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  1. La maison de La Marck ou de La Mark est une famille noble du Saint-Empire germanique, issue de la maison de Berg, détenant d'abord en apanage le comté d'Altena, puis, successivement, le comté de La Marck (en allemand : Grafschaft Mark, en abrégé die Mark ), le comté de Clèves, enfin les duchés de Juliers et de Berg .

  2. Mother. Guillemette de Sarrebruck. Robert IV de La Marck (15 January 1512 – Guise, 1556), was Duke of Bouillon, Seigneur of Sedan and a Marshal of France. He rose to prominence during the reign of Henri II of France as a favourite of both the king and his mistress Diane de Poitiers. In 1547 he was elevated to the rank of Marshal of France.

  3. Head of House Name major titles (birth–death) Notes 1576–1599: Margaret de la Marck, Princely Countess of Arenberg (1527–1599) married Jean de Ligne-Barbançon (1528–1568) 1599–1616: Charles, 2nd Princely Count of Arenberg (1550–1616) son of Jean and Margaret 1616–1640: Philippe-Charles, 3rd Count of Arenberg and 6th Duke of ...

  4. 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.

  5. The United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg was a combination of states of the Holy Roman Empire.The duchies of Jülich and Berg united in 1423. Nearly a century later, in 1521, these two duchies, along with the county of Ravensberg, fell extinct, with only the last duke's daughter Maria von Geldern left to inherit; under Salic law, women could only hold property through a husband or guardian ...

  6. House of La Marck-Bouillon. Lords of Arenberg and Sedan. Dukes of Bouillon. Princes of Sedan. Issued from Eberhard, younger son of Engelbert II, Count of Mark. House of Cleves-Ravenstein. Lords of Ravenstein, Wijnendale. and Enghien. Issued from Adolph, 2nd son of Adolph I, Duke of Cleves.

  7. With the death of Charlotte de La Marck in 1594, the duchy and the title passed to her husband Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne and thereafter became the possession of the House of La Tour d'Auvergne. France again invaded Bouillon in 1676 during the Franco-Dutch War , but Godefroy Maurice de La Tour d'Auvergne retained the title.