-
Philip III,
Count of N****au-Weilburg (20
September 1504 at
Neuweilnau Castle in
Weilrod – 4
October 1559 in Weilburg) was a
Count of the N****au-Weilburg...
- and the
district of Weilburg,
Philip received castle and
district of
Neuweilnau. The
largest part of the
territory and
their father's debts, however,...
-
district of
Neuweilnau. The
largest part of
their territory and the father's the debt, however,
remained common property.
Philip moved into
Neuweilnau Castle...
- Sayn-Wittgenstein (1610-1656) Otto (1610–1632),
Count of N****au-Weilburg in
Neuweilnau Fried Köllner:
Geschichte des
vormaligen N****au-sarbrück'schen Landes...
-
count of N****au-Idstein,
count of N****au-Saarbrücken,
count of N****au-
Neuweilnau, Quarterly: I and IV
Azure billetty Or, a lion
rampant crowned of the...
- (at
Neuweilnau) John I,
Count of N****au-Weilburg 1353
seven children October 1381
Neuweilnau (?) aged 50/51
Joanna held her
estate at
Neuweilnau until...
- Emmershausen, Finsternthal, Gemünden, H****elbach [de], Mauloff, Niederlauken,
Neuweilnau, Oberlauken, Rod an der Weil,
Riedelbach and Winden. The
earliest written...
-
Homburg Burg Königstein, Königstein Burg Kronberg, Königstein
Schloss Neuweilnau,
Weilrod Burg Nürings, Königstein Burg Reifenberg,
Schmitten Kransberg...
- Moers-Saarwerden 1527: Extinct; to N****au-Saarbrücken 1574: To N****au-
Neuweilnau 1602:
Returned to N****au-Saarbrücken 1629: To
Lorraine 1648: Returned...
-
collateral Weilnau line,
centered initially at
Altweilnau and
later at
Neuweilnau [de] from 1302 onwards. With the
demise of the
Hohenstaufen dynasty, the...