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  1. Antonia of Württemberg (24 March 1613 – 1 October 1679) was a princess of the Duchy of Württemberg, as well as a literary figure, patroness, and Christian Kabbalist. Life [ edit ] Born in Stuttgart in 1613, Princess Antonia was the third of nine children from the marriage of Duke Johann Frederick of Württemberg and Barbara Sophie of Brandenburg , the daughter of the Elector Joachim ...

  2. Antonia von Württemberg. Antonia von Württemberg (* 24. März 1613 in Stuttgart; † 1. Oktober 1679 in Liebenzell) war Prinzessin von Württemberg sowie eine Literatin, Mäzenatin, christliche Kabbalistin und Stifterin der Kabbalistischen Lehrtafel [1] [2] in Bad Teinach-Zavelstein .

  3. In the painting, 94 women are following Antonia in a bridal procession, 77 of whom have been identified.58 The women in the picture represent figures from the Old and New Testament, but at the same time they bear the likenesses of real people, most from the house of Württemberg. Directly behind Antonia stand her two sisters; the three sisters ...

  4. One of the best known of them was Antonia, the daughter of Duke Eberhard III. of Würtemberg (1629-74). She acquired a remarkable mastery of Hebrew, and, according to contemporary evidence, was well versed in rabbinic and cabalistic lore. Esenwein, dean of Urach and professor at Tübingen, wrote as early as July, 1649, to John Buxtorf at Basel ...

  5. Antonia and Eberhard had three sons, but only one lived to adulthood: Eberhard IV, Count of Württemberg, (23 August 1388, Stuttgart–2 July 1419, Waiblingen), successor to his father. Ulrich (died young) Ludwig (died young) Antonia and Eberhard were married for twenty-five years. On 26 March 1405 Antonia died at Old Castle (Stuttgart ...

  6. 24 de oct. de 2016 · Constructed in Bad Teinach, in Germany’s Schwarzwald, Antonia von Württemberg (1613–1679)’s "teaching painting" is an original and compelling synthesis of Jewish Kabbala, Christian mystagogy, and Lutheran theology. This collection of studies and documents draws upon extant documentation on the creation of this artwork, mostly in manuscript form, along with contemporary literary ...

  7. Antonia made it her mission to establish foundations to repair and restore the churches. Her charity, piety, gift for languages and all-encompassing scholarship were widely praised, and she became celebrated as "Princess Antonia the learned", and "the Minerva of Württemberg".