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The commanderies of the Teutonicorder, and of that of Malta, at forty per cent.
2
Consequently, in 1226 Duke Conrad invited some members of the TeutonicOrder to help him.
3
The Grand Master of the TeutonicOrder arrived yesterday.
4
Thus miserably terminated the celebrated Teutonicorder.
5
The TeutonicOrder is the great Order of Germany, of which I send you inclosed a short account.
6
In 1225, another religious-brotherhood, the TeutonicOrder, entered into Lithuania, and twelve years later the two orders united.
7
In the sixteenth century the Reformation, spreading throughout the North of Europe, undermined the basis of the TeutonicOrder.
8
The Order of the Sword ceased to resist, and in 1237 it merged itself in the TeutonicOrder in Prussia.
9
He appreciated the routine, the Teutonicorder of the place, the almost comical devotion to saltwater cures and vigorous exercise.
10
He is said to have been "a priest and warden of the house of the TeutonicOrder at Frankfort."
11
He accordingly declared the TeutonicOrder abolished and himself temporal Duke of Prussia, shortly afterwards marrying a daughter of the king of Denmark.
12
A lady whom I did not know said the portrait represented the Elector of Cologne in his robes as Grand Master of the TeutonicOrder.
13
During the mastership of Otho de Kerpen, an order of knighthood arose in the north of Europe, which was afterward incorporated with the Teutonicorder.
14
This was the seat of the Knights of the Teutonicorder, they, in fact, were the founders of the Prussian kingdom, after fifty-three years' struggle.
15
"It was originally named Salamis, I believe, but the TeutonicOrder renamed it Haupt when they made it their capital," Mincio explained.