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  1. Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh: 25 November 1743: 25 August 1805: Married, 1766, Maria Waldegrave, Dowager Countess Waldegrave; had issue. Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn: 7 November 1745: 18 September 1790: Married, 1771, Anne Horton; no issue. Princess Louisa: 19 March 1749: 13 May 1768: Died aged ...

  2. Personal tools. Sign in; Create account; Donate; Volunteer; Help . Contents; Person:Frederick, Prince of Wales (1)

  3. Prince Christian Frederick (18 September 1786 – 20 January 1848), future King Christian Frederick of Norway and Christian VIII of Denmark. Princess Juliane Sophie (18 February 1788 – 9 May 1850), married in 1812 to Prince William of Hesse-Philippsthal-Barchfeld; they had no issue.

  4. William Frederick was the second son of Ernest Casimir I, Count of Nassau-Dietz and Sophia Hedwig of Brunswick-Lüneburg. He married Countess Albertine Agnes of Nassau, the fifth daughter of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange on 2 May 1652 in Cleves. They had three children:

  5. Moreover, Duke Soběslav campaigned the Babenberg lands of Austria in the south, whereby Duke Henry Jasomirgott, Barbarossa's uncle, was killed in an accident. While Soběslav ignored a summons to appear at the Imperial court, Frederick was able to forge an alliance with the Moravian prince Conrad III Otto of Znojmo and the Babenberg duke Leopold V of Austria .

  6. Publications by or about Louis Frederick, Duke of Württemberg-Montbéliard at VD 17 References [ edit ] ^ William Fraser , Melvilles, Earls of Melville, and the Leslies, Earls of Leven (Edinburgh, 1890), p. 166: Dorothea Nolde, 'Religion and the Display of Power', C. Scott Dixon, Dagmar Freist, Mark Greengrass, Living with Religious Diversity in Early-modern Europe (Ashgate, 2009), p. 268.

  7. His Royal Highness The Prince Frederick, Prince of Wales (Frederick Louis) (February 1, 1707 - March 31, 1751) was the only man of that name ever to hold the title Prince of Wales, and is best remembered as the father of King George III of the United Kingdom and as the subject of the epigram which begins: "Here lies poor Fred,