-
Burchard of
Ursperg, also
called Burchard of
Biberach (c.1177–1230/1) was a
German priest and chronicler. His
Ursperger Chronicle (or
Chronicon Urspergensis)...
- St. Veit. The family's
ancestral seat was
Turjak Castle (German: Burg
Ursperg,
later Burg Auersperg) in the
March of Carniola,
according to an engraving...
-
Ursberg Abbey (German:
Kloster Ursberg) is a
former Premonstratensian monastery, now a
convent of the
Franciscan St. Joseph's Congregation,
situated in...
- was
added by
Abbot Burchard of Biberach, who
preceded Conrad as
Abbot of
Ursperg.
Conrad himself continued the work to 1229 and made the
final redaction...
- is
viewed by Elke Goez as unlikely.
According to
chronicler Burchard of
Ursperg, the
alleged founder of this school, Irnerius,
produced an
authentic text...
- in
detail in the
chronicle of the
premonstratensian priest Burchard of
Ursperg.
Burchard wrote a
continuation of the
World Chronicle (Chronicon universale)...
- any
device of the doctors: and as a result, the pope died.
Burchard of
Ursperg's Chronicon Urspergensis, c. 1159 By
autumn 1159 it may have been clear...
- king from the
Staufen dynasty.
According to the
chronicle of
Burchard of
Ursperg,
Conrad died in
Durlach during a
campaign against Berthold V, Duke of Zähringen...
-
Salmannsweiler The
Abbot of
Schussenried The
Abbess of Söflingen The
Abbot of
Ursperg The
Abbot of
Weingarten The
Abbot of
Weissenau The
Abbot of Wettenhausen...
- (pronounced [tuˈɾjaːk]; Slovene: grad
Turjak or turjaški grad, German: Burg
Ursperg,
later Burg Auersperg) is a 13th-century
castle located above the settlement...