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  1. Puerta del Castillo de Wülzburg con los escudos de armas de Sofía y su marido. Sofía de Brunswick-Luneburgo (30 de octubre de 1563 - 14 de enero de 1639) fue un miembro de la Casa de Brunswick-Luneburgo y margravina de Brandeburgo-Ansbach y Brandeburgo-Kulmbach y Duquesa de Krnov por matrimonio.

    • Sophie von Braunschweig-Lüneburg
    • St. Lorenz
  2. Sophie of Brunswick-Lüneburg (30 October 1563 – 14 January 1639) was a member of the House of Brunswick-Lüneburg and margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Brandenburg-Kulmbach and Duchess of Krnov by marriage.

    • Early Years
    • Elevation of Birth Status and Marriage
    • Affair with Königsmarck
    • Divorce and Imprisonment
    • Death and Burial
    • Inheritance

    Born in Celle on 15 September 1666, Sophia Dorothea was the only surviving daughter of George William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, by his morganatic wife Eléonore Desmier d'Olbreuse (1639–1722), Lady of Harburg, a French Huguenotnoblewoman. Sophia Dorothea appears to have grown up in a carefree and loving environment. Her father transferred large a...

    After the death of his daughter's fiancé, George William sought to negotiate an agreement on the inheritance of the Duchy of Lüneburg. He initially approached his younger brother Ernest Augustus, Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg, to arrange a marriage between Sophia Dorothea and Ernest Augustus's eldest son George Louis, the future King George I of Gr...

    Around 1690, Sophia Dorothea was reunited with the Swedish Count Philip Christoph von Königsmarck, whom she had known in her childhood when he was a page at the court of Celle. At first, their meetings were brief and sporadic, but this probably changed in 1691. Initially, their closeness went unnoticed, but eventually the preference that Sophia Dor...

    George Louis demanded a legal separation from his wife, citing her as sole culprit on grounds of desertion. During the divorce proceedings, he had Sophia Dorothea placed under arrest in Lauenau Castle. On 28 December 1694, the dissolution of the marriage was pronounced, and Sophia Dorothea was named as the guilty party for "maliciously leaving her ...

    The death of her mother in 1722 left Sophia Dorothea alone. When Sophia Dorothea's daughter, the Queen in Prussia, travelled to Hanover in 1725 to see her father, by then King George I of Great Britain, Sophia Dorothea, dressed even more carefully than usual, waited every day at the window of her residence, hoping in vain to see her daughter. Sophi...

    Sophia Dorothea's parents seem to have believed to the last that their daughter would one day be released. In January 1705, shortly before her father's death, he and his wife drew up a joint will, under which their daughter was to receive the estates of Ahlden, Rethem and Walsrode, extensive estates in France, and Celle, her father's fortune and he...

    • May 1727, Stadtkirche, Celle
    • Hanover
  3. Biografía. Sofía era la hija mayor del Duque Guillermo el Joven de Brunswick-Luneburgo (1535-1592) de su matrimonio con Dorotea de Dinamarca, una hija del rey Cristián III de Dinamarca. Monumento funerario en la Iglesia de San Lorenzo, Núremberg.

  4. Sofía Amelia de Brunswick-Luneburgo ( Herzberg am Harz, 24 de marzo de 1628- Copenhague, 20 de febrero de 1685) fue reina de Dinamarca y Noruega como esposa del rey Federico III de Dinamarca . Biografía. Retrato de Sofía Amelia atribuido a Jürgen Ovens (c. 1650) Sofía Amelia de Brunswick-Luneburgo, anónimo.

  5. Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Sophie Amalie of Brunswick-Lüneberg (1628–1685)Queen of Denmark. Name variations: Sophia of Lüneburg; Sophia Amelia of Brunswick; SophiaAmelia of Brunswick-Luneburg.

  6. Sophie Amalie of Brunswick-Calenberg (24 March 1628 – 20 February 1685) was Queen of Denmark and Norway as the consort of the King Frederick III of Denmark. She is known for her political influence, as well as for her cultural impact: she acted as the adviser of her husband, and introduced ballet and opera to Denmark.