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  1. Walram wordt tussen 1176 en 1191 vermeld als graaf van Laurenburg en daarna, vanaf 1193, als graaf van Nassau. [1] [2] [3] Hij lijkt zijn residentie eerst te hebben gehad op de Burcht Laurenburg, daarom voerde hij aanvankelijk de naam graaf van Laurenburg, terwijl in zijn huis de naam Nassau allang werd gebruikt. Nog in 1198 zegelde zijn weduwe met het zegel van Walram van Laurenburg. [6 ...

  2. Henry II was the eldest son of Count Walram I of Nassau and a certain Kunigunde, possibly a daughter of a count of Sponheim or a daughter of count Poppo II of Ziegenhain.

  3. Adolf was the reigning count of a small German state. He was born about 1255 and was the son of Walram II, Count of Nassau and Adelheid of Katzenelnbogen. [3] Adolf’s brother was Diether of Nassau, who was appointed Archbishop of Trier in 1300. Adolf was married in 1270 to Imagina of Isenburg-Limburg (died after 1313) and they had eight children.

  4. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Nassau, Germany, Holy Roman Empire. Death: July 02, 1298. Göllheim, Rheinland-Pfalz, Holy Roman Empire (killed in the Battle of Göllheim) Place of Burial: Speyer, Pfalz, Deutschland (HRR) Immediate Family: Son of Walram II, Graf von Nassau-Weilburg and Adelheid von Katzenelnbogen. Husband of Imagina von Limburg, Romisch-Deutsche Konigin.

  5. Nassau. Nassau emerged from Franconia, which gradually fragmented in the thirteenth century. During the first century BC the core of its territory seems to have been home to the Mattiaci tribe of Germans. The rulers of twelfth century AD Nassau were the Laurenbergs. They bore the title count of Nassau. Count of Laurenberg & first Count of Nassau.

  6. 26 de nov. de 2009 · Count of Nassau. He died before 1280 and was buried in the no longer existing castle of his family. He was Lord Camberlain and Councillor of Emperor Rudolph I. In 1255 he divided the lands with his brother Otto, taking Walram the territories south of the river lahn, with the cities Weilburg, Idstein and Wiesbaden.