In 1879, Adolf's niece Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont, the daughter of another of his half-sisters, married her distant relative King William III of the Netherlands. In 1890, their only daughter Wilhelmina succeeded on his death without surviving male issue to the Dutch throne, but was excluded from the succession to Luxembourg by the Salic Law. The Grand Duchy, which had been linked to the Netherlands since 1815, passed to the Dutch royal family's distant relative - the dispossessed Duke Adolphe - on 23 November 1890, in accordance with the Nassau family compact. The Grand Dukes of Luxembourg are still descendants of Adolf, although through female lines, since the very independence of the Grand-Duchy required an alteration of the succession laws at the absence of male heirs. On 31 January 1844, Adolf first married Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mikhailovna of Russia, niece of Emperor Nicholas I of Russia. She died less than a year afterwards in childbirth with a stillborn daughter. On 23 April 1851, he remarried in Dessau Princess Adelheid-Marie of Anhalt-Dessau (1833-1916), a daughter of Friedrich, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau. They had five children, of whom only two lived to the age of eighteen.
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Reportedly first laid to rest in a vault at Schloss Hohenburg in Lenggries (Bavaria), his remains were relocated to Weilburg in 1953 when the castle was sold.
In 1879, Adolf's niece Emma of Waldeck and Pyrmont, the daughter of another of his half-sisters, married her distant relative King William III of the Netherlands. In 1890, their only daughter Wilhelmina succeeded on his death without surviving male issue to the Dutch throne, but was excluded from the succession to Luxembourg by the Salic Law. The Grand Duchy, which had been linked to the Netherlands since 1815, passed to the Dutch royal family's distant relative - the dispossessed Duke Adolphe - on 23 November 1890, in accordance with the Nassau family compact. The Grand Dukes of Luxembourg are still descendants of Adolf, although through female lines, since the very independence of the Grand-Duchy required an alteration of the succession laws at the absence of male heirs. On 31 January 1844, Adolf first married Grand Duchess Elizabeth Mikhailovna of Russia, niece of Emperor Nicholas I of Russia. She died less than a year afterwards in childbirth with a stillborn daughter. On 23 April 1851, he remarried in Dessau Princess Adelheid-Marie of Anhalt-Dessau (1833-1916), a daughter of Friedrich, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau. They had five children, of whom only two lived to the age of eighteen.
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Reportedly first laid to rest in a vault at Schloss Hohenburg in Lenggries (Bavaria), his remains were relocated to Weilburg in 1953 when the castle was sold.
Family Members
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Auguste Luise Friederike Maximiliane Wilhelmine von Nassau-Weilburg
1814–1814
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Princess Therese of Nassau-Weilburg
1815–1871
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Wilhelm Karl Heinrich Friedrich von Nassau-Weilburg
1819–1823
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Moritz Wilhelm August Karl Heinrich von Nassau-Weilburg
1820–1850
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Marie Wilhelmine Luise Friederike Henriette von Nassau-Weilburg
1822–1824
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Wilhelm Karl August Friedrich von Nassau-Weilburg
1823–1828
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Maria Wilhelmine Friederike Elisabeth von Nassau zu Wied
1825–1902
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