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  1. 15 de nov. de 2023 · Sophia Dorothea was widowed in 1698. George I, Hanoverian King of Britain. After years of robust health and acclaim across mainland Europe, the 83-year-old Sophia Dorothea was caught in a rain shower and she fell ill. She died on 8th June 1714. Forty-nine-year-old Queen Anne survived until 1st August 1714.

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Sophia Charlotte of Hanover (30 October 1668, at Schloss Iburg in Bad Iburg near Osnabrück – 1 February 1705 in Hanover) was the daughter of Ernst August, Elector of Hanover and Sophia of the Palatinate. Her eldest brother Georg Ludwig would succeed to the British throne in 1714 as King George I.

  3. Biography. The only daughter of Elector Ernst August (1629-1698) of Hanover and Sophie (1630-1714); 1684 she married Friedrich (1657-1713), who, as Friedrich III, became elector of Brandenburg in 1688 and, as Friedrich I, became the first king of Prussia in 1701.

  4. Kurfurstin Sophie Charlotte von Brandenburg, wax model for medal by Raimund Falz, undated, before 1701 - Bode-Museum - DSC02775.JPG 3,122 × 3,229; 4.93 MB Portret van Sophia Charlotte, koningin van Pruisen, als keurvorstin van Brandenburg, RP-P-1911-4565.jpg 4,268 × 5,630; 4.49 MB

  5. 7 de dic. de 2014 · Sophie Charlotte, Queen of Prussia. Wachsporträt von Johann Wilhelm von Kolm, um 1700 ( Bode-Museum, Berlin) Tomb of Queen Sophie Charlotte. Located in the Hohenzollern crypt in the Berliner Dom. Gilded statue of death at the foot of her sarcophagus by Andreas Schlüter. Heinrich Baucke: Sophie Charlotte (mit dem Modell des Charlottenburger ...

  6. views 3,682,936 updated. Sophia, electress of Hanover (1630–1714). Sophia was a granddaughter of James I by his daughter Elizabeth, who had married the elector palatine. On the death in 1700 of Anne's last surviving child, William, duke of Gloucester, Sophia was the next non-catholic heir, and was recognized in the Act of Settlement of 1701.

  7. Granddaughter of James I of England, Sophia (1630–1714) began life a penniless princess in exile. She ended it as electress dowager of Hanover, an emerging European power. Had she lived two months longer, she would have succeeded to the British crown before her son, George I. In keeping with Sophia’s reputation as the era’s “most entertaining woman,” her memoirs, which she wrote in ...