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Walram II of Nassau, German: Walram II. von Nassau (c. 1220 – 24 January 1276), was Count of Nassau and is the ancestor of the Walramian branch of the House of Nassau.
- Walram I, Count of Nassau
Walram I of Nassau, German: Walram I. von Nassau (c. 1146 –...
- Henry II
Walram II (c. 1220 – 24 January 1276), succeeded his father...
- Walram II
Walram II may refer to: Walram II of Limburg (c. 1085–1139)...
- Walram I, Count of Nassau
In the 1170s, the Count of Nassau, Walram I, received the area around Wiesbaden as a fiefdom. In 1232, Wiesbaden became a Reichsstadt, an imperial city, of the Holy Roman Empire. Wiesbaden returned to the control of the House of Nassau in 1270 under Count Walram II, Count of Nassau.
- 1093; 930 years ago
In 1255, after the Counts of Nassau acquired the estates of Weilburg, the sons of Count Henry II divided Nassau for the first time. Walram II received the county of Nassau-Weilburg. From 1328 on, his younger brother, Otto I, held the estates north of the Lahn river, namely the County of Nassau-Siegen and Nassau-Dillenburg.
- County
- Nassau
- County
Walramian Nassau. Walram II’s son, Adolf of Nassau, was the German king from 1292 to 1298. Adolf’s descendants, however, partitioned their lands, and by the late 18th century the Walramian inheritance was divided between the Nassau-Weilburg and Nassau-Usingen branches.