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  1. The House of Braganza-Saxe-Coburg and Gotha [1] (also known as the House of Saxe-Coburg-Braganza or the Constitutional Branch of the Braganzas) [2] is a term used to categorize the last four rulers of the Kingdom of Portugal, and their families, from 1853 until the declaration of the republic in 1910. Its name derives from the four kings descended in a patrilineal line from King Ferdinand II ...

  2. In 1343 the Counts of Hennberg also purchased the Thuringian town of Ilmenau. The Coburg lands passed to the Saxon House of Wettin upon the marriage of Countess Catherine of Henneberg to Margrave Frederick III of Meissen in 1347.

  3. Pages in category "House of Wettin". The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. House of Wettin.

  4. Albert Leopold Friedrich Christian Sylvester Anno Macarius, Prince of Saxony, Duke of Saxony, Margrave of Meissen (31 December 1893 – 9 August 1968) was the second son of Frederick Augustus III, the last reigning king of Saxony before the abolition of the monarchy in 1918. Upon his father's death in 1932, he became the head of the Royal House ...

  5. Saxe-Meiningen. Saxe-Meiningen ( / ˌsæks ˈmaɪnɪŋən / SAKS MY-ning-ən; German: Sachsen-Meiningen [ˌzaksn̩ ˈmaɪnɪŋən]) was one of the Saxon duchies held by the Ernestine line of the House of Wettin, located in the southwest of the present-day German state of Thuringia . Established in 1681, [1] by partition of the Ernestine Duchy ...

  6. The royal line of the House of Wettin applies semi- salic law, which allows for inheritance through a female. Since the death of Maria Emanuel, if Albert was the last male dynast then this would lead firstly to the children of their sisters Maria Josepha (unmarried), Maria Anna and Mathilde, but only Mathilde's marriage indisputedly ...

  7. Línea ernestina. Isabel II del Reino Unido (n.1926), descendiente directa del duque Ernesto I de Sajonia-Coburgo-Gotha. Línea ernestina es el brazo primogénito de la antiquísima Casa de Wettin. Algunos de sus miembros llegaron a ceñir las coronas de países como Bélgica (1831), Portugal (1837), Gran Bretaña (1901) y Bulgaria (1908).