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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RaugravesRaugraves - Wikipedia

    Charles I died in 1680, followed by his son and heir by his first wife, Charles II, in 1685. The new Elector Palatine Philip William of Neuburg, a distant, Catholic relative, seized Stebbach upon Karl-Eduard's death in 1690. But in addition to several living daughters, Charles I still had a living son of his second marriage, Raugrave Karl-Moritz.

  2. Franz Ludwig (1723-1780) Count of Holnstein, illegitimate son of Charles VII Albert (1697 –1745) Holy Roman Emperor and Maria Caroline Charlotte Freiin of Ingenheim (1704-1749). Married Anna Maria von Löwenfeld (1735-1783) herself illegitimate daughter of Clemens August of Bavaria (1700– 1761) Archbishop-Elector of Cologne.

  3. Charles Louis (1617 –1680) Elector Palatine. Raugrave zu Pfalz . Charles Louis (1617 –1680) Elector Palatine. By the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, Charles Louis was restored to the Lower Palatinate, and given a new electoral title, also called "Elector Palatine", but lower in precedence than the other electorates.

  4. Charles Louis, Elector Palatine ( German: Karl I. Ludwig; 22 December 1617 – 28 August 1680), was the second son of Frederick V of the Palatinate, the "Winter King" of Bohemia, and of Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia and sister of Charles I of England . After living the first half of his life in exile during the German Thirty Years' War and ...

  5. Charles Maurice (9 January 1671 – 13 June 1702); Charles August (19 October 1672 – 20 September 1691), killed in action ; Charles Casimir (1 May 1675 – 28 April 1691), killed in a duel.

  6. CHARLES AUGUSTUS [ Karl August] (1757–1828), grand-duke of Saxe-Weimar, son of Constantine, duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, and Anna Amalia of Brunswick, was born on the 3rd of September 1757. His father died when he was only nine months old, and the boy was brought up under the regency and supervision of his mother, a woman of enlightened but ...

  7. Grave (en allemand : Graf – en allemand et au féminin : Gräfin –, en hongrois : gróf, en tchèque : hrabě, dans les autres langues slaves : hráb'a, groba …), est un titre de noblesse d' Europe centrale et orientale correspondant au titre de comte. Il provient du germanique ǥ (a)rēƀjōn ( haut-allemand : grēva ), du gotique grêve ...