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  1. Built by. Dudo of Laurenburg. Nassau Castle, located in Nassau, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, was the original seat of the House of Nassau. The ruins of the castle are situated on a rock outcropping about 120 m (390 ft) above the Lahn River. The House of Nassau was an aristocratic dynasty among whose descendants are the present-day monarchy of ...

  2. Dudo is mentioned as Tuto de Lurinburg between 1093 and 1117. In a charter dated 1134 (after his death) he is mentioned as Count of Laurenburg. [1] Dudo was lord or Vogt of Lipporn and Miehlen and owned large parts of the lands of Lipporn/ Laurenburg. There are more persons known who, as owners of the lands of Lipporn/Laurenburg (and thus the ...

  3. Arnold was a son of Dudo of Laurenburg ( German: Dudo von Laurenburg) and the fourth of the seven daughters of count Louis I of Arnstein, possibly her name was Irmgardis or Demudis. [1] Arnold is mentioned as count of Laurenburg between 1124 and 1148. He probably ruled together with his brother Rupert I. [1] [2] Arnold and Rupert built Nassau ...

  4. Dudo of Laurenburg [1][2] was probably Count of Laurenburg and is considered the founder of the House of Nassau. The House of Nassau would become one of the reigning families in Germany, from which are descended through females the present-day royals of the Netherlands and Luxembourg, while officially belonging to this House.

  5. Rupert wordt tussen 1079 en 1082 vermeld te Siegen als bezitter van delen van de erflanden Lipporn / Laurenburg, [1] en in een oorkonde uit 1079/1089 als voogd te Siegen. [2] Hij was een leenman van het aartsbisdom Mainz. [2] [noot 2] Mogelijk was Rupert reeds graaf van Laurenburg, maar hij wordt niet als zodanig vermeld.

  6. Dudo-Heinrich von Laurenburg (1070 - aft. 1117) 0 references . Sitelinks. Wikipedia (9 entries) edit. bgwiki Дудо-Хайнрих фон ...

  7. Around 1117, Dudo, Count of Laurenburg founded at Lipporn a Benedictine priory dedicated and named for Saint Florin of Koblenz, and dependent on the Benedictine All Saints Abbey in Schaffhausen. About 1126, his son, Rupert I, Count of Laurenburg , the Vogt of Lipporn , established it as a separate and independent abbey. [7]