| Home Surname List Name Index Sources | Sixth Generation9. He was the son of Friedrich V. von Nürnberg and Elisabeth von Meißen. He married Elisabeth von Bayern-Landshut, who bore him ten children." Life Sketch: "Frederick was born in Nuremberg, the second-born son of Burgrave Frederick V (1333–1398) and the Wettin princess Elisabeth of Meissen. He entered early into the service of his brother-in-law, the Habsburg duke Albert III of Austria. After Albert's death in 1395, he fought on the side of the Luxembourg king Sigismund of Hungary against invading Ottoman forces. He and his elder brother John, husband of Sigismund's sister Margaret of Bohemia, fought in the 1396 Battle of Nicopolis where they suffered a disastrous defeat. After Frederick returned to Nuremberg, he divided the Franconian inheritance from his father with his brother John, who received the Principality of Bayreuth, while Frederick kept the Principality of Ansbach; the brothers ruled jointly in the Burgraviate of Nuremberg. At first Frederick tried to mediate in the imperial confusion between Sigismund's elder half-brother, the German king Wenceslaus, and the party of Elector Rupert III of the Palatinate, but from September 1399 he fought on the side of Rupert, husband of his sister Elizabeth, nonetheless. Wenceslaus was eventually deposed and Rupert elected King of the Romans on 21 August 1400. At the Council of Constance (30 April 1415) Sigismund granted Frederick the titles of Margrave and Prince-elector of Brandenburg. On 21 October 1415 the Brandenburg states meeting in a Landtag asked him to rule in Berlin. The king awarded him the formal enfeoffment of the margravate on 18 April 1417. As Frederick did not agree with the forcible action of Sigismund against the Hussites, relations between them cooled. Constant feuding with the nobility of Brandenburg led Frederick to withdraw to his castle at Cadolzburg in 1425 and transfer the regency of the mark to his son John in 1426 (Frederick, however, remained elector). After 1427 he organized the imperial war against the Hussites. He is best known for joining the papal legate Julian Cesarini in August 1431 to attack the Hussites in the disastrous Battle of Domažlice. He subsequently provided substantial assistance in the mediation of the Compacta of Prague at the Council of Basel (30 November 1433). Upon his death in 1440, Frederick was succeeded as elector by his second-eldest son, Frederick II." He was buried in Heilsbronn, Kreis Ansbach, Bayern (Bavaria) Province, Germania.3 Friedrich I VON BRANDENBURG Burgrave of Nuremberg (+) and Elisabeth "Beautiful Beth" VON BAYERN-LANDSHUT (+) were married on 18 September 1401.1,3 Friedrich I VON BRANDENBURG Burgrave of Nuremberg (+) and Elisabeth "Beautiful Beth" VON BAYERN-LANDSHUT (+) had the following children:
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