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  1. Gerhard VII, Duke of Jülich-Berg (c. 1416 – 19 August 1475) was the son of William VIII of Jülich, Count of Ravensberg and Adelheid of Tecklenburg. Gerhard was the second duke of the combined Duchy of Jülich-Berg but the 7th Gerhard in the House of Jülich.

  2. 30 de abr. de 2022 · August 19, 1475 (54-55) Burg Lülsdorf, Niederkassel, Herzogtum Berg, Deutschland (HRR) Place of Burial: Altenberg, Herzogtum Jülich, Deutschland (HRR) Immediate Family: Son of Wilhelm IX, Duke of Jülich and Adelheid von Tecklenburg. Husband of Sophie von Sachsen-Lauenburg.

    • Sophie Von Sachsen-Lauenburg
    • Deutschland (Germany)
    • 1420
  3. The grandson of William VII, Gerhard VII, inherit the duchy of Jülich from Reinhard IV and the duchy of Berg from his uncle Adolf. His son William IV was duke of Jülich-Berg, but had no sons, thus succeeded by his daughter Maria with her husband John III duke of Cleves, of the House of La Mark. Family tree of the House of Jülich

  4. When Gerhard VII, Herzog von Jülich-Berg was born in 1420, in Jülich, Düren, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, his father, Adolf II von Berg, was 48 and his mother, Elisabeth von Bayern, was 15. He married Sofie, Princess Of Saxony in 1444. He died on 19 August 1475, in Lülsdorf, Siegkreis, Rhineland, Prussia, at the age of 55, and was ...

  5. Gerhard VII, duque de Jülich-Berg ( c. 1416 - 19 de agosto de 1475) era hijo de Guillermo VIII de Jülich, conde de Ravensberg y Adelheid de Tecklenburg . Gerhard fue el segundo duque del ducado combinado de Jülich-Berg, pero el séptimo Gerhard en la Casa de Jülich. [1]

  6. Gerhard VII, duque de Jülich-Berg ( c. 1416 - 19 de agosto de 1475) era hijo de Guillermo VIII de Jülich, conde de Ravensberg y Adelheid de Tecklenburg . Gerhard fue el segundo duque del Ducado combinado de Jülich-Berg pero el séptimo Gerhard en la Casa de Jülich.

  7. 2 de jul. de 2021 · His nephew, Gerhard, Duke of Jülich, Duke of Berg and Count of Ravensberg, continued to press these claims, and won a great battle in 1444, but ultimately sold his claims to Guelders to the Duke of Burgundy—another key step in the consolidation of Burgundian power over the entire Low Countries.