Zij heeft/had een relatie met Friedrich V Del Palatinat Von von der Pfalz (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Kürfürst von der Pfalz, König zu Böhmen.
Kind(eren):
Elizabeth Stuart of England, Electress consort Palatine, Queen Consort of Bohemia<br>Gender: Female<br>Alias name: The Winter Queen, Elizabeth Stuart of Scotland, Queen of Hearts, Erzsebeth, Queen Of bohemia<br>Birth: Aug 19 1596 - Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland<br>Baptism: Dec 28 1596 - Chapel Royal Holyrood, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland <br>Occupation: The Winter Queen, Princess of England / Queen Consort Elizabeth of Bohemia, Queen consort of Bohemia, Queen Consort of Bohemia, Electress Consort of the Palatinate, Queen of Bohemia, Queen of Bohemia/Princess of England<br>Death: Feb 13 1662 - Leicester House, St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, London, England<br>Burial: Feb 17 1662 - Westminster Abbey, <br>Father: James VI/I Stewart, King of Scots, King of England & Ireland,<br>Mother: Anne Of Denmark and Norway Of Oldenburg (born Oldenburg), Queen consort of Scotland, England and Ireland<br>Husband: Friedrich V von der Pfalz (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Kürfürst von der Pfalz, König zu Böhmen<br>Children: Elector Of Palatine Charles I Louis Von Der Pfalz-simmern (Born Wittelsbach (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Elector of Palatine, Elisabeth von Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach), Prinzessin, Äbtissin von Herford, Ruprecht von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmeren), Pfalzgraf bei Rhein, Duke of Cumberland, Henry Frederick Hereditary Prince von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach), Hereditary Prince Of Palatinate, Duke Of Cumberland, Ludwig Von Der Pfalz-simmern (Born Wittelsbach (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Pfalzgraf bei Rhein, Henrietta Maria von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Prinzessin von Siebenbürgen, <a>Sophia von der Pfalz (born Wittelsbach), Duchess consort of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Moritz von der Pfalz (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz), Prinz, Louise Maria Hollandine von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Pfalzgräfin bei Rhein, Eduard von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach, Pfalz-Simmern), Prinz von der Pfalz, Gustav Adolphus von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach), Prinz, Johan Philip Friederich von der Pfalz-Simmern (born Wittelsbach), Pfalzgraf bei Rhein, Charlotte von der Pfalz (born Pfalz-Simmern, Wittelsbach), Pfalzgräfin bei Rhein<br>Siblings: Sophia Stewart, Princess of England and Scotland, Henry Frederick Stuart, Prince of Wales, Robert Stewart, Margaret Stuart, Princess of Scotland, Charles I Unknown, Mary Anne Stuart, Princess of Scotland and England, Robert Bruce Stuart, Prince of Scotland, Unnamed Stuart and Oldenbug, Prince of England
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Elizabeth Von Der Pfalz (born Stuart)<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Aug 19 1596 - Dunfermline Palace, Dunfermaline, Fife, Scotland<br>Christening: Nov 28 1596 - Chapel Royal Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh, Scotland<br>Marriage: Feb 14 1613 - England<br>Residence: James I gave Dunfermline Palace, some 19 miles north-west of Edinburgh, as a wedding present to his wife, Anne of Denmark. After the Union of Crowns in 1603, the move of the Scottish court to London meant the Palace came to be rarely used. During the Cromwellian occupation of Scotland, it was abandoned and by 1708 had been unroofed. All that remains today is the kitchen, its cellars, and the impressive south wall with a commanding prospect over the Firth of Forth to the south. - Dunfermline Palace, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland<br>Residence: Located some 24 miles west of Edinburgh, Linlithgow Palace was one of the principal residences of the monarchs of Scotland in the 15th and 16th centuries. Although maintained after Scotland's monarchs left for England in 1603, the palace was little used, and was burned out in 1746 by The Duke of Cumberland's army. - Linlithgow Palace, Scotland<br>Residence: Holyrood Palace (commonly known as Holyroodhouse) is the official residence of the British monarch in Scotland. Located at the bottom of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, at the opposite end to Edinburgh Castle, it has served as the principal royal residence in Scotland since the 16th century. James VI took up residence at Holyrood in 1579 at the age of 13 years and lived there until he became King of England in 1603. - Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh, Scotland<br>Residence: Oct 19 1603 - Coombe Abbey, Warwickshire, England<br>Residence: placed in the care of Lord Livingston and his wife - early life - Linlithgow Palace, Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland<br>Death: Feb 13 1662 - Leicester