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  1. Schaumburg-Lippe, also called Lippe-Schaumburg, was created as a county in 1647, became a principality in 1807 and a free state in 1918, and was until 1946 a small state in Germany, located in the present day state of Lower Saxony, with its capital at Bückeburg and an area of 340 km 2 (131 sq mi) and over 40,000 inhabitants.

  2. Schaumburg-Lippe fue un Estado alemán que dejó de existir en 1946. Surgido en el siglo XVII a raíz de la Paz de Westfalia , tuvo una existencia de casi 300 años; primero como condado dentro del Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico , luego como principado integrado en la Confederación del Rin , la Confederación Germánica y el Imperio alemán .

  3. Schaumburg-Lippe, one of the smallest of member states of the German Reich prior to the end of World War II. It lay east of the middle bend of the Weser River and was bounded on all sides by Prussian territory from 1866 to 1946. Bückeburg was its capital.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. The House of Lippe (German: Haus Lippe) is the former reigning house of a number of small German states, two of which existed until the German Revolution of 1918–19, the Principality of Lippe and the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe.

  5. Retaining its independence and sovereignty after the Napoleonic Wars, the Principality of Schaumburg-Lippe joined the German Confederation in 1815. The first official act of mutual recognition between Schaumburg-Lippe and the United States came in 1854.