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  1. Há 6 dias · The first Count of Nassau-Siegen was Henry I, Count of Nassau-Siegen (d. 1343), the elder son of Otto I, Count of Nassau. His son Otto II, Count of Nassau-Siegen ruled also in Dillenburg. In 1328, John, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg died unmarried and childless, and Dillenburg

  2. 16 de jun. de 2024 · The first Nassau, who actually went to the Netherlands, was Engelbrecht I, a great-grandson of Heinrich. Count Engelbrecht I of Nassau-Siegen was the third son of count Johann I of Nassau-Siegen and Margaretha van der Mark, whose mother came from the county of Kleve, on the Dutch-German border.

  3. 13 de jun. de 2024 · John Maurice Of Nassau was a Dutch colonial governor and military commander who consolidated Dutch rule in Brazil (1636–44), thereby bringing the Dutch empire in Latin America to the peak of its power. The son of John, count of Nassau-Siegen-Dillenburg, John Maurice fought in the campaigns of his.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 16 de jun. de 2024 · Count Johan Maurits of Nassau-Siegen – hence the name Mauritshuis (house of Maurits) – bought a plot of land bordering the Binnenhof and its pond in 1631. During the years that he was a gouvernor of Dutch Brazil 1636-1644 a house in Dutch Classicist style was built by the wellknown architects Jacob van Campen and Pieter Post.

  5. Há 6 dias · The first of this line to establish himself in the Netherlands was John I, Count of Nassau-Siegen, who married Margaret of the Mark. The real founder of the Nassau fortunes in the Netherlands was John's son, Engelbert I .

  6. 12 de jun. de 2024 · Biography. Elisabeth Heimbach was the youngest child of Johannes Heimbach and Clara. Clara's maiden name is not known but some suggest Jung. Elisabeth was probably born in Trupbach, Nassau-Siegen, Germany about 1662. She died some time after 1696. She married Philip Fischbach 30 May 1683 in Trupbach, Nassau-Siegen (now Westphalia, Germany)

  7. 21 de jun. de 2024 · At the height of their power in Brazil, when the Dutch controlled or influenced four of the seven Portuguese 'capitani├ís' (or governorships) in Brazil under the leadership of Johan Maurits van Nassau-Siegen, much of the trade of north-eastern Brazil was in the hands of the Netherlands West India Company acting on the assumption ...