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  1. Margaret of Brunswick-Lüneburg, was a German noblewoman member of the House of Welf and by marriage Duchess of Saxe-Coburg. Career Born in Celle, she was the ninth of fifteen children born from the marriage of William the Younger, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and Dorothea, Princess of Denmark.

  2. Otto was the eldest son of the Duke Otto I of Brunswick-Harburg (1495–1549) from his marriage to Metta von Campen (died 1580). Otto received a princely education. The House of Brunswick-Lüneburg did not recognize Otto's right to inherit his father's lordship on the grounds that the marriage between his parents had been morganatic.

  3. Magnus, King of Livonia. John II, Duke of Holstein-Sonderburg. Dorothea, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg. v. t. e. Princess Dorothea of Denmark (29 June 1546 – 6 January 1617) was the Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg from 1561 until 1592 as the consort of Duke William the Younger. [1] She was regent for her son George from 1592 to 1596.

  4. Sofía Amelia de Brunswick-Luneburgo, anónimo. Sofía Amelia nació en el castillo de Herzberg, en Herzberg am Harz. Sus padres fueron el duque Jorge de Brunswick-Luneburgo y su esposa, la landgravina Ana Leonor de Hesse-Darmstadt . Sofía Amelia se casó con el príncipe Federico de Dinamarca en el castillo de Glücksburg, el 1 de octubre de ...

  5. English: Margarete of Saxony (born: 4 August 1469 in Meissen – died: 7 December 1528 in Weimar) was a Saxon princess of the Ernestine line of the house Wettin by birth and by marriage a Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg.

  6. Margaret of Jülich. Otto II of Brunswick-Göttingen (nicknamed Otto Cocles or Otto the One-eyed; c. 1380 – 6 February 1463), a member of the House of Welf, was Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and, after the death of his father Otto the Evil in 1394, ruling Prince of Göttingen .

  7. Bernard II, 41st bishop of Hildesheim. Bernard II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, (about 1437 – 1464) was the Bishop of Hildesheim (as Bernard III) from 1452 to 1457, as well as Prince of Lüneburg from 1457 to 1464.