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Hedwig and Eleonora
A princess and spinster, she took care of her dominating grandmother, Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp, during her brother's absence in the Great Northern War.
He was married to Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp, who bore his son and successor, Charles XI.
Charles X had one legitimate child by Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp: his successor Charles XI ( 1655 – 1697, reigned 1660 – 1697 ).
Charles was the only son of King Charles X of Sweden and Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp.
Mindful of this, the foreign ambassadors, always visited Hedwig Eleonora first, and then Ulrika Eleonora, when paying their respects to the royal family.
The Queen Dowager Regent Hedwig Eleonora bought the castle in 1661, a year after her role as Queen of Sweden ended, but it burnt to the ground on 30 December that same year.
During the reign of the kings Charles XI of Sweden and Charles XII of Sweden, the royal court was often present at the palace ; Charles XI of Sweden went there to hunt, and after 1700, Hedwig Eleonora again hosted the royal court during the absence of Charles XII of Sweden under the Great Northern War ( 1700 – 1721 ).
Overview of baroque garden, seen from the palaceThe oldest part of the gardens was created at the end of the 17th century under the direction of Hedwig Eleonora.
Elisabet Gyllenhielm was heiress to the castle and manor of Tynnelsö in Södermanland and lady-in-waiting of two Swedish queens consort, Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg and Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp.
This longtime alliance was sealed by several dynastic marriages: Christina of Holstein-Gottorp married Charles IX of Sweden, Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp married Charles X Gustavus, Duke Frederick IV married the eldest daughter of King Charles XI of Sweden, and ultimately Prince Adolf Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp ascended to the Swedish throne in 1751, founding the Holstein-Gottorp dynasty of Sweden ( ruled 1751 – 1818 ).
During the escape, Marie was separated from the rest of her family ; she was later found with her nurse hiding in a crib in a stable, although another version claims it was actually a cave in an old mineshaft In Sweden, the family was welcomed by the Queen Dowager Hedwig Eleonora and became popular members of the society life on the estates of the nobility around Kristianstad ; in 1712, they also visited Medevi, the spa of the Queen Dowager.
That relationship was open public knowledge at court and seems to have been accepted, though much disliked by her grandmother, Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp.
Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp ( 23 October 1636 – 24 November 1715 ) was the queen consort of King Charles X of Sweden and queen mother of King Charles XI.
Hedwig Eleonora was described as a dominant personality and was regarded as the de facto First Lady of the royal court for 61 years, from 1654 until her death in 1715.
After having seen portraits of both sisters, however, Charles X chose Hedwig Eleonora because of her beauty, and her current fiancé was instead married to Magdalena Sibylla.
In the marriage contract, Hedwig Eleonora was granted a dowry of 20. 000 riksdaler, 32. 000 riksdaler as a dower, and the incomes of the fiefs of Gripsholm, Eskilstuna and Strömsholm.
Charles X and Hedwig Eleonora were also third cousins twice ​​.
Hedwig Eleonora was welcomed by Charles X at Dalarö in Sweden 5 October 1654, and stayed at Karlberg Palace before her official arrival at Stockholm for the wedding 24 October.
Hedwig Eleonora remained in Sweden for the birth of the future Charles XI the 24 November 1655 and the following Christmas.

Hedwig and was
Her sister Hedwig of Andechs married Henry I, duke of Silesia and was canonized as Saint Hedwig in 1267.
Casimir III the Great () ( 30 April 1310 – 5 November 1370 ) who reigned in 1333 – 1370, was the last King of Poland from the Piast dynasty, the son of King Władysław I the Elbow-high and Duchess Hedwig of Kalisz.
With Adelaide still alive and Christine possibly surviving, the marriage to Hedwig was also considered bigamous.
Hedwig the younger was legitimated by Pope Gregory XI on 11 October 1371.
George's second wife was Hedwig of Münsterberg-Oels ( 1508 – 1531 ), daughter of Charles I of Münsterberg-Oels ; their marriage produced two daughters:
Matilda bore him three sons, one called Otto, and two daughters, Hedwig and Gerberga and founded many religious institutions, including the abbey of Quedlinburg where Henry is buried, and was later canonized.
Hedwig was daughter of the Duke Bolesław the Pious and the Hungarian Princess Blessed Jolenta.
Hedwig was wife of Duke George of Bavaria
Saint Hedwig of Silesia (), also Saint Hedwig of Andechs (, ) ( 1174 – 15 October 1243 ) from the comital House of Andechs was Duchess of Silesia from 1201 and of Greater Poland from 1231 as well as High Duchess consort of Poland from 1232 until 1238.
Hedwig proceeded to Płock pleading for Henry and was able to have him released.
On 15 October 1243, Hedwig died and was buried in Trzebnica Abbey with her husband, while relics of her are preserved at Andechs Abbey and St. Hedwig's Cathedral in Berlin.
Hedwig was canonized in 1267 by Pope Clement IV, a supporter of the Cistercian order, at the suggestion of her grandson Prince-Archbishop Władysław of Salzburg.
She was also known for her piety and her admiration for Saints Mary, Martha, and Bridget of Sweden, as well as her patron saint, Hedwig of Andechs.
Despite the agreements signed between Władysław Jagiełło and the Polish magnates to ensure the succession for his sons, the opposition wanted another candidate for the Polish throne – Frederick of Brandenburg, who was betrothed to Hedwig, Jagiełło's daughter by his second wife.
Rudolph was the son of Count Albert IV of Habsburg and Hedwig, daughter of Count Ulrich of Kyburg, and was born at Limburg Castle near Sasbach am Kaiserstuhl in the Breisgau region.
The first duke and deputy of Bruno was Frederick I of Bar, son-in-law of Bruno's sister Hedwig of Saxony.
The church was therefore dedicated to the patron of Silesia and Brandenburg, Saint Hedwig of Andechs.
She was later chosen to play Hedwig, the character she had seen Entwistle play, in The Wild Duck.
Henry was a son of the Polish High Duke Henry I the Bearded, Duke of Silesia-Wrocław, by his wife ( and later Saint ) Hedwig of Andechs, daughter of Duke Berthold IV of Merania.
Hugh's third wife was Hedwig of Saxony, daughter of Henry the Fowler and Matilda of Ringelheim She and Hugh had:

