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  1. After Brunswick was occupied by Napoleon's troops in 1806, he took in the sons of Duke Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Frederick Charles Ferdinand died childless in 1809. With his death, the Brunswick-Bevern line died out, and Brunswick-Bevern fell back to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Ancestors

  2. The Brunswick Monument on the Quai du Mont-Blanc, Geneva. In his will drawn up on 5 March 1871, Charles left his entire estate to the city of Geneva with a single stipulation: that a mausoleum be built for him in Geneva "in a prominent position and worthy", that it should feature statues of his father, Frederick William, and his grandfather, Charles William Ferdinand, and that it should ...

  3. Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg → Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick … Rationale: We should use English; and this Duke is notable as a general in the Wars of the French Revolution, in which he is invariably called Duke of Brunswick Views Please add and sign with ~~~~ a one-sentence comment here. Support as nom.

  4. William was the second son of Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and after the death of his father in 1815, was under the guardianship of King George IV of the United Kingdom. He became a Prussian major in 1823. When his brother, Charles, was deposed as ruling duke by a rebellion in 1830, William took over the government provisionally.

  5. Wikimedia Commons alberga una galería multimedia sobre Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick. Wikisource en inglés contiene el artículo de la Encyclopædia Britannica de 1911 sobre Brunswick, Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand, Duke of. Texto del anuncio del duque de Brunswick-Lüneburg, 1792; Ejército prusiano durante las guerras napoleónicas

  6. Other articles where Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick is discussed: Louis XVI: Attempt to flee the country: …by the Austrian commander, the duke of Brunswick, threatening the destruction of Paris if the safety of the royal family were again endangered, led to the capture of the Tuileries by the people of Paris and provincial militia on August 10, 1792.

  7. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title.