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  1. Anna was the eldest daughter of the elector Frederick I of Saxony (1370–1428) from his marriage to Catherine (1395–1442), daughter of Duke Henry I "the Mild" of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Anna, with a dowry of 19,000 Rhenish gold florins, married on 8 September 1433 in Kassel Landgrave Louis I of Hesse. Their engagement had been announced on the ...

  2. 21 de dic. de 2023 · Anna of Saxony's Cruel Imprisonment and Early Death Christine was taken from her in 1575 and Anna was informed that her stay at Bellstein was almost over. Elector Augustus of Saxony warned William, who was negotiating his next (3rd) marriage, that as the divorce was not yet finalised and Anna had not confessed to adultery in a courtroom, his preparations for another marriage were premature.

  3. 15 de jun. de 2019 · Linda van Dyck as Anna of Saxony in Willem van Oranje (1984 - Screenshot/Fair Use) After the death of Anna of Buren, William, Prince of Orange, remarried to Anna of Saxony. Anna was born on 23 December 1544 in Dresden, the daughter of Maurice, Elector of Saxony and Agnes of Hesse. She would be their only surviving child, and she was just nine ...

  4. 21 de ene. de 2015 · Anna of Saxony was born on 23 December 1544 in Dresden to Maurice, Elector of Saxony and Agnes of Hesse. She became her father’s heiress upon the death of brother Albert, who died in infancy. She was thus very wealthy and an attractive candidate for marriage. She married as his second wife, William the Silent, or William I of Orange.

  5. Anna of Saxony (1420–1462)Landgravine of Hesse. Born on June 5, 1420; died on September 17, 1462; daughter of Fredrick I the Warlike (b. Source for information on Anna of Saxony (1420–1462): Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia dictionary.

  6. 4 de nov. de 2015 · 4th November 2015. The second Princess of Orange, and also William the Silent’s second wife, is probably the most scandalous of them all. She was born on 23 December 1544 in Dresden as the ...

  7. As wife of the Dutch national hero, William of Orange, Anna of Saxony's immoderate behaviour and bouts of temper were an embarrassment. She neglected their children, publicly ridiculed her husband and squandered their money. Pregnant from a lover, she was locked up and finally plunged into total insanity. Anna of Saxony (1544-77) was 9, when ...