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  1. Rudolf I, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg. Mother. Judith of Brandenburg-Salzwedel. Rudolf II, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg, nicknamed Rudolf the Blind, ( c. 1307 – 6 December 1370 in Wittenberg) was a member of the House of Ascania. He was Elector of Saxony and Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg from 1356 until his death. He was the eldest son of Duke Rudolf I of ...

  2. Louis VI _____, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt. 25 Jan 1630 Hessen, Germany. 24 Apr 1678 Hessen, Germany. 2. George III of Hesse-Itter. 29 Sep 1632 Darmstadt, Hessen ...

  3. Otto was the son of Count Henry IV of Waldeck and his wife Adelaide of Cleves. He married in 1339 or 1340 to Matilda, a daughter of Duke Otto III of Brunswick-Lunebürg. They had at least two children: Matilda died in 1357 or earlier. Soon after her death, Otto married his second wife, Margaret, the widow of Heinemann of Itter (d. 1356).

  4. Family. Frederick II married May 1323 in Nürnberg Mathilde of Bavaria, daughter of Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor and had 9 children: Elisabeth (22 November 1329 – 21 April 1375), married to Frederick V of Nuremberg. Frederick (born and died 1330) Frederick III, Landgrave of Thuringia. Balthasar (1336-1406)

  5. Ernest, Elector of Saxony (1464–1486), Frederick II, Elector of Saxony (1428–1464) and Albert III, Duke of Saxony (1486–1500); Fürstenzug, Dresden, Germany. After Henry's death in 1435, and Sigismund was forced to renounce and became a bishop (in 1440), Frederick and William divided their possessions. In the Division of Altenburg in 1445 ...

  6. Mother. Ida of Chiny. Godfrey II ( Dutch: Godfried; c. 1110 – 13 June 1142) was the count of Louvain, landgrave of Brabant by inheritance from 23 January 1139. He was the son of Godfrey I and Ida of Chiny. He was also the duke of Lower Lorraine (as Godfrey VII ), and as such also margrave of Antwerp, by appointment in 1139 after the death of ...

  7. Count of Arneburg. Albert II was, from 1184 onwards, Count of Arneburg in the Altmark. The Altmark belonged to Brandenburg, and his older brother Otto II claimed that this implied that the Ascanians owned Arneburg. When Henry of Gardeleggen died in 1192, he left his domains to Albert II. But that caused a conflict between himself and his brother.