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  1. Albert of Prussia ( German: Albrecht von Preussen; 17 May 1490 – 20 March 1568) was a German prince who was the 37th grand master of the Teutonic Knights and, after converting to Lutheranism, became the first ruler of the Duchy of Prussia, the secularized state that emerged from the former Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights.

  2. Albert de Prusse est le troisième fils de Frédéric II de Brandebourg-Ansbach issu de la lignée de Brandebourg-Ansbach de la Maison de Hohenzollern et de Sophie Jagellon, fille du roi de Pologne Casimir IV Jagellon. En juillet 1526, Albert de Brandebourg épouse Dorothée de Danemark, fille du roi Frédéric I er de Danemark.

  3. Frédéric II est le fils du margrave Albert III Achille de Brandebourg et d' Anne de Saxe. Il succède à son père comme margrave d'Ansbach en 1486. En 1495, il succéda à son frère Sigismond comme margrave de Brandebourg-Kulmbach. Lors de la querelle de succession de Bavière, il cherche à faire annuler la mise au ban de l'empire d ...

  4. Born in Ansbach, Albert was the second son of Joachim Ernst, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1582–1625) and his wife Sophie (1594–1651), daughter of John George, Count of Solms-Laubach. On Joachim Ernst's death Albert's elder brother Frederick III succeeded him in Ansbach from 1625 onwards, initially under their mother's guardianship, but he was killed without issue in the Thirty Years ...

  5. Albrecht II. von Brandenburg-Ansbach. ... Albert de Brandebourg-Ansbach épouse à Stuttgart Henriette-Louise (1623-1650), fille du duc Louis-Frédéric de Wurtemberg.

  6. Albrecht II. von Brandenburg-Ansbach (* 18. jul. / 28. September 1620 greg. in Ansbach; † 22. Oktober jul. / 1. November 1667 greg. ebenda) war von 1634 bis zu seinem Tod Markgraf des fränkischen Fürstentums Ansbach. „Von Gottes Gnaden Albrecht, Markgraf zu Brandenburg, zu Magdeburg, in Preußen, Stettin, Pommern, der Cassuben und Wenden ...

  7. Count of Arneburg. Albert II was, from 1184 onwards, Count of Arneburg in the Altmark. The Altmark belonged to Brandenburg, and his older brother Otto II claimed that this implied that the Ascanians owned Arneburg. When Henry of Gardeleggen died in 1192, he left his domains to Albert II. But that caused a conflict between himself and his brother.