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  1. 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.

  2. Johann Casimir von Sachsen-Coburg, Herzog von Sachsen-Coburg, was born 12 June 1564 in Gotha, Thuringia, Germany to Johann Friedrich II. von Sachsen (1529-1595) and Elisabeth von der Pfalz (1540-1594) and died 16 July 1633 Coburg, Bavaria, Germany of unspecified causes. He married Anna von Sachsen (1567-1613) 16 January 1586 in Dresden, Saxony, Germany. He married Margarethe von Braunschweig ...

  3. The interior, remade in 1701, include the notable funerary moment of Duke John Casimir, a 12 m-tall alabaster sculpture painted with statue and reliefs (1595-1598). The medieval Veste Coburg, one of the biggest and most beautiful castles in Germany. It was mostly rebuilt in the 19th century. It has a triple line of walls with numerous towers.

  4. History Casimir Duke Johann of Saxe-Coburg, 1597, oil on wood, castle Callenberg nearby Coburg. The earliest written messages on individual settlements of Heldburger Land come from the Frankish settlement time in Grabfeldgau : in 776 Westhausen and in 783 Hellingen first mentioned in documents of the monastery of Fulda in the 9th century and in other documents Heldburg and Ummerstadt .

  5. 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.

  6. 2 de jul. de 2020 · Duke Ernst I of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. The castle at Callenberg was originally a hunting lodge, about 4 miles from Coburg, purchased by Duke Johann Casimir in the 1580s and used as a summer residence. It was re-acquired by the Coburg line in 1825, remodelled by Ernst, then remodelled again in the 1850s.

  7. In 1554, John Frederick I split the duchy among his three sons. In 1572 the Ernestine duchies were rearranged and redivided between the two sons of John Frederick II and the son of John William. In 1596 the brothers agreed to split the lands between them. After Frederick William's death, the land was split between his young sons and his brother.