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  1. The first branch descends from Frederick I of Württemberg. This branch became extinct at the death of William II of Württemberg in 1921. The second branch descends from Duke Louis of Württemberg, and belonged to the Teck family. This branch became extinct at the death of George Cambridge, 2nd Marquess of Cambridge in 1981.

  2. 5 de may. de 2016 · Johann Frederick of Württemberg was the eldest son of Frederick I and Sibylla of Anhalt. He was born in Mömpelgard castle which he left at the age of four when his family moved its residence to Stuttgart. Johann Frederick married Barbara Sophia of Brandenburg (1584–1636), daughter of prince-elector Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg.

  3. Frederick, Hereditary Prince of Württemberg, later Duke of Württemberg, and Frederick I, King of Württemberg (1805), was the eldest son of Duke Frederick Eugene of Württemberg and Frederica, daughter of Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt. He married, firstly, in 1780, Augusta, eldest daughter of Charles II, Duke of Brunswick, by whom he had four children, and secondly, in 1797 ...

  4. In 1803 Frederick William fled Württemberg to Paris, Vienna, Schaffhausen and Saarburg. In Saarburg, Therese gave birth to twins, who died shortly after birth. Now Elector of Württemberg, Frederick wanted to bring his son back to Württemberg. Frederick William went in October to Paris, where he was received on 14 October by Napoleon.

  5. Princess Friederike Sophie Charlotte Auguste of Württemberg-Oels (m. 1768) Frederick Augustus of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel (29 October 1740, Wolfenbüttel – 8 October 1805, Eisenach) was a German nobleman and Prussian general. A prince of Braunschweig-Wolfenbüttel and thus one of the Dukes of Brunswick-Lüneburg, in 1792 he was granted the ...

  6. Louis Frederick of Württemberg was born at Montbéliard Castle as the fifth child and second son of Duke Frederick I of Württemberg, and princess Sibylla of Anhalt. Life [ edit ] In 1608 Louis Frederick came to England with Benjamin von Buwinckhausen to return his father's insignia of the Order of the Garter and visited Scotland, where he was hosted by Andrew Melville of Garvock . [1]

  7. The Duke and Duchess’s union would result in seven children, all of whom feature heavily within the correspondence: Augusta (later Duchess Frederick of Württemberg), Karl, Caroline (later Queen consort of George IV), George, Augustus, Frederick William and Amelia (who died in infancy). As a consequence of both Dukes George and Augustus being ...