Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Lippe was occupied by the Prussians, who regarded it as a hostile country and as Pauline as a collaborator. As a result, Lippe resigned from the Confederation of the Rhine. Counsellor Preuss signed treaties of alliance with Austria and Russia on 29 November 1813. A Lippe volunteer corps was formed and was equipped by donations from Lippe citizens.

  2. 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 ...

  3. The House of Lippe (German: Haus Lippe) is the former reigning house of a number of small German states, two of which existed until the German Revolution of 1918–19, the Principality of Lippe and the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe. Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands, former Queen of the Netherlands (1980–2013), is an agnatic member of this house.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Traute married Armin, Prince of Lippe, in Göttingen, where they first met, on 27 March 1953. He was head of the Princely House of Lippe. In 1959, Traute gave birth to their son Stephan, Prince of Lippe. She was regularly seen walking around Detmold with Prince Armin and their Scottish terrier dog until Armin died in 2015.

  6. 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.

  7. Woldemar of Lippe (Günther Friedrich Woldemar; 18 April 1824 – 20 March 1895) was the sovereign of the Principality of Lippe, reigning from 1875 until his death. Early life and reign [ edit ] Prince Woldemar of Lippe was born in Detmold the third child of Leopold II , Lippe's reigning prince, and his consort, Princess Emilie of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (1800–1867). [1]