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  1. Margaret of the Palatinate (German: Margarete von der Pfalz; 1376 – 26 August 1434, Einville-au-Jard) was the daughter of Rupert of Germany and his wife Elisabeth of Nuremberg. She married Charles II, Duke of Lorraine on 6 February 1393. [1]

  2. She married in 1474, with an elaborate celebration in Amberg (the "Amberg Wedding") Philip, who later became Elector Palatine Philip the Upright (1448–1508). He had earlier turned down marriage candidates such as Mary of Burgundy and Anna, heiress of the county of Katzenelnbogen .

  3. Margaret of the Palatinate was the daughter of Rupert of Germany and his wife Elisabeth of Nuremberg. She married Charles II, Duke of Lorraine on 6 February 1393. Her maternal grandparents were Frederick V, Burgrave of Nuremberg and Elisabeth of Meissen.

  4. The Palatine Wedding of 1613: Protestant Alliance and Court Festival. Ed. Mara R. Wade and Sara Smart. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2013. 662 pp. $120.50. ISBN 978-3-447-10014-4. Whether or not the wedding of Friedrich V Elector Palatine to James I’s daughter Elizabeth was “the single most important occasion in the whole of James’s reign”

  5. Molly Taylor-Poleskey describes an interactive website mapping the trip from London to Heidelberg, while Margaret McGowan analyses a Huguenot poem of 1613 on the wedding, that also identified Friedrich as a new Jason.

  6. The wedding of Elizabeth Stuart (1596–1662), daughter of James VI and I, and Frederick V of the Palatinate (1596–1632) was celebrated in London in February 1613. There were fireworks, masques (small, choreography-based plays), tournaments, and a mock-sea battle or naumachia.

  7. The Palatine Wedding of 1613: Protestant Alliance and Court Festival. Edited by Sara Smart and Mara R. Wade. (Wolfenbütteler Abhandlungen zur Renaissanceforschung, Bd. 29) ISBN: 978-3-447-10014-4. Harrassowitz Verlag · Wiesbaden 2013 in Kommission.

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