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HOHENSTAUFEN DYNASTY

Books about Hohenstaufen Dynasty :

Intellectual Life at the Court of Frederick II Hohenstaufen (Studies in the History of Art, 44)

The ruling house, or dynasty, of the Holy Roman Empire and Germany for more than 100 years was named Hohenstaufen (see Holy Roman Empire). More accurately, the name is Staufen, from the castle built by the family's founder, Count Frederick, in the Swabian Jura Mountains.
The dynasty ruled from 1138 until 1254 with the exception of the years 1208 to 1212. Frederick I (died 1105) married Agnes, the daughter of Emperor Henry IV. They had two sons, Frederick and Conrad, who became heirs of their uncle Henry V.
When Henry V died he was briefly succeeded by Lothair III. The Staufen family rebelled against Lothair, and on his death in 1137 Conrad became Conrad III, German king and Holy Roman emperor. Subsequent Hohenstaufen rulers were Frederick I Barbarossa (Holy Roman emperor 1155-90), Henry VI (Holy Roman emperor 1190-97), Philip of Swabia (king 1198-1208), Frederick II (king 1212-50, emperor from 1220), and Conrad IV (king 1237-54). The last illegitimate son of Frederick II, Enzio, died in 1272, and the Hohenstaufen line came to an end.

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