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  1. Walram II of Nassau was Count of Nassau between ca. Home. Log In Once logged in, you can add biography in the database. Directories Newly added. Create Biography

  2. 26 de may. de 2024 · His grandsons, Rupert II and Walram I, were the first to have themselves named count of Nassau around 1160. In 1255, Walram’s grandsons, brothers Walram II and Otto I, split their possessions. The grand ducal family of Luxembourg descends from Walram, the Dutch royal family from Otto, although both branches have since died out in the male line.

  3. Walram II of Nassau (ca. 1220-1276) was Count of Nassau between ca. 1249 and 1276.Walram was the elder son of Count Henry II of Nassau and Matilda of Guelders. Stöbern Sie im Onlineshop von buecher.de und kaufen Sie Ihre Artikel bequem online und ohne Mindestbestellwert!

  4. Adolph I, Count of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein (1307 – 17 January 1370) was a son of Count Gerlach I and Agnes of Hesse. In 1344, his father abdicated in favor of his sons. They ruled jointly until 1355, then divided their inheritance: Adolph I inherited Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein (this line died out in the male line in 1605)

  5. 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. Henry is mentioned for the first time in a charter dated 20 March 1198, together with his mother and his brother Rupert IV.

  6. Walram was the younger son of Count Robert I (German: Ruprecht) of Nassau and an unknown mother. She may have been Robert I’s wife, Beatrix of Limburg (c. 1115-c. 1164), daughter of Walram II the Pagan, Count of Limburg and Duke of Lower Lorraine and Jutta of Guelders (daughter of Gerard I, Count of Guelders ), but this is considered unconfirmed by some historians.