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  1. 1. She Was a Spoiled Brat. Though she’d suffer a cold end, Sophie began life in the warm lap of luxury. In 1805, she came into the world as the daughter of King Maximilian I and Princess Caroline of Baden, who would soon become the rulers of Bavaria.

  2. Archduchess Sophie of Austria (5 March 1855 – 29 May 1857) was the first child of Emperor Franz Joseph I and Empress Elisabeth of Austria. She died aged two. Life. Within two months of her marriage to Franz Joseph, Elisabeth was pregnant.

  3. 1845 births. 1867 deaths. House of Wettin. Saxon princesses. Nobility from Dresden. Duchesses in Bavaria. Deaths from influenza. German Roman Catholics. Albertine branch. Daughters of kings.

  4. Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark (Greek: Σοφία, romanized: Sofía; 26 June 1914 – 24 November 2001) was by birth a Greek and Danish princess, as well as Princess of Hesse-Kassel and Princess of Hanover through her successive marriages to Prince Christoph of Hesse and Prince George William of Hanover.

  5. Sophie was born in 1805 to King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria and his second wife Caroline of Baden. King Maximilian had thirteen children in total including two sets of twin girls; Sophie was one of the second set of twins born, along with her sister Marie Anne.

  6. Sophie of Bavaria. Archduchess of Austria (non-ruling member of the dynasty) Born 27 January 1805 in Munich. Died 28 May 1872 in Vienna. The daughter of King Maximilian I of Bavaria, Sophie married Archduke Franz Karl, the brother of Emperor Ferdinand I in 1824.

  7. Sophia of Bavaria ( Czech: Žofie Bavorská; German: Sophie von Bayern; 1376 – 4 November 1428 [1]) was a Queen of Bohemia and the spouse of Wenceslaus, King of Bohemia and King of the Romans. She was briefly interim regent of Bohemia after the death of Wenceslaus in 1419. Early life.

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