on behalf of his nephew Count John Henry IV. He inherited from his father only the lands in the Puster Valley .

    • before 1275
    • Euphemia of Głogów
  2. Albert II (died in 1327), a member of the House of Gorizia (Meinhardiner dynasty), ruled as governor of the County of Gorizia from 1323, on behalf of his nephew Count John Henry IV. Albert II was a younger son of Count Albert I of Gorizia and his wife Euphemia, a daughter of the Silesian duke Konrad I of Głogów.

    • Gorizia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia
    • 1274
    • Friuli-Venezia Giulia
    • 1326 (51-53)
  3. Albert II was born at Habsburg Castle in Swabia, a younger son of King Albert I of Germany and his wife Elizabeth of Carinthia, [1] a member of the House of Gorizia ( Meinhardiner ). He initially prepared for an ecclesiastical career and, though still a minor, was elected Bishop of Passau in 1313.

    • History
    • Counts
    • See Also

    Gorizia

    Count Meinhard I, a descendant of the Meinhardiner noble family with possessions around Lienz in the Duchy of Bavaria, is mentioned as a count as early as 1117. As a vogt official of the Patriarchs of Aquileia, he was enfeoffed with large estates in the former March of Friuli, including the town of Gorizia. The borders of the county changed frequently in the following four centuries, due to frequent wars with Aquileia and other counties, but also to the subdivision of the territory in two mai...

    Gorizia-Tyrol

    Meinhard's descendant Count Meinhard III of Gorizia, a follower of the Hohenstaufen emperor Frederick II, upon the extinction of the ducal House of Babenberg was appointed administrator of Styria in 1248. He campaigned the adjacent Duchy of Carinthia but was defeated by the troops of Duke Bernhard von Spanheim and his son Archbishop Philip of Salzburg at Greifenburg in 1252. Nevertheless, the county reached the apex of its power, when Meinhard III inherited County of Tyrol (as Meinhard I) fro...

    Habsburg

    While the Lienz area was administered with the Tyrolean crown land, the "inner county" of Gorizia remained an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire ruled by the Inner Austrian Archdukes as part of the Austrian Circle, governed by a capitano. Its territory included the Isonzo Valley down to Aquileia, the area of Cormons and Duino, and the former Venetian fortress of Gradisca, which was conquered by Imperial troops in 1511. Monfalcone formed a Venetian exclave in the county from 1420 to 1797....

    Houses of Eppenstein and Siegharding

    1. Marquard (E) (fl. 1060/1074), Vogtof Aquileia 2. Meginhard (S) (died about 1090), from the House of Siegharding, Count in the Puster Valley 3. Henry I (E) (died after 1102), Vogt of Aquileia from 1082 3.1. Ulrich(E) (died 1122), brother

    House of Gorizia

    Line extinct, county inherited by the Habsburg king Maximilian I, Archduke of Austria.

    • Gorizian Denar
    • Latin
  4. Albert I of Gorizia. Albert I ( c. 1240 – 1 April 1304), a member of the House of Gorizia ( Meinhardiner dynasty), ruled the counties of Gorizia ( Görz) and Tyrol from 1258, jointly with his elder brother Meinhard IV. In 1271, the brothers divided their heritage and Albert became sole ruler of the Gorizia estates until his death.

    Ruler
    Born
    Reign
    Death
    ?
    1090-1122
    1122
    ?
    1122-1142
    1142
    ?
    1142-1150
    1150
    ?
    1150-1191
    1 April 1191
  5. Contents. Albert II. duke of Austria. Learn about this topic in these articles: contribution to coinage. In coin: Germany and central Europe. …until the 14th century, when Albert II (1330–58) introduced a gold florin of Florentine character.

  6. Brief Life History of Albert II. When Albert II von Gorizia was born in 1275, in Görz, Küstenland, Austria, his father, Albert I von Gorizia, was 35 and his mother, Euphemia Von Glogau, was 21. He married Euphemia Von Mätsch on 16 March 1299. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 2 daughters.