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House of Wurmbrand-
Stuppach is an old
noble family of Austria.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, the
Counts of Wurmbrand-
Stuppach gained notability in...
- (January 17, 1763 –
November 11, 1827) was a
German aristocrat,
living in
Stuppach Castle near Gloggnitz, who is best
remembered for
having commissioned a...
- The
Stuppach Madonna (German:
Stuppacher Madonna) is a 1514–1519
painting of the
Madonna and
Child by the
German Renaissance painter Matthias Grünewald...
- Etti Plesch, born
Countess Maria Anna
Paula Ferdinandine von Wurmbrand-
Stuppach (3
February 1914 – 29
April 2003), was an Austro-Hungarian countess, huntress...
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Countess Stephanie von Wurmbrand-
Stuppach (December 26, 1849 –
February 16, 1919) was a
Hungarian pianist and composer. She was also
known as Stephanie...
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Markelsheim (2,000),
Neunkirchen (1,000),
Rengershausen (480), Rot (260),
Stuppach (680),
Wachbach (1,300)
Mergentheim is
mentioned in
chronicles as early...
- not survived.
Other works are in Munich, Karlsruhe,
Aschaffenburg and
Stuppach (:de).
Altogether four
somber and awe-filled
Crucifixions survive. The...
- to 1955. In 1956 she
married the
Austrian Count Degenhart von Wurmbrand-
Stuppach (1893-1965) but
divorced him the same year. The
Alibi (1937) - La maitresse...
-
Count Johann Joseph Wilhelm of Wurmbrand-
Stuppach (= 14) 5.
Countess Anna
Christine Eleonore of Wurmbrand-
Stuppach 11.
Baroness Susanna Josefa von Prösing-Stein...
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Baroness Adelma Vay de Vaya, (born
Countess Adelaide von Wurmbrand-
Stuppach;
October 21, 1840 – May 24, 1925), was a
medium and
pioneer of spiritualism...