In 1709, while she was a duchess, she visited the William Fountain, a medicinal spring in Schleusingen. She promoted the development of Schleusingen as a spa.
She died in 1739, at the age of 68, at the castle in Schleusingen that had earlier served as the seat of the Counts of Henneberg-Schleusingen. She had received this castle as her widow seat. Via her daughter, she was related to the Landgraviate family in Hesse and on that basis, she was buried in the royal crypt in the Martinskirche, Kassel.
Karoline Amalie (Moritzburg, 24 May 1693 – Moritzburg, 5 September 1694).[3]
Sophia Charlotte (Moritzburg, 25 April 1695 – Moritzburg, 18 June 1696).[3]
Frederick Augustus (Moritzburg, 12 August 1700 – Halle, 17 February 1710).
References
^Owens, Samantha; Reul, Barbara M.; Stockigt, Janice B., eds. (2015). Music at German courts: 1715 - 1760; changing artistic priorities (Paperback ed.). Woodbridge Rochester: The Boydell Press. ISBN978-1-78327-058-3.
^Ilany, Ofri (2018). In Search of the Hebrew People: Bible and Nation in the German Enlightenment. Indiana University Press. ISBN9780253033864.
^ abcSiegemund, Justine (2007). Tatlock, Lynne (ed.). The Court Midwife. Translated by Tatlock, Lynne. University of Chicago Press. p. 7. ISBN9780226757100.