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The March of Austria, also known as Marcha Orientalis, was first formed in 976 out of the lands that had once been the March of Pannonia in Carolingian times. The oldest attestation dates back to 996, where the written name "ostarrichi" occurs in a document transferring land in present-day Austria to a Bavarian monastery.
Austrian royalty and nobility with disabilities (14 P) Austrian royal houses (1 C) A. Austrian consorts (1 C, 56 P) B. Biographical films about Austrian royalty (19 P) C.
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Austrian royalty (14 C, 2 P) S. Silesian nobility (8 C, 72 P) Slovak nobility (10 P) U. Austrian untitled nobility (68 P) Pages in category "Austrian nobility"
The princely title was the most prestigious of the Austrian nobility, usually borne by heads of families whose cadets were generally counts/countesses, although in some mediatized princely families (Reichsfürsten) members were allowed to bear the same title as cadets of royalty: prince/princess (Prinz/Prinzessin) with the style of Serene Highness.
Austria portal Princes of Austria . It should be noted that non-ruling male members of the Austrian branch of the House of Habsburg and its successor the House of Habsburg-Lorraine usually held the higher title of Archduke , so there is no subcategory for that title.
The Austrian princely title was the most prestigious title of the Austrian nobility, forming the higher nobility (hoher Adel) alongside the counts . This close inner circle, called the 100 Familien (100 families), possessed enormous riches and lands.
This is a list of the Austrian empresses, archduchesses, duchesses and margravines, wives of the rulers of Austria. The monarchy in Austria was abolished at the end of the First World War in 1918. The different titles lasted just a little under a millennium, 976 to 1918.