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  1. John signed the alliance with France against the Emperor on 5 September 1633, as the representative of the Nassau brothers. The youngest brother, Otto, died on 24 November 1632. On 11 December, Ernest Casimir came of age and the brothers decided to revise the division of the inheritance. In this new division, Ernest Casimir received the ...

  2. John of Saint-Pol (died 1344) was Count of Saint-Pol between 1317 and 1344. He was the eldest son of Guy IV, Count of Saint-Pol and Marie of Brittany . He married in 1319 with Joanna, daughter of John I of Fiennes, and had 2 children: Mathilde (1335–1373), married Guy I, Count of Ligny.

  3. John, Count of Soissons. John (Jean) de Bourbon was born at La Fere as the fourth son of Charles, Duke of Vendome and his wife Francoise d'Alencon. [1] He became Count of Enghien after the accidental death of his elder brother Francis in 1546. [2] On 14 June 1557, he married Mary of Bourbon, [3] the daughter of Francis, Duke of Estouteville.

  4. John of Orléans. John of Orléans, Count of Angoulême and of Périgord ( French: Jean d'Orléans, comte d'Angoulême, 26 June 1399 – 30 April 1467), was a younger son of Louis I, Duke of Orléans, and Valentina Visconti, [1] and a grandson of Charles V of France. He was the younger brother of the noted poet, Charles, Duke of Orléans, and ...

  5. Agnes of Leiningen-Landeck. John, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg (died 10 August 1328, fell in battle near Wetzlar) was the third son of Count Otto I of Nassau and his wife Agnes (d. 1303), daughter of Count Emich IV of Leiningen-Landeck. John was a first cousin of King Adolf of the Romans .

  6. John, Count of Chalon. John (1190 – 30 September 1267), called the Old ( l'Antique ), was a French nobleman, the Count of Auxonne and Chalon-sur-Saône in his own right and regent in right of his son, Hugh III, Count of Burgundy. In contemporary documents, he was sometimes called "Count of Burgundy", as by King William of Germany in 1251.

  7. Francis Joseph Count Heissler of Heitersheimacquires Qualkowitz in 1702 which he resells in 1718. He also sells the Píesling property to Count Anton von Hartig. Francis Joseph had also a brilliant career as a member of the Geheimrat then as royal judge of the Land from 1732, to finally become governor of Moravia in 1740. Bernard of Heissler