Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. He was the youngest child of Francis, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg (Franz I. von Sachsen-Lauenburg) and his wife, Sibylle of Saxony, daughter of the influential Duke Henry IV the Pious of Saxony and his wife, Katharina of Mecklenburg. Of his six brothers, he and Henry (1550–1585) followed the ecclesiastical career. Frederick was raised Lutheran ...

  2. George William ( German: Georg Wilhelm; 26 January 1624 – 28 August 1705) was the first Welf Duke of Lauenburg after its occupation in 1689. From 1648 to 1665, he was the ruler of the Principality of Calenberg as an appanage from his eldest brother, Christian Louis, Prince of Luneburg. When he inherited Luneburg on the latter's death in 1665 ...

  3. Magnus var den første av Sachsen-Lauenburgs hertuger som avstod fra kurfyrstelige ambisjoner. Han førte aldri kurfyrstelig tittel og i sitt våpen fantes intet kurfyrstelig sverd. Den 12. november 1530 ble Magnus forlenet med sitt hertugdømme med regaliene av keiser Karl V ved riksdagen i Augsburg .

  4. 9 de abr. de 2021 · On October 29, 1525, in Lauenburg, fourteen-year-old Dorothea married the twenty-three-year-old future King Christian III of Denmark and Norway, son of Frederik I, King of Denmark and Norway and his first wife Anna of Brandenburg. Dorothea’s dowry of 15,000 guilders was considered extremely small. The groom’s father Frederik I, who had only ...

  5. John II of Saxe-Lauenburg (c. 1275 – 22 April 1322) was the eldest son of John I of Saxony and Ingeborg Birgersdotter of Småland (c. 1253–30 June 1302, Mölln ), a daughter or grandchild of Birger jarl. He ruled the Saxony jointly with his uncle Albert II and his brothers Albert III and Eric I, first fostered by Albert II until coming of age.

  6. Augustus of Saxe-Lauenburg ( Ratzeburg, 17 February 1577 – 18 January 1656, Lauenburg upon Elbe) was Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg between 1619 and 1656. He was a son of Duke Francis II and his first wife Margaret of Pomerania-Wolgast, daughter of Philip I, Duke of Pomerania-Wolgast. Since Augustus survived all his sons he was succeeded by his half ...

  7. In return Saxe-Lauenburg had to cede the bailiwick of Steinhorst to Holstein-Gottorp in 1575. Magnus fled to his estates in Uppland in 1574, there displaying violence, wantonness and brutality. So next year his brother-in-law, the new King John III of Sweden , enfeoffed Magnus with Sonnenburg castle in Orissaare on Ösel island, recently conquered from Denmark.