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  1. Duke Ferdinand Frederick Augustus of Württemberg (22 October 1763 – 20 January 1834) was a Habsburg Austrian general during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars. Early life [ edit ] He was born into the House of Württemberg as the fifth son of Frederick II Eugene, Duke of Württemberg and his wife, Princess Friederike of Brandenburg-Schwedt , niece of Frederick the Great .

  2. 15 de sept. de 2016 · Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge (1774 – 1850), married Augusta of Hesse-Kassel, had issue, present British Royal Family are his descendants through his granddaughter Mary of Teck who married King George V of the United Kingdom; Princess Mary (1776 – 1857), married Prince William Frederick, Duke of Gloucester, no issue

  3. Soldier. After serving with Frederick the Great during the Seven Years' War, he took up residence in 1769 at his family's exclave, the County of Montbéliard, of which he was also made lieutenant-general in March 1786 by his eldest brother, Charles Eugene, Duke of Württemberg, who had begun to come into the inheritance of portions of the County of Limpurg in the 1780s.

  4. 25 de sept. de 2017 · The following year, his sights were set on Frederick, Hereditary Prince of Württemberg. He was unattractive, over 40 and had divorced his first wife for infidelity – a situation that didn’t sit well with George III thanks to memories of Caroline Matilda, particularly given that the woman had died soon after on rumors of poison.

  5. Frederick assumed the title Prince-Elector (German language: Kurfürst) on 25 February 1803, and was thereafter known as the Elector of Württemberg. The reorganization of the Empire also secured the new Elector control of various ecclesiastical territories and former free cities , thus greatly increasing the size of his domains.

  6. Brandenburg-Schwedt was a secundogeniture of the Hohenzollern margraves of Brandenburg, established by Prince Philip William who took his residence at Schwedt Castle in 1689. By appanage, they administered the manors of Schwedt and Vierraden on the Oder river ( Uckermark and Neumark) as well as Wildenbruch in Pomerania (present-day Swobnica ...