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  1. 5 de jul. de 2020 · The Wedding of Prince Henri, Count of Clermont, son of the Count of Paris and Princess Isabelle of Orléans-Braganza, and Duchess Marie-Thérèse of Württemberg (wearing the Württemberg Small Diamond Tiara), daughter of the Duke of Württemberg and Archduchess Rosa of Austria, at the Chapelle Royale de Dreux on this day in 1957, the largest royal event in France since the Wedding of Queen ...

  2. Ludwig III (1166–1241) was Count of Württemberg.He was probably married to a daughter of count Adalbert III von Dillenburg, whose name is unknown. Ludwig III and Hartmann were both known as 'Count of Württemberg' in documents of King Otto IV in his Rhineland, Swabian and Franconian palaces at the same time, so it seems they co-managed the county, with one staying at home and the other ...

  3. Henry was the second son of Count Ulrich V of Württemberg-Stuttgart (1413–1480), from his second marriage to Elisabeth of Bavaria-Landshut (1419–1451). As a second son, Henry was provided with a career in the clergy. In 1464, he became provost at Eichstätt. The intent was that he would succeed Adolph II of Nassau as Archbishop of Mainz.

  4. Otto Henry died in Sulzbach in 1604 and was buried in Lauingen. Without any surviving sons, Sulzbach was inherited by his brother Philip Louis of Palatinate-Neuburg. Marriage. Otto Henry married Dorothea Maria of Württemberg (3 September 1559 – 23 March 1639), daughter of Duke Christopher, on 25 November 1582 and had the following children:

  5. Henry of Württemberg (7 September 1448 Stuttgart – 15 April 1519 Hohenurach Castle near Bad Urach) was from 1473 to 1482 Count by Montbéliard.

  6. Württemberg. Father. Ulrich III. Mother. Sophie of Pfirt. Eberhard II (1315 – 15 March 1392), nicknamed the Quarrelsome ( German: der Greiner ), was Count of Württemberg from 1344 until his death in 1392. [1] [2] He ruled Württemberg alongside his brother, Ulrich IV, until Eberhard forced him out of power in 1362.

  7. 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 ...