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・ Eberhard Gläser
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Eberhard I, Count of Württemberg
・ Eberhard I, Duke of Württemberg
・ Eberhard II
・ Eberhard II von der Mark
・ Eberhard II, Count of the Mark
・ Eberhard II, Count of Württemberg
・ Eberhard II, Duke of Württemberg
・ Eberhard III, Count of Württemberg
・ Eberhard III, Duke of Württemberg
・ Eberhard Isbrand Ides
・ Eberhard IV of Nordgau
・ Eberhard IV, Count of Württemberg
・ Eberhard Janotta
・ Eberhard Junkersdorf
・ Eberhard Jäckel


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Eberhard I, Count of Württemberg : ウィキペディア英語版
Eberhard I, Count of Württemberg

Eberhard I (13 March 1265, Stuttgart - 5 June 1325, Stuttgart) was Count of Württemberg from 1279 until his death. He was nicknamed 'der Erlauchte' or the Illustrious Highness.
== Life ==
Eberhard's half-brother and predecessor Ulrich II and took office at the age of about eleven years. It is generally assumed that he stood under the guardianship and regency of Count Hartmann I of Grüningen. Ulrich II died in 1279 and his guardian Hartmann in 1280, allowing Eberhard to exercise unrestricted reign of the County of Württemberg from 1280.
His father, Ulrich I, had extended the Württemberg territory and the anti-king Henry Raspe IV had legitimized his conquests. However, when Rudolph I was elected Emperor, these territories had to be returned to the Empire. Rudolph created bailiwicks to administer the reclaimed imperial territories. He appointed his brother-in-law Albrecht II, Count of Hohenberg-Rotenburg. as Vogt of the new bailiwick of Lower Swabia. Rudolph's aim was to re-establish the Duchy of Swabia, which had been leaderless after the execution in 1268 of Conradin, the last member of the Hohenstaufen dynasty. To this end, he appointed his young son Rudolph II as Duke of Swabia. Eberhard resisted these measures. Despite being weaker, he managed exploit the situation after Rudolph's death in 1291 and achieve military successes against Albrecht of Hohenberg-Rotenburg.
Rudolph's successor Adolph of Nassau, did not try to extend his power base into Swabia. After Adolph was overthrown in 1298, Eberhard promised to support his successor Albert I, the oldest son of Rudolph of Habsburg. In return, Albert appointed him Vogt of Lower Swabia. Eberhard used this position to safeguard his territorial claims. It wasn't until 1305 that he again came into military conflict with Albrecht.
Eberhard supported the Bohemian nobility in their struggle against Albert I and his successor Henry VII. Imperial Vogt Konrad IV von Weinberg, who acted on the orders of Henry VII, declared war on Eberhard, causing much distress in Württemberg. Württemberg was saved from defeat by the death of Henry VII on 24 August 1313 and the election in 1314 of Louis IV as King of the Germans and of Frederick the Fair as anti-king. By maneuvering tactically between the king and the anti-king, Eberhard managed to offset his territorial losses and even gain some more territories. His participation in the war in Bohemia brought in additional funding, which he used to purchase land and towns in Swabia from impoverished noble families, for example, the Count Palatine of Tübingen.
Eberhard I made Stuttgart the capital of Württemberg. He died in 1325 and was buried in the Stiftskirche in Stuttgart.

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