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  1. Friederike Charlotte Leopoldine Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt (also often referred to as the Princess of Prussia; 18 August 1745 in Schwedt – 23 January 1808 in Altona) was a German aristocrat who lived as a secular canoness and ruled as the last Princess-abbess of Herford Abbey.

  2. Friederike Charlotte Leopoldine Louise von Brandenburg-Schwedt (vielfach auch bezeichnet als Prinzessin von Preußen) (* 18. August 1745 in Schwedt; † 23. Januar 1808 in Altona) war letzte Fürstäbtissin des Stifts Herford .

  3. Friederike of Brandenburg-Schwedt (Friederike Sophia Dorothea; 18 December 1736 – 9 March 1798) was Duchess of Württemberg by marriage to Frederick II Eugene, Duke of Württemberg. She is an ancestor to many European royals of the 19th and 20th century.

  4. 20 de ene. de 2022 · For several years, starting in 1760, Euler wrote a series of letters to Friederike Charlotte, princess of Brandenburg-Schwedt, a niece of Frederick the Great of Prussia. The collection of...

  5. Friederike Charlotte of Brandenburg-Schwedt *August 18, 1745 (Schwedt, Germany) †January 23, 1808 (Altona, Germany) Primary Sources. Secondary Sources. Online Sources.

  6. class, presumably Princess Friederike Charlotte Leopol-dine Luise von Brandenburg-Schwedt (1745–1808), who was only 14 when the private course was initiated. Between 1760 and 1762, Euler wrote 234 letters to the Princess, totaling some 1000 pages of high-level science in a palatable form. Among the topics discussed we find,

  7. Friederike Charlotte was the firstborn daughter of Friederich Heinrich von Brandenburg-Schwedt and his wife Leopoldine Marie von Anhalt-Dessau, a daughter of Prince Leopold I of Anhalt-Dessau. Friederike Charlotte had a younger sister named Louise Henriette born in 1750.