At the outbreak of hostilities in March 1799, Karl Aloys zu Fürstenberg was with his troops in Bavarian territory, just north of the free and Imperial city of Augsburg.
The mine lay on Bavarian territory just north of the Austrian border in the Isar valley, at the southwestern end of the Riedboden.
The alpine regions of the south were Bavarian territory from the early Middle Ages.
On the other hand the Itzgrundbahn ran through the Duchy of Coburg but the line to Dietersdorf was in Bavarian territory.
The section from Homburg to Bexbach, which was located on Bavarian territory, opened on 6 June 1849.
The Bavarians were placed at the head of column, according to Delbrück, because they were marching through Bavarian territory and they therefore knew the territory best.
From the confiscated Bavarian territory, Otto II established the Duchy of Carinthia in southern Germany.
In 1818, as part of the reformation of the bavarian territories, the municipalities of Kleinmünster, Kleinsteinach, Mechenried and Humprechtshausen (with its district Kreuzthal) were created.
On May 1, 1978 as part of another reformation of the bavarian territories, the former municipalities formed the municipality "Riedbach".
In this role, he oversaw the situation in Lorraine, and, after the armistice on November 11, he and von Bothmer oversaw the withdrawal back to Bavarian territory.