Ladislaus The Posthumous - Ancestors

Ancestors

Ancestors of Ladislaus the Posthumous
16. Albert II, Duke of Austria
8. Albert III, Duke of Austria
17. Joanna of Pfirt
4. Albert IV, Duke of Austria
18. Frederick V, Burgrave of Nuremberg
9. Beatrix of Nuremberg
19. Elisabeth of Meissen
2. Albert II, King of the Romans
20. Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor
10. Albert I, Duke of Bavaria
21. Margaret II, Countess of Hainault
5. Joanna Sophia of Bavaria
22. Louis I, Duke of Brieg
11. Margaret of Brieg
23. Agnes of Sagan
1. Ladislaus the Posthumous
24. John, Count of Luxembourg and King of Bohemia
12. Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor
25. Elisabeth of Bohemia, Princess of Přemyslid
6. Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor
26. Bogislaw V, Duke of Pomerania
13. Elizabeth of Pomerania
27. Elisabeth of Poland
3. Elisabeth of Luxembourg
28. Hermann I, Count of Cilli
14. Hermann II, Princely Count of Celje
29. Catherine of Bosnia
7. Barbara of Cilli
30. Henry VII, Count of Schaunberg
15. Anna of Schaunberg
31. Ursula of Görz

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Famous quotes containing the word ancestors:

    I stand here tonight to say that we have never known defeat; we have never been vanquished. We have not always reached the goal toward which we have striven, but in the hour of our greatest disappointment we could always point to our battlefield and say: “There we fought our good fight, there we defended the principles for which our ancestors and yours laid down their lives; there is our battlefield for justice, equality and freedom. Where is yours?”
    Anna Howard Shaw (1847–1919)

    Even though fathers, grandparents, siblings, memories of ancestors are important agents of socialization, our society focuses on the attributes and characteristics of mothers and teachers and gives them the ultimate responsibility for the child’s life chances.
    Sara Lawrence Lightfoot (20th century)

    Rights! There are no rights whatever without corresponding duties. Look at the history of the growth of our constitution, and you will see that our ancestors never upon any occasion stated, as a ground for claiming any of their privileges, an abstract right inherent in themselves; you will nowhere in our parliamentary records find the miserable sophism of the Rights of Man.
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772–1834)