
The Posthumous Son of the European Struggle for Hegemony
About This Novel
The posthumous son Ladislas, born from February 22, 1440 to November 23, 1457, was the Duke of Austria, King of Hungary, King of Croatia, and King of Bohemia. His father was Albrecht of the Habsburg family and his mother was Elisabeth of the Luxembourg family. Ladislaus was nicknamed posthumous because he was born after his father's death. The following are the titles owned by Ladislaus, including the titles (including territories) that are theoretically possible to inherit: The titles that are in line with the customs of the time and recognized are: Duke of Austria, King of Bohemia, Margrave of Moravia, King of Hungary, and King of Croatia; there are reasons Titles that were claimed but were entangled with the owner at the time and had no clear written record of claiming were Duke of Luxembourg and Margrave of Brandenburg; titles that could be inherited through blood relationships, but which even the parties involved could not remember after several generations: King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania. The life of the posthumous son Ladislaus can be summed up as a coffee table filled with cups. Although he was one of the people with the most extensive territory in Europe at the time, he did not actually control any territory until the time of his death; his father died a few months before he was born, and his mother died in an unknown manner when he was three years old. He grew up without parental care; everyone around him only wanted to control the huge territory through him, and in the end he himself died.
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