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  1. Through his mother he had ties to the House of Bourbon-Vendôme, with the king of Navarre and prince of Condé as uncles. Marriage. In 1558 Nevers was married to Diane de La Marck, third daughter of Robert IV de La Marck, the duke of Bouillon and Françoise de Brézé but the two would not have any offspring prior to Nevers' early death in 1564.

  2. House of Egmond. The Egmond family did not abandon their claims to Guelders and Charles of Egmond conquered the Duchy in 1492. He remained in power with support of the French king. 1492–1538: Charles II, son of Adolf; House of La Marck. 1538–1543: William II, distant relative and successor of the House of Egmond; House of Habsburg

  3. William de la Marck (1446–1485) was an adventurer of German extraction. He became an important character in the late 15th century in the Prince-Bishopric of Liège . William's was nicknamed Le Sanglier des Ardennes (The Wild Boar of the Ardennes )— because he was as fierce as the wild boar which he delighted to hunt.

  4. François I de Clèves, (2 September 1516 – 13 February 1561) was a French Prince étranger and military commander during the Italian Wars. He was the first duke of Nevers, his county being elevated to a duchy in 1539. In deference to the large amount of land he held in Champagne, and lands he was set to inherit there from his mother ...

  5. Life. John was born on 10 November 1490, as the son of John II, Duke of Cleves, and Mathilde of Hesse. In 1510, at the age of 19, John married Duchess Maria of Jülich-Berg, daughter of Duke William IV of Jülich-Berg and Sibylle of Brandenburg, who became heiress to her father's estates Jülich, Berg and Ravensberg.

  6. La Marck. Pour l’article ayant un titre homophone, voir Lamarck . Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Comté de La Marck. Maison de La Marck. Guillaume de La Marck, le "Sanglier des Ardennes". Guillaume II de la Marck.

  7. Engelbert III of the Mark (1333–1391) was a son of Count Adolph II of Mark. Adolf III de la Marck (1334–1394) was a son of Count Adolph II. He was bishop of Münster and later archbishop of Cologne. In 1364 he left his position as bishop of Cologne to his cousin Engelbert III, to become Count of Cleves. {See Duchy of Cleves .}