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  1. Sophia Charlotte von Kielmansegg, Countess of Darlington and Countess of Leinster (1675–1725) was a German-born courtier. A half-sister of George I of Great Britain , to whom she was close, she moved to England in 1714 shortly after the Hanoverian succession , where she became an influential figure of his court.

  2. Hace 5 días · Sophia Charlotte, Countess of Darlington, was buried in the vault of the Duke of Ormond at the east end of Henry VII's chapel in Westminster Abbey on 24th April 1725. In the 19th century her name was inscribed on the stone above the vault with the many others buried there.

  3. Women. Encyclopedias almanacs transcripts and maps. Kielmansegge, Sophia Charlotte von (1673–1725) views 2,692,095 updated. Kielmansegge, Sophia Charlotte von (1673–1725) Countess of Platen, Brentford and Darlington. Name variations: Baroness von Kielmansegge; Countess Leinster; Baroness of Brentford.

  4. Sophia von Platen von Kielmansegg, Countess of Darlington has often, but erroneously, been asserted to have been mistress of King George I of Great Britain and Ireland; in fact, she was his half-sister.

  5. En la corte londinense de Jorge I, Sophia von Kielmansegg compitió con Melusine von der Schulenburg, duquesa de Kendal , amante de Jorge. Su título de Condesa de Darlington en la Nobleza de Gran Bretaña , con el título subsidiario de Baronesa de Brentford, fue otorgado por el rey en 1722, después de un título de Condesa de Leinster en la ...

  6. She was born Sophia Charlotte Mary von Kielmansegg. Her mother Charlotte Sophia, Countess of Darlington (1675–1725), wife of Johann Adolph, Baron von Kielmansegg, was the half-sister George I of Great Britain, (reigned 1714 - 26). Viscount and Viscountess Howe are said to have ten (10) children, including:

  7. Earl of Darlington is a title that has been created twice, each time in the Peerage of Great Britain. Baroness von Kielmansegg, half-sister of King George I, was made countess of Darlington in 1722. This creation was for life only, and so the title expired on her death in 1725.