Countess Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg


Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg was the elder daughter of Landgrave George III, Landgrave of Leuchtenberg and Margravine Barbara of Brandenburg-Ansbach.
After her death, the German theologian Christoph Pezel wrote an obituary about her.

Portraits

At least two portraits of Elisabeth of Leuchtenberg exist. The first is in the collection of the Rijksmuseum in the form of an anonymous picture, made between 1850 and 1930, a reproduction of a painting by an unknown painter. The second is a drawing in circular shape.
Another portrait, also made by an anonymous painter, was initially identified as portrait of Charlotte of Bourbon, but it was later identified by L.J. van der Klooster as possibly Elisabeth van Leuchtenberg.

Marriage and issue

Elisabeth was the first wife of John VI of Nassau-Dillenburg, son of William "the Rich" of Nassau and Juliana of Stolberg. They married on 6 June 1559 at Dillenburg Castle and went on to have thirteen children in the next twenty years:
Elisabeth died in 1579. John VI remarried twice after her death and fathered even more children.