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Albert and died
* Albert I of Käfernburg ( died 1232 ), Archbishop of Magdeburg
* Albert II, second monkey in space, died on impact following V2 flight June 14, 1949.
Three years he was occupied in campaigns against the Slavic Wends, who as pagans were considered fair game, and whose subjugation to Christianity was the aim of the Wendish Crusade of 1147 in which Albert took part ; diplomatic measures were more successful, and by an arrangement made with the last of the Wendish princes of Brandenburg, Pribislav of the Hevelli, Albert secured this district when the prince died in 1150.
Albert was married in 1124 to Sophie of Winzenburg ( died 25 March 1160 ) and they had the following children:
# Count Albert of Ballenstedt ( died after 6 December 1172 )
Victoria was in mourning for her grandson, Albert Duke of Clarence, who died January 1892.
# Frederick Albert, died young.
Albert Frederick died in the following year.
He never married or had children ; because his brother Henry died before him ( in 1192 ) also without issue, after Otto II's death in 1205 Brandenburg was inherited by his younger half-brother Albert II, son of Otto I and Ada.
Aside from these, thereafter there is no eyewitness to events in Jerusalem until William of Tyre, archbishop of Tyre and chancellor of Jerusalem, who began writing around 1167 and died around 1184, although he includes much information about the First Crusade and the intervening years from the death of Fulcher to his own time, drawn mainly from the writings of Albert of Aix and Fulcher himself.
By the time Albert died 30 years later, the conquest and formal Christianisation of present-day Estonia and northern Latvia was complete.
* Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, British prince consort, Queen Victoria's husband, died of typhoid fever on 14 December 1861.
In 1901, King's roommate and best friend, Henry Albert Harper, died heroically during a skating party when a young woman fell through the ice of the partly frozen Ottawa River.
* July 21 – Albert Hamilton Gordon, American businessman and philanthropist ( died 2009 )
He is the successor of Charles VII Albert of Bavaria, an enemy of Habsburg, who died on January 20 of this year.
When Sigismund died in 1437, Albert was crowned king of Hungary on 1 January 1438, and just as his predecessor did, he moved his court to the Hungarian Kingdom from where he later oversaw his other domains.
Three years later, Eleanor died, and 1484, Sigismund married the 16-year-old Catherine of Saxony, daughter of Albert, Duke of Saxony.
Soon after taking part in the election of Maximilian as King of the Romans, Albert died at Frankfurt in March 1486.
Margaret died 24 October 1457 and in 1458 Albert married Anna, daughter of Frederick II, Elector of Saxony and Margarete of Austria.
Weary of the long struggle with the Duchy of Pomerania, he abdicated in 1470 in favour of his younger brother Albert Achilles, he retired to the Bayreuth Principality and died one year later in Neustadt an der Aisch.
Saint Adalbert of Magdeburg ( also Saint Albert of Magdeburg ) ( died 20 June 981 ), sometimes known as the Apostle of the Slavs, was the first Archbishop of Magdeburg ( from 968 ) and a successful missionary to the Slavic peoples to the east of Germany.
Albert died in December 1861 just two weeks after the visit.
Just a few weeks later, in early 1892, Albert Victor died of pneumonia.

