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  1. Dorothea was born 4 October 1563, the daughter of the Elector Augustus of Saxony (1526–1586) and his wife Anna (1532–1585), daughter of King Christian III of Denmark. Of the four 15 children from the marriage of her parents, only four survived their father; Dorothea among them. On 26 September 1585 in Wolfenbüttel, the twenty-two-year-old ...

  2. House. House of Ascania. Father. Magnus I, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg. Mother. Catherine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Dorothea of Saxe-Lauenburg (9 July 1511 – 7 October 1571) was queen consort of Denmark and Norway by marriage to King Christian III of Denmark. She was known to having wielded influence upon the affairs of state in Denmark. [1]

  3. Jagiello. Dorothea of Saxe-Lauenburg (1511–1571)Queen of Norway and Denmark. Name variations: Lüneburg or Luneburg. Born on July 9, 1511; died on October 7, 1571, in Sonderburg; daughter of Magnus, duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, and Catherine of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel (1488–1563); married Christian III (1503–1559), king of Norway and Denmark (r.

  4. Dorothea of Saxony (1563–1587)Princess of Saxony. Born on October 4, 1563; died on February 13, 1587; daughter of Anna of Denmark (1532–1585) and Augustus (1526–1586), elector of Saxony; married Heinrich Julius also known as Henry Julius, duke of Brunswick (r.

  5. Mar 15, 2024 · 12. More than 400 years after Dorothea’s death, vestiges of the idea that women are responsible for providing healing and medical care remain today. “It’s all a part of the hidden labor of women that is very much still a topic today,” Rankin said. “None of the women who I looked at are known at all in history.

  6. Dorothea of Brandenburg (1446–1519) Duchess of Saxe-Lauenburg. Name variations: Dorothea von Brandenburg. Born in 1446; died in March 1519; daughter of Catherine of Saxony (1421–1476) and Frederick II the Iron (1413–1471), elector of Brandenburg (r. 1440–1470, abdicated); married John V of Saxe-Lauenburg, duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, on ...

  7. The Female Consort as Intercessor in Sixteenth-Century Saxony; Borderline Sanctity: Dorothea of Montau, Günter Grass, and Pope Benedict XVI; Teaching Magna Carta in American History: Land, Law, and Legacy; The Vikings in Wales; Haraldr the Hard-Ruler and his poets

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