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  1. House of Württemberg. Father. John Frederick of Württemberg. Mother. Barbara Sophie of Brandenburg. Antonia of Württemberg (24 March 1613 – 1 October 1679) was a princess of the Duchy of Württemberg, as well as a literary figure, patroness, and Christian Kabbalist .

  2. Antonia von Württemberg. Antonia von Württemberg (* 24. März 1613 in Stuttgart; † 1. Oktober 1679 in Liebenzell) war Prinzessin von Württemberg sowie eine Literatin, Mäzenatin, christliche Kabbalistin und Stifterin der Kabbalistischen Lehrtafel [1] [2] in Bad Teinach-Zavelstein .

  3. Antonia Visconti (born after 1350, probably about 1360, Milan – 16 March 1405, Stuttgart) was Countess of Württemberg. [1]

  4. Antonia of Württemberg (24 March 1613 – 1 October 1679) was a princess of the Duchy of Württemberg, as well as a literary figure, patroness, and Christian Kabbalist.

  5. Antonia of Württemberg (24 March 1613 – 1 October 1679) was a princess of the Duchy of Württemberg, as well as a literary figure, patroness, and Christian Kabbalist . Contents. 1 Life. 2 Hebrew scholar. 3 The Kabbalistic Lehrtafel at Bad Teinach. 4 Ancestry. 6 Further reading. Life.

  6. 24 de oct. de 2016 · About this book. Constructed in Bad Teinach, in Germany’s Schwarzwald, Antonia von Württemberg (1613–1679)’s "teaching painting" is an original and compelling synthesis of Jewish Kabbala, Christian mystagogy, and Lutheran theology.

  7. This article explores the complex interweaving of kabbalistic and Christological concepts within the kabbalistic “teaching panel” (Lehrtafel) of Princess Antonia of Württemberg. The essay discusses the artwork in the context of visual representations of the ten sefirot, the divine attributes or vessels in Jewish mysticism.