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  1. Adolf VII of Berg (also referred to as Adolf IV, especially in the Netherlands and in Germany) (c. 1220 – 22 April 1259) was the eldest son of Henry IV, Duke of Limburg and Irmgard of Berg. [1] In 1247, Adolf succeeded his father as Count of Berg while his brother Waleran succeeded as Duke of Limburg.

  2. Sep 2, 2015 · Adolf Hitler's home, the Berghof, was just outside the town, on a mountain in the Bavarian Alps. To the extent that Hitler had a home, this was it, and it was the place where Hitler met with many ...

  3. Dec 23, 2021 · 1437. "Adolf, Duke of Jülich-Berg (c. 1370 – 14 July 1437), was the first Duke of the combined duchies of Jülich and Berg. He was the son of William VII of Jülich, 1st Duke of Berg and Anna of the Palatinate. In 1397, Adolf rebelled against his father along with his brother William, ravaged Düsseldorf and imprisoned his father.

  4. Brief Life History of Adolf VII. When Adolf VII. von Jülich-Berg was born in 1372, in Jülich, Rhineland, Prussia, his father, Wilhelm II. von Berg, was 25 and his mother, Anna von der Pfalz, was 26. He married Elisabeth von Bayern on 14 February 1430. He died on 14 July 1437, in his hometown, at the age of 65. Photos and Memories (0) Do you ...

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    • Elisabeth Von Bayern
  5. Adolf VII of Berg was the eldest son of Henry IV, Duke of Limburg and Irmgard of Berg.

  6. Sep 1, 2003 · Seventy years ago a fateful meeting occurred in Rome. The Vatican’s secretary of state, Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli (the future Pope Pius XII), and Germany’s vice chancellor, Franz von Papen ...

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  8. Across the globe in Europe, the continent’s major powers were still struggling with the aftereffects of World War I when the global economic crisis spiraled much of the continent into chaos. Germany’s Weimar Republic collapsed with the economy, and out of the ashes emerged Adolf Hitler’s National Socialists—the Nazis.

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