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  1. Alexandrine von Taxis (1 August 1589 – 26 December 1666), was a German noblewoman who served as Imperial General Postmaster of the Kaiserliche Reichspost, the General Post Office of the Holy Roman Empire, as well as the Post Master of the Spanish Netherlands, from 1628 until 1646.

  2. Alexandrine von Taxis (gebürtig: de Rye, Comtesse de Varax, getauft 1. August 1589 in Brüssel; † 26. Dezember 1666) [1] war als Witwe Leonhards II. von Taxis in der Zeit von 1628 bis 1646 stellvertretend für ihren minderjährigen Sohn Lamoral Claudius Franz Generalpostmeisterin der Kaiserlichen Reichspost und ...

  3. Alexandrine von Taxis (1 August 1589 – 26 December 1666), was a German noblewoman who served as Imperial General Postmaster of the Kaiserliche Reichspost, the General Post Office of the Holy Roman Empire, as well as the Post Master of the Spanish Netherlands, from 1628 until 1646.

  4. Alexandrine von Taxis commissioned genealogists to "clarify" their origin, who until then had only been considered a family descending from medieval knights who had become merchants. They now claimed, albeit without documentary evidence, that they descended from the famous Italian noble family Della Torre , or Torriani, who had ruled in Milan and Lombardy until 1311.

  5. They included Alexandrine von Taxis, who took charge in 1628. She ran the Imperial Postal Service on behalf of her late husband and is now considered the first female entrepreneur in German history. Moreover, the 17th century was also the period in which the Thurn und Taxis family achieved growing social prestige.

  6. 13 de dic. de 2015 · Alexandrine von Taxis Seit 1595/1597 existierte im Heiligen Römischen Reich Deutscher Nation die Kaiserliche Reichspost, die seit ihrer Gründung durch Kaiser Rudolf II. (1552-1612) ununterbrochen bis zu ihrer Auflösung im Jahre 1806 von Mitgliedern der Familie Taxis von Brüssel aus betrieben wurde.

  7. 25 de abr. de 2019 · Alexandrine von Taxis commissioned genealogists to "clarify" the origin of the taxis, which until then had only been regarded as a small family of knights who had changed to the merchant class. They now claimed, albeit without documentary evidence, that the taxis descended from the Italian noble family of the Torriani, or della Torre ...