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  1. Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg (11 November 1599 – 28 March 1655) was Queen of Sweden from 1620 to 1632 as the wife of King Gustav II Adolph (Gustavus Adolphus). [1] She was born a German princess as the daughter of John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg, and Anna, Duchess of Prussia, daughter of Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia.

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    Maria Eleonora was born in 1599 to John Sigismund, the Prince electorate of Brandenburg. Her mother was no slouch either: Anna was the Duchess of Prussia, and baby Maria grew up in the lap of luxury alongside her seven (!) other siblings. Shutterstock

    Maria Eleonora’s own daughter Christina of Sweden had a verytroubled relationship with her unbalanced mother—and, as we’ll see, for very good reason. As Christina once said of the queen, she had “all the virtues and vices'” of her gender. Shutterstock

    Maria Eleonora was theIt Girl of the 17th century, and monarchs fell over themselves to marry her. She was a famously beautiful girl and, ironically, many spoke of her admirable mental faculties. Some of her most powerful suitors included William of Orange and the future King Charles I of England. Not bad for a teenager. Wikipedia

    The Princess always had extravagant tastes. She was excessively fond of entertainments of all kinds, plus she had a notorious sweet tooth she just couldn’t seem to get rid of. Pixabay

    After hearing of Maria Eleonora’s great beauty and intelligence, the 22-year-old Swedish King Gustav Adolphus started seriously trying to woo the 17-year-old girl. The marriage competition was so stiff that Gustav considered it a point of pride to bag the beauty. He actually swore to accept no other wife. But there was an eerie catch:Adoluphus said...

    For all Gustav Adolphus’ fierce “devotion,”he was hiding a dark secret.He was really in love with someone else. For years before he started trying to win Maria Eleonora’s hand, he had been begging his mother for permission to marry his one true love, the noblewoman Ebba Brahe. Mommy said “heck no,” so he was forced to look elsewhere. Shutterstock

    Maria Eleonora was never much of a scholar. Though she was a German princess and a Swedish queen, she never even learned how to properly write German or Swedish. Instead, she spoke and most often wrote in French, which was the court language of her day. Shutterstock

    There was another problem with Gustav’s prospects: Maria Eleonora’s mother despised him. Though the princess’s father didn’t mind the young man, he had suffered a stroke and was too infirm to put his foot down about anything. Shutterstock

    Around 1617, King Gustav was so certain that he was going to marry Maria Eleonora, he even re-decorated rooms in his castle to suit a more feminine taste. But just as he started planning to travel to Berlin and actually meet his bride to be, his mother received a letter from Mama Anna that changed everything. In the missive, the Duchess told Gustav...

    Maria Eleonora went wild for all the latest fads of her era, and she was particularly obsessed with buffoons and jesters—as well as the unfortunate 17th-century craze for keeping dwarfs as court curios. She kept so many of them around that her more sober daughter Christina was often annoyed by the ruckus they created. Wikipedia

  2. Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg was Queen of Sweden from 1620 to 1632 as the wife of King Gustav II Adolph. She was born a German princess as the daughter of John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg, and Anna, Duchess of Prussia, daughter of Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia.

  3. Marie Eleonore von Brandenburg (1607-1675) [1] was a princess of Brandenburg, Countess Palatine and from 1655 to 1658, regent of Simmern.

  4. Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg (November 11, 1599 – March 28, 1655) was a German princess and queen consort of Sweden. She was the daughter of John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg and Anna, Duchess of Prussia, daughter of Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia.

  5. Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg (1599–1655) Queen of Sweden. Name variations: Maria Eleanora Hohenzollern. Born Nov 11, 1599; died Mar 28, 1655; dau. of John Sigismund (1572–1619), elector of Brandenburg (r. 1608–1619), and Anna of Prussia; sister of George William, elector of Brandenburg (r. 1619–1640); m. Gustavus II Adolphus (1594 ...

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  7. Apr 25, 2021 · Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg. English: Maria Eleonora of Brandenburg or Mary Eleanor (1599–1655), in Swedish Maria Eleonora, was a princess of Brandenburg (Hohenzollern dynasty) and by marriage became queen of Sweden.

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