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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. Henri-Robert de la Marck. Mother. Françoise de Bourbon. Charlotte de La Marck (5 November 1574 – 15 May 1594) was a ruling Princess of Sedan and a Duchess of Bouillon in her own right between 1588 and 1594. [1] Her titles and the principality of Sedan passed in to the House of La Tour d'Auvergne through her marriage without issue.

  3. Érard de la Marck (French pronunciation: [eʁaʁ də la maʁk]; 31 May 1472 – 18 March 1538) was prince-bishop of Liège from 1506 till 1538. He was born in Sedan, Ardennes , the third son of Robert I de la Marck [ fr ] , lord of Sedan and Bouillon .

  4. He was also Count of Altena. The United Duchies of Jülich-Cleves-Berg was a combination of reichsfrei states within the Holy Roman Empire . Johann Wilhelm was first married in 1585 to Jakobea of Baden (d. 1597), daughter of Philibert, Margrave of Baden. He was secondly married to Antonia of Lorraine (d. 1610), daughter of Charles III, Duke of ...

  5. Anna of Katzenelnbogen. Mathilde of Hesse (4 July 1473 in Blankenstein – 19 February 1505 in Cologne) was a Landrave princess from birth and became the Duchess of Cleves and Countess of La Marck through her marriage to John II, Duke of Cleves in 1489 until her death. She was the daughter of Henry III, Landgrave of Upper Hesse (1441-1483) and ...

  6. Coalition Wars. Prince Auguste Marie Raymond d'Arenberg, Count of La Marck Grandee of Spain (30 August 1753 – 26 September 1833), [1] [2] was a French-Belgian aristocrat. Part of the House of Arenberg, who at this time still held the rank of sovereign princes, he was the second son and fourth child of Charles, 5th Duke of Arenberg .

  7. Robert III de La Marck (1491–1537), Seigneur of Fleuranges, was a Marshal of France and historian. Self-styled "The Young Adventurer," he was one of Francis I's close companions in the last years of Louis XII's life, and remained close after Francis ascended the throne.