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EBERHARD , Surnamed Ii See also: BART (Barbatus), count and afterwards duke of See also: Wurttemberg (1445-1496), was the second son of See also: Louis I., count of Wurttemberg-Urach (d
.
1450), and succeeded his elder
See also: brother Louis II. in 1457
.
His See also: uncle See also: Ulrich V., count of Wurttemberg-See also: Stuttgart (d
.
148o), acted as his See also: guardian, but in 1459, assisted by See also: Frederick I., elector palatine, he threw off this restraint, and undertook the See also: government of the See also: district of Urach as Count Eberhard V
.
He neglected his duties as a ruler and lived a reckless See also: life until 1468, when he made a See also: pilgrim-age to Jerusalem
.
He visited See also: Italy, became acquainted with some famous scholars, and in 1474 married See also: Barbara di Gonzaga, daughter of Lodovico III., See also: marquis of See also: Mantua, a lady distinguished for her intellectual qualities
.
In 1482 he brought about the treaty of Munsingen with his See also: cousin Eberhard VI., count of Wurttemberg-Stuttgart
.
By this treaty the districts of Urach and Stuttgart into which Wurttemberg had been divided in 1437 were again See also: united, and for the future the county was declared indivisible, and the right of See also: primogeniture established
.
The treaty led to some disturbances, but in 1492 the sanction of the nobles was secured for its provisions
.
In return for this Eberhard agreed to some limitations on the power of the count, and so in a sense founded the constitution of Wurttemberg
.
At the See also: diet of See also: Worms in 1495 the emperor See also: Maximilian I. guaranteed the treaty, confirmed the possessions and prerogatives of the See also: house of Wurttemberg, and raised Eberhard to the See also: rank of duke
.
Eberhard, although a See also: lover of See also: peace, was one of the founders of the Swabian See also: League in 1488, and assisted to See also: release Maximilian, then See also: king of the
See also: Romans, from his imprisonment at Bruges in the same See also: year
.
He gave charters to the towns of Stuttgart and See also: Tubingen, and introduced See also: order into the convents of his See also: land, some of which he secularized
.
He took a keen See also: interest in the new learning, founded the university of Tubingen in 1476, befriended See also: John
See also: Reuchlin, whom he made his private secretary, welcomed scholars to his See also: court, and is said to have learned Latin in later life
.
In 1482 he again visited Italy and received the See also: Golden See also: Rose from See also: Pope See also: Sixtus IV
.
He won the esteem of the emperors Frederick III. and Maximilian I. on account of his wisdom and fidelity, and his See also: people held him in high regard
.
His later years were mainly spent at Stuttgart, but he died at Tubingen on the 25th of See also: February 1496, and in 1537 his ashes were placed in the choir of the Stiftskirche there
.
Eberhard See also: left no See also: children, and the succession passed to his cousin Eberhard, who became Duke Eberhard II
.
See Rosslin, Leben Eberhards See also: im Bade (Tubingen, 1793) ; Bossert, Eberhard im Bart (Stuttgart, 1884)
.
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