John I of Isenburg-Braunsberg was the Count of Isenburg-Braunsberg from 1278 until 1327. [1] [2]
Limburg-Isenberg was a German county during the Middle Ages. It was a partition of the Duchy of Limburg, located in the County of Isenberg. Limburg-Isenberg was further partitioned into county Limburg-Hohenlimburg and lordship Limburg-Styrum.
Isenberg was a County of medieval Germany. It was a partition of the county of Altena and was annexed to Limburg(Lenne) in 1242.
Count Frederick of Isenberg was a German noble, the younger son of Arnold of Altena. Before the split between Arnold of Altena-Isenberg the eldest and his brother Friedrich Altena-Mark the younger son of Everhard von Berg-Altena. His family castle was the Isenberg near Hattingen, Germany.
Joseph Annegarn (13 October 1794 at Ostbevern in Westphalia – 8 July 1843 at Braunsberg, East Prussia, was a German Catholic theologian, professor of church history and popular writer.
Isenburg-Braunsberg was the name of a state of the Holy Roman Empire, based around Braunsberg in modern Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It was created as a partition of Isenburg-Isenburg in 1199 (1210). In 1338 Isenburg-Braunsberg became an Imperial County. It slowly acquired territories of the County of Wied, being renamed to Isenburg-Wied in 1388.
The Countship of Isenburg-Limburg was a state of the Holy Roman Empire in the 13th and 14th centuries, based around the city of Limburg an der Lahn in modern Hesse, Germany.
Gerlach IV of Isenburg-Limburg, also known as Gerlach I of Limburg, was from 1258 Count of (Isenburg-)Limburg, ruling over the town of Limburg an der Lahn and some villages in its hinterlands. He was the founder of the short-lived House of Limburg.
Gerlach VI of Isenburg-Limburg, also known as Gerlach III of Limburg, was Count of Isenburg-Limburg and Lord of Limburg an der Lahn. He succeeded his father Gerlach V in 1355. In 1356, he married Elisabeth of Falkenstein.
Count Johann Reinhard I of Hanau-Lichtenberg ruled the county of Hanau-Lichtenberg from 1599 to 1625.
Philipp II of Hanau-Lichtenberg ruled the County of Hanau-Lichtenberg from 1480 until his death.
Europäische Stammtafeln - German for European Family Trees - is a series of twenty-nine books which contain sets of genealogical tables of the most influential families of Medieval European history. It is a standard reference work for those researching medieval, imperial, royal and noble families of Europe.
Anna of Isenburg-Büdingen was a German noblewoman. She was a daughter of Count Louis II of Isenburg-Büdingen and Countess Maria of Nassau-Wiesbaden-Idstein.
Karl, Prince of Isenburg-Büdingen was head of the mediatised German house of Isenburg and Büdingen.
Carl Adolf Cornelius was a German historian. In the context of the 1848 revolutions he was elected to the Frankfurt Parliament in 1848/49, after which he switched from the schools sector to the universities sector and built a reputation as a church historian.
Philip III of Falkenstein, Lord of Falkenstein, Münzenberg and Lich, Hesse was a member of the Lich line of the Falkenstein dynasty, son of Werner I of Falkenstein, Lord of Münzenberg and Falkenstein, who founded the Lich line, and his wife Mechtild of Diez.
Ferdinand Maximilian III of Ysenburg-Wächtersbach was the head of the Wächtersbach branch of the House Ysenburg and the first Prince of Isenburg-Budingen-Wächtersbach.
Christine Eleonore of Stolberg-Gedern. was a German noblewoman of The House of Stolberg and by marriage Countess of Isenburg-Büdingen.
Ernst Dietrich, of Ysenburg-Büdingen was a German Count (Graf) from the House of Isenburg-Büdingen.
Ernst Casimir I, Prince of Ysenburg and Büdingen was a prince of Isenburg-Büdingen, a former County of southern Hesse, Germany.
Count Ernst von Isenburg-Grenzau was a Spanish general in the Thirty Years' War and the last representative of the Isenburg-Grenzau line.
Preceded by: | John I | Succeeded by: |
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Bruno III | Count of Isenburg-Braunsberg 1278–1327 | William I |