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  1. Countess Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg. Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg (born: March 1537- died: 6 July 1579 in Dillenburg) was the daughter of Landgrave George III, Landgrave of Leuchtenberg and Margravine Barbara of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1495–1552). After her death, the German theologian Christoph Pezel wrote an obituary about her. [1] Portraits.

  2. Marriage and issue. Elisabeth was the first wife of John VI of Nassau-Dillenburg, son of William "the Rich" of Nassau en Juliana of Stolberg. She married on 6 June 1559 at Dillenburg Castle. They had thirteen children: William Louis (1560-1620), stadtholder of Frisia (1584-1620), married Anna of Nassau (1563-1588) John VII (1561-1623)

  3. Advertisement. Elisabeth von Leuchtenberg von Nassau. Birth. Mar 1537. Death. 6 Jul 1579 (aged 42) Burial Details Unknown Add to Map. Memorial ID. 44787720. · View Source. Suggest Edits. Memorial. Photos 0. Flowers 5. Maintained by: V F. Originally Created by: FS. Added: Nov 25, 2009. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 44787720. Source citation.

  4. Elisabeth Müller-Himmler (1906–1999) Duke of Leuchtenberg 2 March 1928 – 5 May 1937 (9 years, 2 months and 3 days) (son of his predecessor) Nicolas de Leuchtenberg Born on 12 October 1933 in Munich, Germany: styled Highness (1933); Duke of Leuchtenberg (1933); Count of Beauharnais (1933); Marquis of La Ferté-Beauharnais (1937)

  5. He married Princess Elisabeth Von Leuchtenberg of Beauharnais Countess of Nassau-Dillenberg on 16 July 1559, in Dillenburg, Dillkreis, Hesse-Nassau, Prussia, Germany. They were the parents of at least 8 sons and 5 daughters.

  6. When Princess Elisabeth Von Leuchtenberg of Beauharnais Countess of Nassau-Dillenberg was born on 1 March 1537, in Pfreimd, Schwandorf, Bavaria, Germany, her father, Georg III von Leuchtenberg Beauharnais von Leuchtenburg, was 34 and her mother, Empress Barbara Gravin von Brandenburg, was 41.

  7. List of countesses of the Palatinate. The Countess of the Palatinate ( German: Gräfin von der Pfalz) was the consort of the Count of the Palatinate, one of the Empire's greatest princes. [1] Non-Hereditary, 1085–1156. House of Hohenstaufen, 1156–1195. House of Welf, 1195–1214. House of Wittelsbach, 1214–1356. Sources. ^ Thomas Curtis (1829).