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  1. Engelbert I of Nassau ( c. 1370, in Dillenburg – 3 May 1442, in Breda) was a son of Count John I of Nassau-Siegen and Countess Margaret of the Mark, daughter of Count Adolph II of the Marck.

  2. This day of tilting and pageantry was an occasion to view in the Grote Kerk the splendid monument that Hendrik had erected to his uncle and guardian, Engelbert II of Nassau (figs. 1-8). 1 Visitors to the new herenkoor beheld Engelbert and his wife, Cimburga of Baden, carved in alabaster and lying on a plinth of black marble, surrounded by four ...

  3. Engelbert II of Nassau, Engelbrecht in Dutch (17 May 1451 – 31 May 1504), was count of Nassau and Vianden and lord of Breda, Lek, Diest, Roosendaal, Nispen and Wouw. He was a soldier and courtier, for some time leader of the Privy council of the Duchy of Burgundy and a significant patron of the arts.

  4. Otto f BEING NASSAU 9 and Engelbert I were crucial to Orange’s argument that he was a direct descendant of the Nassaus of Breda. The political activity and service to the Habsburgs of Engelbert II, Hendrik III, and René were meant to turn the ingratitude-charge back on Philip II.

    • Liesbeth Geevers
  5. Identifiers. Engelbrecht Engelbrecht I Engelbert, heer van Breda, Geertruidenberg, Niervaart, Zundert en Princenhage, Sprundel, Castricum, Monster, Rijswijk en Naaldwijk van Nassau-Dillenburg (Nassau) aka van Nassau (1370 - certain 3 May 1442)

  6. Begun in ry26, the Monument to Engelbert II of Nassau and Cimburga of Baden is a strikingly novel manifestation of courtly magnificence that forges identity through a selective synthesis of disparate paradigms.

  7. Engelbert I. (* 1370 in Dillenburg; 3. Mai 1442 in Breda) war in den Jahren 1420 bis 1442 Graf von Nassau-Dillenburg. Engelbert war ein Sohn von Johann I., Graf von Nassau-Dillenburg aus dem Haus Nassau, und Margarethe von Mark-Kleve. Er studierte in Köln, um als jüngerer Sohn des Grafen Priester zu werden.