House, St. Martin's-in-the-Fields, London, Middlesex, England<br>Burial: Feb 17 1662 - Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England<br>Occupation: Queen of Bohemia<br>Parents: King James Charles Stuart VI and I of Scotland and England, Anne Princess of Denmark Stuart<br>Husband: Frederick Von Der Pfalz<br>Children: Heinrich Friedrich von der Pfalz, Prince Karl Ludwig von der Pfalz I, Elizabeth von der Pfalz, Rupert von der Pfalz, Maurice von der Pfalz, Louise Hollandine Marie von der Pfalz, Prince Ludwig von der Pfalz, Prince Edward von der Pfalz, Prince Palatine, KG, Henrietta Marie Rakoczi (born von der Pfalz), Johann Philip Frederick von der Pfalz, , Sophia Dorothea von Braunschweig-Lüneburg (born von der Pfalz), Prince Gustavus Adolphus von von der Pfalz, Rose Polteney<br>Siblings: Henry Frederick Stuart Prince of Wales, Stuart, Princess Margaret Stuart, Prince Charles I Stuart King of England, Scotland and Ireland, Robert Bruce, Duke of Kintyre Stuart, Stuart, Princess Mary Stuart, Princess Sophia Stuart<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: Elizabeth Stuart was the second child and eldest daughter of King James I and his wife, Queen Anne of Denmark and at the time of her birth, her father was only King of Scots. With the demise of the last Stuart monarch in 1714, Elizabeth's grandson succeeded to the British throne as George I, initiating the Hanoverian dynasty. Elizabeth was 7 years old, her father succeeded as King of England. Along with her elder brother, Henry, Elizabeth made the journey south towards England with her mother "in a triumphal progress of perpetual entertainment". Elizabeth was given a comprehensive education for a princess at that time including instruction in natural history, geography, theology, languages, writing, history, music, and dancing. By the age of 12, Elizabeth was fluent in several languages, including French, "which she spoke with ease and grace" and would later use to converse with her husband. She also was also said to be an excellent rider. For most of this time she was under the care of Lord Harington at Coombe Abbey near Coventry. most desirable prize when it came to marriage but who the bridegroom would be was all down to politics and religion. The man finally chosen was Frederick V, Count Palatine of the Rhine. Her father saw him as a senior Prince of the Empire and a staunch defender of the Protestant faith; her mother saw him as a German count far below her daughter's rank. However, Elizabeth and Frederick were considered to be genuinely in love and remained a romantic couple throughout the course of their marriage. dependent kingdom in the Holy Roman Empire, and part of the Habsburg Monarchy, defied their Catholic king and offered the crown of Bohemia to protestant Frederick. In November 1619 he was crowned king but in November 1620 his Bohemian forces were defeated by the Catholic League at The Battle of White Mountain. Elizabeth is thus remembered as the "Winter Queen", and Frederick as the "Winter King", a derogatory reference to the brevity of their reign, and to the season of the battle. Elizabeth and Frederick fled Prague, ultimately finding refuge at The Hague with Prince Maurice of Orange, where the glorious art and culture of the Dutch Golden Age indelibly shaped their daughters' lives. d intelligent, she became the dominant partner in the marriage and one of the foremost power brokers for the Protestant cause in Europe She kept up an extensive correspondence with powerful rulers and influential clergy and diplomats in Europe to gain support for Frederick and the Protestant cause, though all in vain. in 1623 from the plague, whilst on military maneuvers at Mainz, absolutely devastated Elizabeth. When in 1648 her second son, Charles Louis, was restored to the Palatinate, he ignored her pleas to join him, and in 1650 a pension from the House of Orange ceased. Help from England stopped owing to the English Civil Wars (1642–51) between supporters of Elizabeth’s brother, King Charles I, and the Parliamentarians. Finally in 1661, with her nephew now restored to the English throne as Charles II, was she allowed to return to England. She initially took up residence in Drury House in Wych Street but in early 1662 she made another move, to Leicester House, Westminster, and it was here that she died from pneumonia just after midnight on 13 February 1662. She was interred next to beloved brother Henry in Westminster Abbey, as she had stipulated in her Will.ed immense strength of character, who would be the one to fulfill the promise of her great-grandmother, Mary Queens of Scots, a legacy that endures to this day in the lineage of the current royal family of Great Britain. Maine.
TitleOfNobility: Princess, Electress consort Palatine, Queen Consort of Bohemia
TitleOfNobility: ~Q of Bohemia
TitleOfNobility: Queen of Bohemia
TitleOfNobility: Princess Royal
TitleOfNobility: Electress of Palatine
TitleOfNobility: Electres
TitleOfNobility: , Princess Of England
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