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・ Frederick Prince
・ Frederick Putnam
・ Frederick Pyne
・ Frederick R. De Funiak
・ Frederick of Brandenburg
・ Frederick of Brandenburg (1530–1552)
・ Frederick of Brunswick-Lüneburg
・ Frederick of Castile
・ Frederick of Cieszyn
・ Frederick of Denmark
・ Frederick of Denmark (bishop)
・ Frederick of Hallum
・ Frederick of Hesse
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Frederick of Isenberg
・ Frederick of Liege
・ Frederick of Luxembourg
・ Frederick of Montbéliard
・ Frederick of Naples
・ Frederick of Pettorano
・ Frederick of Prussia
・ Frederick of Saxony
・ Frederick of Saxony (Teutonic Knight)
・ Frederick of Sicily
・ Frederick of Solms-Rödelheim
・ Frederick of Sweden (disambiguation)
・ Frederick of Utrecht
・ Frederick Ogden
・ Frederick Ogilvie


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Frederick of Isenberg : ウィキペディア英語版
Frederick of Isenberg

Count Frederick of Isenberg (Friedrich von Isenberg) (1193 – 15 November 1226) was a German noble, the younger son of Count Arnold of Altena (died 1209). His family castle was the Isenburg near Hattingen, Germany.
==Murder==
According to recent research, Frederick of Isenberg was a leading figure in the opposition of Westphalian nobles to the aggressive power politics of the Archbishop of Cologne, Engelbert of Berg.
In 1225 at the Nobles' Assembly in Soest, Count Frederick met his cousin Count Engelbert von Berg, Archbishop of Cologne, in order to bring about a peaceful agreement concerning the stewardship (''Vogtei'') of Essen Abbey, which Count Frederick, according to contemporary complaints, was abusing to his own benefit and to the detriment of the abbey. No conclusion was reached.
During their return together from Soest to Cologne, Count Frederick arranged to ambush his cousin, in a defile at the foot of the Gevelsberg between Hagen and Schwelm in the late afternoon of 7 November 1225, in the course of which the Archbishop was killed.
There is no consensus as to whether it was a deliberately planned murder, or whether the Archbishop was killed in the heat of combat. Current research assumes the latter, and that it was intended to take him into "knightly detention" so that the political demands of the opposing nobility could be pushed through. This was in accordance with the customs of the medieval feuding ethos.

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