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  1. Elimar II, noto anche come Egilmar (o in italiano Adelmiro) (1070 – 1142), fu conte di Oldenburg dal 1108 al 1142.. Matrimonio. Elimar sposò prima del 1102 Eilika di Werl-Rietberg, figlia del conte Rietberg Enrico.

  2. The svg file requires the following fonts: Aquiline Two, Alte Haas Grotesk, Tangerine and Bebas Neue. Here is the family tree of all the English and Scottish monarchs and all their different ruling Houses up to present time with the current monarch Charles the IIIrd of the United Kingdom. At the same time: English chart, Scottish Chart and ...

  3. Anna of Oldenburg (3 April 1539 – 25 August 1579); married on 16 February 1566 to John Günther I, Count of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (20 December 1532 – 28 October 1586). John VII, Count of Oldenburg (9 September 1540 – 12 November 1603); married in 1576 to Elisabeth of Schwarzburg-Blankenburg (13 April 1541 – 26 December 1612).

  4. Elimar II (also Egilmar) was Count of Oldenburg from 1108 through 1142. He was son of Elimar I, Count of Oldenburg and his wife Richenza. Elimar married before 1102 Eilika of Werl-Rietberg, daughter of Henry, Count of Rietberg.

  5. On 24 June 1825, after five years as a widower, Augustus married secondly Princess Ida of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym, a younger sister of his first wife. Augustus and Ida had one son, Peter, who was born in 1827 and would later succeed Augustus as Grand Duke. Just like her sister, however, Princess Ida died after three years of marriage ...

  6. When John I came of age, he ruled jointly with Otto I. After Otto I died in 1251, John I ruled alone. In 1244, Otto I and John I together founded the Cistercian Rosenthal monastery in Menslage. In 1251, the monastery moved to a fort in the Börsteler Forest, which John I already owned. In 1258 and 1259, he fought in the Bremen Prince ...

  7. His father was Maurice, Count of Oldenburg who died in 1209, whereupon Otto succeeded to the title along with his brother Christian II, Count of Oldenburg . He participated in the Stedinger Crusade in 1234. In so doing he won Moorriem, Holle, and Elsfleth from Stedingen and freed himself from the archiepiscopal sovereignty.