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  1. Princess. She belonged to the Oldenburg Dynasty, daughter of King Gustav IV Adolph and Queen Frederica. She was inflicted with rickets as a young child and had a deformed spine and body. When she was four years old her father and mother were dethroned and their whole family had to go into forced exile. As an adult, she...

  2. 7 de dic. de 2022 · Catharina-Amalia became heir-apparent to the Dutch throne in 2013 after the abdication of her grandmother, Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands, and the accession of her father to the throne. She is the first girl to assume the title of Princess of Orange in her own right. Previously, there have only been Queen Regents of the Netherlands.

  3. About Amalia Maria Charlotta von Holstein-Gottorp, Princess of Sweden. Princess. She belonged to the Oldenburg Dynasty, daughter of King Gustav IV Adolph and Queen Frederica. She was inflicted with rickets as a young child and had a deformed spine and body. When she was four years old her father and mother were dethroned and their whole family ...

  4. 12 de dic. de 2021 · Paul Frederick Augustus, Amalia’s father, was known as Augustus, Grand Duke of Oldenburg. Five years after Amalia’s mother died, Augustus married her sister, Ida. After that, he became Grand Duke of Oldenburg, inheriting the throne from his father. After Ida’s death, Augustus married Cecilia of Sweden.

  5. 25 de feb. de 2024 · Amalia Euphrosyne Lindegren was one of Sweden’s most popular 19th century artists and painters. She was the first Swedish woman to be awarded a scholarship to study art abroad. In this chapter, we follow this quietly modest and brilliantly talented artist, as she rises from humble beginnings in Stockholm to become a celebrated portrait painter of the elite.

  6. Oct 11, 2021 - This Pin was discovered by Gita様. Discover (and save!) your own Pins on Pinterest

  7. Hedwig Amalia von Hessenstein (1743–1752). After the death of Hedvig Taube, his official mistress was the noblewoman Catharina Ebba Horn (1720–1781), whom he gave the title and recognition of Countess (from 1745). Thus, the Hessian line in Sweden ended with him and was followed by that of Holstein-Gottorp.