Albert and childless
In a generous act by his father, he was adopted and raised in Vienna by his childless aunt Archduchess Marie Christine of Austria and her husband Albert of Saxe-Teschen.
Because Pribislav was childless, Brandenburg passed to Albert after the death of the Slavic prince in Brandenburg an der Havel.
As he died childless, the throne of the duchies would have passed to the male descendants of Ernst's late brother Albert, the Prince Consort, husband of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.
* Duke of Brabant ( Kingdom of Belgium ); does not automatically descend by primogeniture, e. g., never held by Albert, Prince of Liège after his childless brother became king
Eric then held Bergedorf ( Vierlande ) and Lauenburg and inherited the share of his childless brother Albert III, Saxe-Ratzeburg, after he was already deceased in 1308 and a retained section from Albert's widow Margaret of Brandenburg-Salzwedel on her death.
Gustav would serve as an officer to the Habsburgs of Austria, but would only father one daughter, Carola, the wife of King Albert I of Saxony, but she died childless.
# Albert Frederick ( b. Dessau, 22 April 1750-d. Dessau, 31 October 1811 ), married on 25 October 1774 to Henriette of Lippe-Weissenfeld ; the union was childless.
Albert and Maria Christina's marriage remained childless, and upon the death of the widowed Albert in 1822 the duchy passed to their adopted son, Archduke Charles of Austria, who became Herzog von Teschen and started the Teschen branch of the Habsburg-Lorraine Dynasty.
Albert's marriage to Ada was childless and apparently very troubled, as Albert describes them as not being on speaking terms.
Albert however died childless the next year and all his lands fell back to his elder brother.
Queen Carola of Saxony was his only surviving child and wife of King Albert I of Saxony, but she died childless in 1907.
She married firstly ( Berlin February 1360 ) Louis VI the Roman, Duke of Bavaria ( b. Munchen 12. 5. 1330 d. Berlin 17. 5. 1365 ), this marriage remained childless ; and married secondly Count Henry II of Holstein ( b. c. 1317, d. 16. 11. 1384 ), of which marriage several children Gerhard, Albert, Henry, and Sophia.

Albert and was
Albert Einstein was quoted as saying: `` The workings of the woman's mind amaze me ''.
`` Their house '', writes Albert S. Flint, `` was always a haven of hospitality and good cheer, especially grateful to one like myself far from home ''.
When he was answered, he said, `` Albert??
But when tiny, 145-pound Albert Gregory Pearson of the Los Angeles Angels, who once caught three straight fly balls in center field because, as a teammate explained, `` the other team thought no one was out there '', hits seven home runs in four months ( three more than his total in 1958, 1959, and 1960 ), his achievement borders on the ridiculous.
Although Albert Johnston was born in Kentucky, he lived much of his life in Texas, which he considered his home.
Although americium was likely produced in previous nuclear experiments, it was first intentionally synthesized, isolated and identified in late autumn 1944, at the University of California, Berkeley by Glenn T. Seaborg, Leon O. Morgan, Ralph A. James, and Albert Ghiorso.
J. Desaulx suggested in 1877 that the phenomenon was caused by the thermal motion of water molecules, and in 1905 Albert Einstein produced the first mathematical analysis of the motion.
The name was invented either by Lovecraft, or by Albert Baker, the Phillips ' family lawyer.
Albert Camus (; 7 November 1913 – 4 January 1960 ) was an algerian born author, journalist, and philosopher.
It was won by Georges Bouton of the De Dion-Bouton Company, in a car he had constructed with Albert, the Comte de Dion, but as he was the only competitor to show up it is rather difficult to call it a race.
Albert Schweitzer, OM ( 14 January 1875 – 4 September 1965 ) was a German and then French theologian, organist, philosopher, physician, and medical missionary.
This state of matter was first predicted by Satyendra Nath Bose and Albert Einstein in 1924 – 25.
Albert Alcibiades () ( 28 March 1522 – 8 January 1557 ) was a Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach, also known as Brandenburg-Bayreuth.
Because of his bellicose nature Albert received the cognomen Alcibiades after his death ; during his lifetime Albert was known as Bellator ( the Warlike ).
Albert was born at Ansbach and, having lost his father Casimir in 1527, he came under the guardianship of his uncle George, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, a strong adherent of Protestantism.
Sharing in the attack on the Electorate of Saxony, Albert was taken prisoner at Rochlitz in March 1547 by Elector John Frederick of Saxony, but was released as a result of the Emperor's victory at the Battle of Mühlberg in the succeeding April.
The rival forces met at Sievershausen on 9 July 1553, and after a combat of unusual ferocity Albert was put to flight.
Henry, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, then took command of the troops of the league, and after Albert had been placed under the imperial ban in December 1553 he was defeated by Duke Henry, and compelled to flee to France.
Albert the Bear (; c. 1100 – 18 November 1170 ) was the first Margrave of Brandenburg ( as Albert I ) from 1157 to his death and was briefly Duke of Saxony between 1138 and 1142.

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