Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Duke Frederick Augustus died of dysentery on 6 August 1716 in Gochsheim. His grave still stands in the Martinskirche church in Gochsheim, next to his wife who died in 1728. Gochsheim became an obsolete fiefdom. As the couple had no surviving male children, Frederick Augustus’s brother, Carl Rudolf, succeeded him as Duke of Württemberg ...

  2. Maria's only son, Duke Adam of Württemberg, remained with his father and was raised in an atmosphere prejudiced against his mother and Poland. Life after divorce. Following her divorce, Maria lived mostly in Warsaw, and from 1798 to 1804 spent winters in Vienna and summers at Puławy.

  3. Frederick Achilles, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt. Frederick Achilles (5 May 1591 – 30 December 1631) was the first Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt from 1617 until his death in 1631. [1] The Duchy of Württemberg-Neuenstadt was a branch line of the ducal House of Württemberg in the 17th and 18th century named after the town of residence ...

  4. Duke Friedrich Paul Wilhelm of Württemberg ( German: Friedrich Paul Wilhelm, Herzog von Württemberg; 25 June 1797, in Bad Carlsruhe, Silesia, Kingdom of Prussia – 25 November 1860, in Mergentheim, Kingdom of Württemberg) was a member of the House of Württemberg and a Duke of Württemberg. Paul Wilhelm was a German naturalist and explorer ...

  5. Adam Karl Wilhelm Nikolaus Paul Eugen von Württemberg (16 January 1792 – 26 July 1847) was a Duke of Württemberg and General in Russian and Polish-Russian service. Württemberg was born in Puławy to Duke Louis of Württemberg (1756–1817) and Princess Maria Anna Czartoryska (1768–1854).

  6. Born in 1515, Christoph was the son of Ulrich, Duke of Württemberg and Sabina of Bavaria. [1] In November 1515, only months after his birth, his mother fled to the court of her parents in Munich. Young Christoph stayed in Stuttgart with his elder sister Anna and his father, Duke Ulrich. When the Swabian League mobilized troops against Ulrich ...