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  1. The House of Schwarzburg was one of the oldest noble families of Thuringia, which is in modern-day central Germany. Upon the death of Prince Friedrich Günther in 1971, a claim to the headship of the house passed under Semi-Salic primogeniture to his elder sister, Princess Marie Antoinette of Schwarzburg who married Friedrich Magnus ...

  2. La Casa de Schwarzburgo, Schwarzburg o Schwarzbourg fue una de las más antiguas familias nobles de Turingia, hasta su extinción en 1971 tras la muerte del príncipe Federico Gunter de Schwarzburgo. 1 Su historia se remonta por lo menos al siglo XI, siendo el condado de Schwarzburgo un territorio de Alemania, actualmente en Turingia y antiguamen...

  3. The House of Schwarzenberg is a German ( Franconian) and Czech ( Bohemian) aristocratic family, formerly one of the most prominent European noble houses. The Schwarzenbergs are members of the German and Czech nobility, and they once held the rank of Princes of the Holy Roman Empire.

  4. Gunter Sizzo de Schwarzburgo (en alemán, Günther Sizzo von Schwarzburg; Rudolstadt, 3 de junio de 1860-Grossharthau, 24 de marzo de 1926) fue jefe de la Casa de Schwarzburgo y pretendiente al trono de los principados de Schwarzburgo-Rudolstadt y Schwarzburgo-Sondershausen.

  5. The House of Schwarzburg subsequently became a personal union with the House of Solms-Wildenfels. [1] [2] Reigning over the County of Schwarzburg and founded by Sizzo I of Schwarzburg (died 1160), the family split in the 16th century into the lines of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen and Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt , with the Sondershausen dying out in 1909.

  6. The heads of the Elder and Younger Reuss both acquired the rank of count of the Holy Roman Empire in 1673; Elder that of prince in 1778; and branches of Younger Reuss that of prince in 1806. Both lines entered the German Confederation in 1815 and became members of the German Empire in 1871. The two territories, which became free states in 1918 ...