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t. e. Anne of Denmark ( Danish and German: Anna; Haderslev, 22 November 1532 – Dresden, 1 October 1585) was a Danish princess from the House of Oldenburg. Through her marriage with Augustus of Saxony she became Electress of Saxony.
The consorts usually referred to as Electresses, therefore, were: The Electress of the Palatinate; The Electress of Saxony; The Electress of Brandenburg. To these were added, in 1623 and 1692 respectively: The Electress of Bavaria; The Electress of Hanover.
Margaret of Austria (c. 1416 – 12 February 1486), a member of the House of Habsburg, was Electress consort of Saxony from 1431 until 1464 by her marriage with the Wettin elector Frederick II. She was a sister of Emperor Frederick III.
27 de abr. de 2022 · Margarete of Saxony, by marriage Electress of Brandenburg, was the daughter of William III "the Brave", Landgrave of Thuringia, and his wife Anna, archduchess of Austria.
- Weimar, Sachsen
- Kurfürst Johann I Cicero Von Brandenburg
- Sachsen
- "Markéta"
Everything Explained.Today. A-Z Contents. ANN. Anne of Denmark, Electress of Saxony explained. Anne of Denmark ( Danish and German: Anna; Haderslev, 22 November 1532 – Dresden, 1 October 1585) was a Danish princess from the House of Oldenburg. Through her marriage with Augustus of Saxony she became Electress of Saxony.
- yes
- Augustus, Elector of Saxony
- 9 July 1553-1 October 1585
- Electress consort of Saxony
7 de jul. de 2021 · Catherine Ostler. Maria Antonia, Electress of Saxony, was an artistic polymath who helped re-shape elite culture in the Enlightenment age. An eighteenth-century portrait of Maria Antonia of Bavaria, Electress of Saxony, by Peter Jacob Horemans. Credit: Heritage Images / Getty Images.
Electress of Saxony. Name variations: Gertrud. Born around 1257; died on October 11, 1322, in Wittenberg; daughter of Anna of Hohenberg (c. 1230–1281) and Rudolph or Rudolf I of Habsburg (1218–1291), king of Germany (r. 1273), Holy Roman emperor (r. 1273–1291); married Albert II, elector of Saxony.