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・ Anna of Greater Poland
・ Anna of Hesse
・ Anna of Hohenstaufen
・ Anna of Holstein-Gottorp
・ Anna of Hungary (Byzantine empress)
・ Anna of Hungary (disambiguation)
・ Anna of Hungary, Duchess of Macsó
・ Anna of Isenburg-Büdingen
・ Anna of Kashin
・ Anna of Lorraine
・ Anna of Masovia
・ Anna of Masovia, Duchess of Racibórz
・ Anna of Mecklenburg
・ Anna of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
・ Anna of Moscow
Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg
・ Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg (1541–1616)
・ Anna of Oldenburg
・ Anna of Poland (disambiguation)
・ Anna of Poland, Countess of Celje
・ Anna of Pomerania
・ Anna of Pomerania, Duchess of Lubin
・ Anna of Racibórz
・ Anna of Russia
・ Anna of Russia (disambiguation)
・ Anna of Ryazan
・ Anna of Sagan
・ Anna of Savoy
・ Anna of Saxe-Wittenberg
・ Anna of Saxony


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Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg : ウィキペディア英語版
Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg

Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg (–1514) was a Flemish-German philanthropist.
Anna was the eldest daughter of John IV, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg, and his wife Maria, the daughter of John II, Count of Loon-Heinsberg. Anna was married firstly (1467) to Otto V 'the Magnanimous,' Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. With Otto's early death (1471), her father-in-law, the elderly Duke Frederick acted as guardian of her son, Duke Henry I (1468–1532). Anna remarried (1474) to Philip I, Count of Katzenelnbogen (1402–1479), as his second wife, and went to reside under his roof. After Philip's death, the duchess returned to Celle in Brunswick, where she was appointed as guardian to her son after the death of his aged grandfather. Anna founded and established the hospital of St Anne in the suburbs of the town of Celle. She died there aged seventy-two on April 8, 1514.
==References==

*Sir Andrew Halliday, ''A History of the House of Brunswick'' (1826)



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