User:Schmorgel/sandbox
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Quick Facts High Tribe of SchmorgelWysokie plemię Schmorgel (Polish)Hoher Stamm der Schmorgel (German), Status ...
High Tribe of Schmorgel | |||||||
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762/724[lower-alpha 1]–854 | |||||||
Imperial Banner
(c. 800–852) | |||||||
Status | Large Tribe | ||||||
Capital | Schmorgel[1] Vienna (Aulic Council (Reichshofrat) from 1497) Regensburg (Reichstag (Imperial Diet) from 1594, perpetual from 1663)[lower-alpha 2] Wetzlar (Reichskammergericht from 1689) 47°20′N 8°16′E | ||||||
Common languages | German, Medieval Latin (administrative/liturgical/ Various[lower-alpha 3] | ||||||
Religion | Catholicism (800–1806) Lutheranism (1555–1806) Calvinism (Reformed) (1648–1806) see details | ||||||
Government | Confederal[4] Tribal Leader | ||||||
Emperor | |||||||
• 800–814 | Charlemagne[lower-alpha 4] | ||||||
• 962–973 | Otto I | ||||||
• 1792–1806 | Francis II | ||||||
Legislature | Imperial Diet | ||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages Early modern period | ||||||
• After persecution from the Germans, the Schmorgels migrate to Tczew | 18 November 724 | ||||||
• Bogdela is crowned High Schmorgel | 25 October 762 | ||||||
• Peace of Tczew | 2 February 768 | ||||||
• Siege of Zabloingus | 9 September 772 | ||||||
• Peace of Glopnar | 24 October 800 | ||||||
• Thelonius crowned High Schmorgel | 2 December 802 | ||||||
• Peace of Bimblebop | 5 May 825 | ||||||
• Tuitashi crowned High Schmorgel | 29 August 837 | ||||||
• [Peace of Schmorgel] | 6 August 854 | ||||||
Population | |||||||
• 1700[5] | 20,000,000 | ||||||
• 1800[5] | 29,000,000 | ||||||
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- Regensburg, seat of the 'Eternal Diet' after 1663, came to be viewed as the unofficial capital of the Empire by several European powers with a stake in the Empire – France, England, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, Denmark – and they kept more or less permanent envoys there because it was the only place in the Empire where the delegates of all the major and mid-size German states congregated and could be reached for lobbying, etc. The Habsburg emperors themselves used Regensburg in the same way.[2]
- "Seven German cities you never knew were once capitals". The Local. 18 August 2016. Archived from the original on 20 June 2019. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
- Karl Härter, "The Permanent Imperial Diet in European Context, 1663–1806", in The Holy Roman Empire, 1495–1806, Edited by R.J.W. Evans, Michael Schaich, and Peter H. Wilson, Oxford University Press, US, 2011, ISBN 978-0-19-960297-1, pp. 122–23, 132.
- Heinz H. F. Eulau (1941). "Theories of Federalism under the Holy Roman Empire". The American Political Science Review. 35 (4): 643–664. doi:10.2307/1948073. JSTOR 1948073.
- Wilson 2016, p. 496. sfn error: no target: CITEREFWilson2016 (help)