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  1. Germany. The County of Oldenburg ( German: Grafschaft Oldenburg) was a county of the Holy Roman Empire . In 1448 Christian I of Denmark (of the House of Oldenburg ), Count of Oldenburg became King of Denmark, and later King of Norway and King of Sweden. One of his grandsons, Adolf, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp was the first Duke of Holstein-Gottorp .

  2. As they were agnates of the ducal house, the title of duke belonged to every one of them (as is the Germanic custom). The Dukes of Augustenburg were not sovereign rulers—they held their lands in fief to their dynastically-senior kinsmen, the sovereign Dukes of Schleswig and Holstein—who were the Oldenburg Kings of Denmark.

  3. 1448. Huset Oldenburg er en nordtysk fyrsteslekt som stammer fra det såkalte Osnabrücker Nordland. Den nevnes første gang med Egilmar I omkring 1100. Borgen Aldenburg, som slekten har sitt navn etter, lå ved Hunte og ble først nevnt 1108. Den tjente grevene som residens fra midten av det 12. århundre. Slekten kom i 1448 på den danske ...

  4. Since it was founded in 1917, there have been five British monarchs of the House of Windsor: George V, Edward VIII, George VI, Elizabeth II, and Charles III. The children and male-line descendants of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip also genealogically belong to the House of Oldenburg [1] since Philip was by birth a member of the ...

  5. v. t. e. The House of Holstein-Gottorp, a cadet branch of the Oldenburg dynasty, ruled Sweden between 1751 and 1818, and Norway from 1814 to 1818. In 1743, Adolf Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp was elected crown prince of Sweden as a Swedish concession to Russia, a strategy for achieving an acceptable peace after the disastrous war of the same year.

  6. Princess Marie Alix of Schaumburg-Lippe. Christoph Prinz zu Schleswig-Holstein (22 August 1949 – 27 September 2023) was the head of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (commonly known as the House of Glücksburg) and, by agnatic primogeniture, of the entire House of Oldenburg between 1980 and 2023.

  7. Thus they were no longer Romanovs by patrilineage, belonging instead to the Holstein-Gottorp cadet branch of the German House of Oldenburg that reigned in Denmark. The 1944 edition of the Almanach de Gotha records the name of Russia's ruling dynasty from the time of Peter III (reigned 1761–1762) as "Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov". [5]