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  1. In Schaumburg an der Lahn on 26 April 1732, Frederick Christian married Victoria Charlotte of Anhalt-Zeitz-Hoym (September 25, 1715 – February 4, 1772). They had two daughters: Christiane Sophie Charlotte (b. Neustadt am Aisch, 15 October 1733 – d. Seidingstadt, 8 October 1757), married on 20 January 1757 to Ernst Frederick III, Duke of ...

  2. John Casimir of Saxe-Coburg (Gotha, 12 June 1564 – Coburg, 16 July 1633) was the Duke of Saxe-Coburg. He was the descendant of the Ernestine branch of the House of Wettin . Under his rule, the residence town of Coburg prospered with many Renaissance buildings being erected that still remain today.

  3. Kunigunde was the youngest child of the Margrave Casimir of Brandenburg-Kulmbach (1481–1527) from his marriage to Susanne (1502–1543), daughter of the Duke Albert IV of Bavaria . She married on 10 March 1551 in Neustadt an der Aisch with Margrave Charles II of Baden-Durlach (1529–1577). Kunigunde had been raised in the Lutheran faith ...

  4. Frederick I, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach; Frederick Christian, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth; Frederick II, Elector of Brandenburg; Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth; Friedrich of Brandenburg-Bayreuth

  5. Marriage and issue. On 25 August 1518, Casimir married Susanna of Bavaria, the daughter of Duke Albert IV of Bavaria. Emperor Maximilian I, the uncle of the bride, also participated in the glamorous wedding in 1518, during the Diet of Augsburg. His close ties to the imperial family were visible again at the coronation of Charles V, where ...

  6. Casimir (or Kasimir) (December 27 1481 in Ansbach – September 21 1527 in Ofen), Margrave of Bayreuth, was the son of Frederick I and his wife Princess Sofia, a daughter of Kazimierz IV Jagiellon. In 1518, he married Susanna of Bavaria , the daughter of Albert IV, Duke of Bavaria .

  7. On 29 April 1604, she married Margrave Christian of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1581–1655) in Plassenburg Castle. Since her father left no male heirs, a dispute arose between Prussia and Jülich-Cleves-Berg about Mary's compensation. [1] In 1613, Marie acquired the manors of Schreez and Culmbach in Haag (Oberfranken).