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  1. Count Philip IV of Waldeck (1493 – 30 November 1574) was Count of Waldeck-Wildungen from 1513 to 1574. In 1526, he and his uncle Philip III of Waldeck-Eisenberg led the Lutheran Reformation in the county of Waldeck. Background. Philip was the son of Count Henry VIII of Waldeck and his wife Anastasia of Runkel.

    • 30 November 1574, Waldeck Castle in Waldeck, County of Waldeck, Holy Roman Empire
  2. Philipp IV, Count of Waldeck. Philip VI, Count of Waldeck. Philip VII, Count of Waldeck-Wildungen. Philip Dietrich, Count of Waldeck. Wolrad I, Count of Waldeck. Wolrad II, Count of Waldeck-Eisenberg. Wolrad IV, Count of Waldeck-Eisenberg. Categories: Counts in Germany. House of Waldeck.

  3. Margaretha von Waldeck (1533 – 15 March 1554) was the daughter of Philip IV, Count of Waldeck-Wildungen (1493–1574) and his first wife, Margaret Cirksena (1500–1537), daughter of Edzard I, Count of East Frisia. One author theorized in the 1990s that her life influenced the fairy tale of Snow White.

  4. When Philipp IV von Graf von Waldeck-Wildungen IV was born in 1493, in Nieder-Wildungen, Eder, Waldeck-Pyrmont, his father, Graf Heinrich VIII von Waldeck-Wildungen, was 28 and his mother, Anastasie Grafin Von Wied Runkel, was 16. He married Margarethe Cirksena von Ostfriesland on 30 March 1522, in Hanover, Prussia, Germany.

  5. Count Philip IV of Waldeck (1493 – 30 November 1574) was Count of Waldeck-Wildungen from 1513 to 1574. In 1526, he and his uncle Philip III of Waldeck-Eisenberg led the Lutheran Reformation in the county of Waldeck. Background. Philip was the son of Count Henry VIII of Waldeck and his wife Anastasia of Runkel

  6. Count Philip IV of Waldeck (1493 – 30 November 1574) was Count of Waldeck-Wildungen from 1513 to 1574. In 1526, he and his uncle Philip III of Waldeck-Eisenberg led the Lutheran Reformation in the county of Waldeck.

  7. 8 de jul. de 2021 · Margretha von Waldeck was a German countess, born in 1533 as the second daughter of Philip IV, Count of Waldeck-Wildungen and his first wife. She was an extraordinary beauty, with—you guessed it—fair skin and ruby lips but blonde instead of dark hair, as depicted in later versions of the story.