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Definition of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II
1. Noun. The Holy Roman Emperor who led the Sixth Crusade and crowned himself king of Jerusalem (1194-1250).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II
Literary usage of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Tuscany and Umbria by Emma Jones (2005)
"... constructed 1215 Conflict between the Guelphs (pro-Pope) and the
Ghibellines (pro-Emperor) 1220 Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II of Germany crowned 1224 ..."
2. The History of Medieval Europe by Lynn Thorndike (1917)
"The Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II, went out in 1228, and by skillful diplomacy
with little fighting secured from the Moslems the cession of Jerusalem and ..."
3. The History of Nations by Henry Cabot Lodge (1906)
"As a versatile and erratic genius he offers many points of resemblance to the
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. His cousin, Firuz Shah ..."
4. India by William Wilson Hunter (1906)
"As a versatile and erratic genius he offers many points of resemblance to the
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II. His cousin, Firuz Shah ..."
5. The Russian Road to China by Lindon Wallace Bates (1910)
"The Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick II, who undertook to gather the powers of Europe
to meet the danger, wrote to Henry III of England: — " A barbarous nation ..."
6. Milan & the Italian Lakes by Dan Colwell (1999)
"... and the Ghibellines, who thought it politic to follow the new Holy Roman Emperor.
Frederick II. The two factions rallied around different families, ..."