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  1. 28 de abr. de 2022 · Death: 1429 (82-92) Cleves, Germany. Immediate Family: Daughter of Gerhard I von Jülich, Graf von Berg und Ravensberg and Margareta von Ravensberg. Wife of Adolf III von der Mark, count of Cleves. Mother of Adolf IV, duke of Cleves; Duke Dietrich II of Mark; Margaret of Cleves, Duchess of Bavaria-Straubing; Engelberta von der Mark; Mynta von ...

  2. His skillful marriage policy, especially the marriage of his son Gerhard to Margaret of Ravensberg, heiress of Berg and Ravensberg, enabled him to add territory to the house of Jülich. Upon William's death in 1361, the Duchy of Jülich passed to his second son, William , his eldest son having predeceased.

  3. Margaret of Guelders (11 August 1436, Grave, North Brabant – 2 November 1486, Simmern) was a noblewoman from what is now the Netherlands. She was part of the Egmond Family. She was married to the Count Palatine of Simmern and was the Countess of Palatinate-Simmern .

  4. Federico I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua. Father. Albert III, Duke of Bavaria. Mother. Anna of Brunswick-Grubenhagen-Einbeck. Margaret of Bavaria (1442–1479) was a Marchioness consort of Mantua, married in 1463 to Federico I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua. [1] She was regent in the absence of her spouse during his military campaign in 1479.

  5. Margaret of Jülich. Otto II of Brunswick-Göttingen (nicknamed Otto Cocles or Otto the One-eyed; c. 1380 – 6 February 1463), a member of the House of Welf, was Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and, after the death of his father Otto the Evil in 1394, ruling Prince of Göttingen .

  6. Margaret of Cleves (c. 1375–14 May 1411) was a German noblewoman. A daughter of Adolph III, Count of Mark and Margaret of Jülich (making her sister to Adolph I ), in 1394 she became the second wife of Albert I, Duke of Bavaria, though the marriage remained childless. [1] The couple held court in The Hague . Margaret is also well known for ...

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JülichJülich - Wikipedia

    Germany 1990–present. The Duchies of Cleves, Berg, Jülich and the County of Mark in 1477. Jülich is first mentioned in Roman times as Juliacum along an important road through the Rur valley. Fortified during the late Roman period, it was taken over by the Franks and grew to be the centre of a county which became the nucleus of a regional power.