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  1. The House of La Marck (German: Haus Mark; von der Mark) was a noble family, which from about 1200 appeared as the counts of Mark. History [ edit ] The family history started with Count Adolf I , scion of a cadet branch of the Rhenish Berg dynasty residing at Altena Castle in Westphalia .

  2. Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, il cui nome completo era Jean-Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet cavaliere di Lamarck, è stato un naturalista, zoologo, botanico ed enciclopedista francese. Introdusse verso la fine del XVIII secolo il termine "biologia" ed elaborò la prima teoria dell'evoluzione degli organismi viventi basata sull'adattamento ...

  3. C. Catherine of Cleves. Catherine of Cleves (1417–1479) Charles II, Count of Nevers. Charlotte de La Marck. Adolph of Cleves, Lord of Ravenstein. Henriette of Cleves. Marie of Cleves, Princess of Condé.

  4. Biography. upper: left Jülich, center Cleves, right Berg, down: left La Mark, right Ravensberg. Jakobe von Baden. Antoinette de Lorraine. His parents were William the Rich, Duke of Jülich-Cleves-Berg (1516–1592) and Maria of Austria (1531–1581), a daughter of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and Anna of Bohemia and Hungary.

  5. The County of Mark ( German: Grafschaft Mark, French: Comté de La Marck colloquially known as Die Mark) was a county and state of the Holy Roman Empire in the Lower Rhenish–Westphalian Circle. It lay on both sides of the Ruhr River along the Volme and Lenne rivers.

  6. William of Jülich-Cleves-Berge (William I of Cleves, William V of Jülich-Berg) ( German: Wilhelm der Reiche; 28 July 1516 – 5 January 1592) was a Duke of Jülich-Cleves-Berg (1539–1592). William was born in and died in Düsseldorf.

  7. The House of La Marck ( German: Haus Mark; von der Mark) was a noble family, which from about 1200 appeared as the counts of Mark.