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Elimar's wife Richenza (also called Rikissa or Rixa) was the daughter of Dedi or Adalger, according to the Annals of Stade, [3] and according to the same source, her mother was Ida of Elthorp (the Annales Stadenses also record that "Rikencen, filie Ide de Elthrope" was the wife of "comes Eilmari de Aldenburg"). According to Albert of Stade, Ida ...
Elimar II (also Egilmar) was Count of Oldenburg from 1108 through 1142. He was son of Elimar I, Count of Oldenburg and his wife Richenza. [1] Marriage and issue.
1088 [1] /1101–1108 Elimar I; 1108–1143 Elimar II; 1143–1168 Christian I the Quarrelsome; 1168–1211 Maurice I; 1209–1251 Otto I, joint rule with Christian II and later with John I; 1211–1233 Christian II; 1233–1272 John I; 1272–1278 Christian III; 1272–1301 Otto II, Count of Oldenburg-Delmenhorst; 1278–1305 John II; 1302 ...
The Duchy of Oldenburg (German: Herzogtum Oldenburg), named for its capital, the town of Oldenburg, was a state in the north-west of present-day Germany.The counts of Oldenburg died out in 1667, after which it became a duchy until 1810, when it was annexed by the First French Empire.
Anton Gunther Friedrich Elimar was a child of Augustus, Grand Duke of Oldenburg and his third wife, Princess Cecilia of Sweden, daughter of King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden. His eldest half-sister Amalia was the first modern Queen-consort of Greece. Elimar was a charming prince and tried his best to please his worried father.
The County of Oldenburg (German: Grafschaft Oldenburg) was a county of the Holy Roman Empire.. In 1448 Christian I of Denmark (of the House of Oldenburg), Count of Oldenburg became King of Denmark, and later King of Norway and King of Sweden.
Elimar is a given name. Notable people with the name include: Elimar I, Count of Oldenburg (r. 1040–1112) Elimar II, Count of Oldenburg (r. 1108–1142) Duke Elimar of Oldenburg (1844–1895) Elimar Díaz (born 1989), Venezuelan politician; Elimar Freiherr von Fürstenberg (1910–1981), German politician; Elimar Klebs (1852–1918), German ...
Loft is a traditional two-storey wooden building preserved mostly in Norway. A loft was used for storage and sleeping, and is known since the early Middle Ages. [4] [5] [6] Loft buildings dating from around 1200 are preserved in rural areas. Lofts were typically built in log technique, unlike the post and lintel construction