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  1. The House of Lippe (German: Haus Lippe) is the former reigning house of a number of small German states, two of which existed until the German Revolution of 1918–19, the Principality of Lippe and the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe.

  2. La Casa de Lippe es una Casa Principesca alemana. La Casa de Lippe desciende del Conde Judoco Germán de Lippe [1] (muerto ca. 1056) cuyo hijo Bernardo I fue el fundador del estado de Lippe en 1123. En 1613, el territorio de la casa fue dividido en Lippe-Detmold, Lippe-Brake y Lippe-Alverdissen.

  3. Lippe (later Lippe-Detmold and then again Lippe) was a state in Germany, ruled by the House of Lippe. It was located between the Weser river and the southeast part of the Teutoburg Forest. It originated as a state during the Holy Roman Empire, and was promoted to the status of principality in 1789.

  4. The House of Lippe-Biesterfeld was a comital cadet line of the House of Lippe (a German dynasty reigning from 1413 until 1918, of comital and, from 1789, of princely rank). The comital branch of Lippe-Biesterfeld ascended the throne of the Principality of Lippe in 1905, after the extinction of the ruling main branch, when count Leopold of Lippe ...

  5. Los condes de Lippe-Detmold recibieron el título de príncipes del Imperio en 1789. Poco después de la incorporación del Principado al Imperio alemán, la línea Lippe-Detmold desapareció, lo que originó en 1895 una disputa dinástica entre las líneas hermanas de Lippe-Schaumburg y Lippe-Biesterfeld. Tras una mediación imperial, la ...

  6. Lippe, one of the smallest of the former German states, forming, since 1946–47, the northeastern corner of the Land (state) of North Rhine-Westphalia; the rather smaller Schaumburg-Lippe, now in the southern part of the Land of Lower Saxony, was founded in the 1640s under a separate branch of the.