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  1. Princess Frederica Louise Wilhelmina of Orange-Nassau was a Hereditary Princess of Brunswick; married 14 October 1790 to Hereditary Prince Charles George A...

  2. Crown princess Charles XV and Louise of Orange Nassau betrothal in 1850. Returning home to the castle. Louise left Germany by a Swedish boat from Travemünde and arrived to Sweden with her parents and sister Marie, who were present at her wedding. Princess Louise and Crown Prince Charles married at Storkyrkan in Stockholm on 19 June 1850.

  3. 23 de jun. de 2020 · They moved in with them into the Niederländische Palais. Louise and Wilhelmina were happy to finally be reunited with their family and even welcomed a new addition as Princess Marianne was born on 9 May 1810. At Schönhausen, which Wilhelmina bought, Louise threw herself into her role as an aunt. She was a master at organising surprises and ...

  4. The visitor is introduced to Marie Louise of Hesse-Kassel, Princess of Orange-Nassau, on the ground floor of the city palace, where she lived from 1731 until her death in 1765. A room in the museum has been decorated with portraits of Marie Louise and her family, along with objects and prints that also illustrate the influential period of the ...

  5. Princess Pauline of Orange-Nassau. Princess Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Pauline Charlotte of Orange-Nassau (1 March 1800 – 22 December 1806) was the third child and elder daughter of King William I of the Netherlands and his queen consort, Wilhelmine of Prussia .

  6. Princess of Orange is the title ( name) used for the women who were married to the Ruling Princes of Orange in the time between 1171 to 1815. Since 1815, it was also used for the wives of the heirs to the Dutch throne, who were titled Prince of Orange. The only woman who became a Princess of Orange without being married to a Prince of Orange ...

  7. Louise Juliana of Orange-Nassau (31 March 1576 in Delft – 15 March 1644 in Königsberg) was a countess consort of the Palatinate by marriage to Frederick IV, Elector Palatine, and took part in the regency government of her son between 1610 and 1614. [1] She also acted as a mediator between the king of Sweden and the elector of Brandenburg in ...