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  1. Arnold of Egmond (14 July 1410 – 23 February 1473) was Duke of Guelders, Count of Zutphen.

  2. 14 de ago. de 2023 · Arnold, Duke of Guelders. Arnold of Egmond (14 July 1410, Egmond-Binnen, North Holland – 23 February 1473, Grave) was Duke of Guelders, Count of Zutphen. He was son of John II of Egmond and Maria van Arkel. On 11 July 1423, Arnold of Egmond, who was still a boy in years, succeeded Duke Reinald IV.

  3. The first Egmond Duke, Arnold, suffered the rebellion of his son Adolf and was imprisoned by the latter in 1465.

  4. Arnold sold the Duchy of Guelders to Charles I, Duke of Burgundy, who was recognized by the Holy Roman Emperor as Duke of Guelders. House of Burgundy. 1473–1477: Charles I. 1477–1482: Mary, daughter of Charles I, wife of Maximillian. House of Habsburg. 1477–1482: Maximillian I, ruler jure uxoris.

  5. This was also the case in Guelders, where Duke Arnold (r. 1423-1473) pawned his domains, often to members of the Estates, in order to fund his deficits. The State assembly as a whole opposed this use of the domains, and promised extraordinary taxes (aides, bedes) to redeem the alienated domains.

  6. 30 de mar. de 2018 · In July 1423, the Estates of Guelders accepted Arnold – oldest son of John, lord of Egmond – as the new duke of Guelders. Arnold was a relative of the late duke Reinald IV, who died a month earlier.

  7. When Arnoud van Egmond Duke de Gueldres was born on 14 July 1410, in Egmond-Binnen, North Holland, Netherlands, his father, Jan II Lord of Egmond, was 25 and his mother, Maria van Arkel, was 22. He married Catherine von Cleves on 26 January 1430, in Kleve, Rhineland, Prussia, Germany.