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{{NOINDEX}}{{<includeonly>safesubst:</includeonly>#invoke:RfD|||month = January | |||
{{Infobox former country | |||
|day = 7 | |||
| conventional_long_name = The Landgraviate of Burgundy | |||
|year = 2025 | |||
| common_name = Little Burgundy, Transjurania | |||
|time = 15:55 | |||
|timestamp = 20250107155535 | |||
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#REDIRECT ] | |||
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From the 13th to 15th centuries, the '''Landgraviate of Burgundy''' Aare, from Thun to Aarwangen . The holders of the office of Landgrave were first the Counts of ], the ] and other, minor nobles before the office was transferred to the city of ] after their extinction. In historical documents and reports on the state, the name Little Burgundy / Klein Burgund ( Latin ''Burgundia minor'' ) was also used for the Landgraviate of Burgundy, which had been invented in the 16th century by Aegidius Tschudi, but which did not represent a contemporary medieval term. | |||
===Sources=== | |||
<references /> | |||
{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} | |||
<ref> Anne-Marie Dubler: The Oberaargau region. Origin, concept and extent over time . In: Yearbook of the Oberaargau . Volume 44 . Merkur Druck, Langenthal 2001, p. 74–114 ( digital copy at digibern.ch “The name of the Landgraviate is ‘Burgundy’; not a single documentary source gives a different name. The almost ineradicable term ‘Little Burgundy’, even if actively used by well-known historians such as Richard Feller, is incorrect.” Note 11, p. 111).</ref> | |||
<ref> ] : The territorial development of the Swiss Confederation 1291–1797. Sauerländer, Aarau 1932, pp. 62–64, 67.</ref> | |||
<references group="https://www.digibern.ch/jahrbuch_oberaargau/jahrbuch_2001/JBOAG_2001_074_114_region_oberaargau.pdf" /> |
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