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  1. Countess Maria Wilhelmina von Neipperg (later Princess of Auersperg) (30 April 1738 - 21 October 1775) was an Austrian noble and court official, known as the mistress of Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor. By birth, she was member of an ancient House of Neipperg and by marriage member of the House of Auersperg .

  2. 6 de oct. de 2023 · Countess Maria Wilhelmina von Neipperg (Maria Wilhelmina Josepha ; 30 April 1738 - 21 October 1775) was an Austrian noblewoman and court official and later, a mistress of Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor. Marriage . On 10 April 1755, she married Johann Adam Joseph, Prince of Auersperg.

  3. House. Montenuovo. Father. Adam Albert, Count of Neipperg. Mother. Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma. Arms of the Prince of Montenuovo. Portrait circa 1850. William Albert, 1st Prince of Montenuovo (8 August 1819 – 7 April 1895) was an Italian prince and Field Marshal Lieutenant of the Austrian Empire .

  4. 13 de sept. de 2012 · Thursday, September 13, 2012. Princely nuptials: Neipperg-Lobkowicz. Imagine three of your children getting married in the same year with two brides and one groom competing for family attention. On May 30, Countess Hemma von Neipperg, fourth child of the Hereditary Count and Countess of Neipperg, married Roman Keno Specht.

    • Marlene Eilers Koenig
  5. Adam Neipperg was born in Vienna as a son of Count Leopold von Neipperg (1728–1792) and his third wife, Countess Maria Wilhelmine von Hatzfeldt-Wildenburg (1750–1784). In 1766, the County of Neipperg, centred on Schwaigern, had become an Imperial State of the Holy Roman Empire, but was mediatised to the Kingdom of Württemberg in 1806.

    • 1791–1829
  6. English: Mary Frederica Charlotte of Württemberg (*30 October 1816-4 January 1887*), daughter of Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna of Russia and King William I of Württemberg. In 1840 the princess married Count Alfred von Neipperg. She was buried in the mausoleum on Mount Württemberg, Stuttgart. Subcategories.

  7. Photograph of Princess Marie of Neipperg, seated and facing 3/4 left. She holds a book in her left hand. The Princess was the first daughter of Wilhelm I, King of Württemberg.