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  1. Media in category "Anna (Swedish princess 1545)" The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. Anna of the Veldenz Palatinate 1580 by unknown.jpg 582 × 860; 142 KB

  2. Princess of Sweden, duchess of Baden-Rodemachern. Princess Cecilia Vasa is the best-known and most famous of Gustav Vasa and Margareta Leijonhufvud ’s five daughters. Cecilia Vasa, like her sisters, had a caring childhood, which was intended to prepare her for her future as the wife of a foreign prince. It was hoped that all the princesses ...

  3. House of Vasa. The House of Vasa or Wasa [2] ( Swedish: Vasaätten, Polish: Wazowie, Lithuanian: Vazos) was an early modern royal house founded in 1523 in Sweden. Its members ruled the Kingdom of Sweden from 1523 to 1654 and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth from 1587 to 1668; its agnatic line became extinct with the death of King John II ...

  4. Anna Vasa of Sweden (also Anne, Polish: Anna Wazówna; 17 May 1568 – 26 February 1625) was a Polish and Swedish princess, starosta of Brodnica and Golub. She was the youngest child of King John III of Sweden and Catherine Jagiellon. She was close to her brother Sigismund Vasa, King of Poland (1587–1632) and King of Sweden (1592–99).

  5. e. Catherine Vasa of Sweden ( Swedish: Katarina Gustavsdotter Vasa; 6 June 1539 – 21 December 1610) was a Swedish princess, and the Countess consort of East Frisia as the spouse of Edzard II, Count of East Frisia. She was the oldest daughter of Gustav Vasa and Margareta Leijonhufvud. She was the autonomous Regent of Berum [ nl] and Norden in ...

  6. Anna Maria Vasa was a member of the aristocracy in Sweden. Princess Anna Maria (19 June 1545 - 20 March 1610) of Sweden (in Swedish Anna Gustavsdotter) was the daughter of King Gustav I of Sweden and Queen Margaret. She was a Countess Palatine of Veldenz as the spouse of Georg Hans I, Count Palatine of Veldenz. She had twelve children:

  7. The early Vasa kings (1523–1611) Gustav I Vasa, portrait after J. Binck, 1542; in the University of Uppsala, Sweden. After Gustav I Vasa was elected to the throne in 1523, he began to restore the power of the Swedish king and to organize a central administration under his own direct leadership. On the one hand, this task was facilitated by ...