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  1. Irmgard of the Marck. Simon III, Lord of Lippe ( c. 1340 – 1410) was Lord of Lippe from 1360 until his death. He was the son of Otto, from whom he inherited the city of Lemgo. His control of the surrounding areas was initially uncertain. As late as 1368, the castellans of his castles and representatives of the cities of Horn, Detmold and ...

  2. After the death of Woldemar, Prince of Lippe in 1895, her parents were involved in a regency and succession dispute to the principality of Lippe. Though Woldemar's younger brother Alexander succeeded, he was incapable of ruling due to a mental illness. Consequently, two branches of the House of Lippe argued over rights to a regency.

  3. Princess Luise von Ardeck. Princess Marie Adelheid of Lippe (30 August 1895 – 25 December 1993) was a socialite and writer who was active in Nazi Germany. As the wife of Hanno Konopath, a prominent Nazi official, Marie Adelheid was a well known and ardent supporter of the Nazi regime. She was instrumental in the Nordic Ring, a forum for the ...

  4. Countess Adelheid of Castell-Castell. Ernst, Count of Lippe-Biesterfeld ( Ernst Kasimir Friedrich Karl Eberhard; 9 June 1842 – 26 September 1904) was the head of the Lippe-Biesterfeld line of the House of Lippe. From 1897 until his death he was the regent of the Principality of Lippe .

  5. Simon Henry was the eldest son of Herman Adolph, Count of Lippe and his first wife Countess Ernestine of Ysenburg-Büdingen-Birstein. In 1665, he became co-ruler with his father; in 1666, his father died and Simon Henry inherited Principality of Lippe . Between 1683 and 1685, he replaced the Jagdschloss his father had built near today's ...

  6. Ribbon of the Order. The House Order of the Wendish Crown ( German: Hausorden der Wendischen Krone) is a dynastic order that was jointly instituted on 12 May 1864 by Grand Duke Friedrich Franz II of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Grand Duke Friedrich Wilhelm of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. It is the oldest and most senior order of the House of Mecklenburg.

  7. He was the son of Frederick Adolphus, Count of Lippe-Detmold and his wife Johanna Elisabeth of Nassau - Dillenburg. His five siblings all died young, of his seven step-siblings, only three sisters lived into adulthood: Amalia 1701–1754 abbess of Cappel Abbey in Lippstadt and St. Mary's Abbey in Lemgo. Franziska 1704–1733, married to Count ...