Hedwig and at
Her elder sister Agnes married King Philip II of France ( annulled in 1200 ) and her sister Gertrude ( killed in 1213 ) King Andrew II of Hungary, while the youngest Matilda ( Mechtild ) became abbess at the Benedictine Abbey of Kitzingen in Franconia, where Hedwig also received her education.
Hedwig and her daughter-in-law, Henry's II widow Anna of Bohemia, established a Benedictine abbey at the site of the battle in Legnickie Pole, settled with monks coming from Opatovice in Bohemia.
A 17th-century legend has it that Hedwig, while on a pilgrimage to Rome, stopped at Bad Zell in Austria, where she had healing waters spring up at a source which today still bears her name.
About 1353 he had a manuscript on the life of Saint Hedwig of Andechs drawn up, later called Schlackenwerth ( Ostrov ) Codex, which today is kept at the J. Paul Getty Museum.
St. Hedwig is located at ( 29. 424484 ,-98. 214357 ).
The Harris County Public Library ( HCPL ) system operates the Spring Branch Memorial Branch at 930 Corbindale Road in Hedwig Village.
Hedwig Gorski before 1982 came up up with the term performance poetry, to distinguish her text-based vocal performances from performance art, especially the work of performance artists, such as Laurie Anderson, who worked with music at that time.
Also offended by the countess's elevation were King Frederick's younger unmarried siblings, Princess Sophia Hedwig ( 1677 – 1735 ) and Prince Charles ( 1680 – 1729 ), who withdrew from Copenhagen to their own rival court at the handsomely re-modelled Vemmetofte Cloister ( later a haven for dowerless damsels of the nobility ).
Hedwig Taube von Hessenstein's grave at Strängnäs Cathedral
Kurt Eisner was born in Berlin at 10: 15 p. m. on 14 May 1867 to Emanuel Eisner and Hedwig Levenstein, both Jewish.
Hedwig died in October 1243 and was buried there also, while some of her relics are preserved at Andechs Abbey in Bavaria, she was canonized in 1267.
He married recent German immigrant Hedwig Roelen in 1942, who was a nurse at Glockner Penrose Hospital in Colorado Springs.
Henry erected a stone castle at Krosno, where he died in 1238 and where his widow, Hedwig of Andechs, took refuge during the 1241 Mongol invasion of Europe.
From 1910 to 1911, Scheler briefly lectured at the Philosophical Society of Göttingen, where he made and renewed acquaintances with Theodore Conrad, Hedwig Conrad-Martius ( an ontologist and Conrad's wife ), Moritz Geiger, Jean Hering, Roman Ingarden, Dietrich von Hildebrand, Husserl, Alexandre Koyré, and Adolf Reinach.
His collection Conversation and Cognition, co-edited with Hedwig te Molder, brought together a group of conversation analysts, ethnothodologists and discursive psychologists ( including Geoff Coulter, John Heritage, Anita Pomerantz, and Robert Hopper ) to address fundamental issues at the boundary of work on cognition and interaction.
Gertude's paternal grandparents were Count Berthold III of Andechs, Margrave of Istria and his wife Hedwig from the House of Wittelsbach at Scheyern, a descendant of King Béla I of Hungary, through his daughter, Sophia of Hungary.
Among other people he tested tuberculin on his mistress and later wife, Hedwig Freiberg, who was 16 years old at the time.
His mother, Charlotte Hedwig Kiszko, died four months later, in Rochdale, on 3 May 1994, at the age of 70.

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