Category
page 1Lower Saxony articles missing geocoordinate data
Kingdom of Hanover
German kingdom established in 1814
Duchy of Brunswick
historical German state (1815–1918)

Schaumburg-Lippe
Schaumburg-Lippe, also called Lippe-Schaumburg, was created as a county in 1647, became a principality in 1807 and a free state in 1918, and was until 1946 a small state in Germany, located in the present-day state of Lower Saxony, with its capital at Bückeburg, an area of and over 40,000 inhabitants.
Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
section of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lunenburg
Free State of Brunswick
German federated state in the Weimar Republic
Bundesautobahn 29
federal motorway in Germany
Principality of Lüneburg
principality of the Holy Roman Empire
Prince-Bishopric of Hildesheim
ecclesiastical principality
Principality of Calenberg
principality
substate of Hanover
German substate in 1946
Free State of Schaumburg-Lippe
state of the Weimar Republic and Nazi Germany (1918-1946)
Old Saxony
larger region of which Lower Saxony is a part
Hannover–Braunschweig–Göttingen–Wolfsburg Metropolitan Region
metropolitan region in Germany
Brunswick-Grubenhagen
subdivision of the Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg from 1291 to 1617 AD
County of East Frisia
historical territory in the Holy Roman Empire
Prince-Bishopric and Duchy of Verden
former prince-bishopric (later principality) in the Holy Roman Empire
County of Hoya
countship
Evangelical-Lutheran Church of Hanover
one of the regional churches of the Protestant Church in Germany

Principality of Göttingen
part of the Duchy of Brunswick-Luneburg
Harlingerland
thumb|right|The Harlingerland around 1300
The Harlingerland is a strip of land on the North Sea coast of East Frisia. While today the whole of the district of Wittmund is usually described as Harlingerland, historically it specifically refers to the northern part of the present district, which formed the old Frisian state of this name, in particular, the regions around Esens and Wittmund. The region around Friedeburg still belonged at that time to the Frisian state of Östringen.
Rüstringen
250px|right|thumb|Location of Rüstringen
Rüstringen () or Rustringen was an old Frisian gau, which lies between the modern district Friesland and the Weser river in modern Lower Saxony. Nowadays, only a small part of the original territory remains, namely the Butjadingen peninsula. The largest part of historical Rüstringen has been lost to the sea in the Middle Ages due to various storm surges and now forms the Jadebusen bay.
Oldenburg Münsterland
geographical object

Roman Catholic Diocese of Verden
los Roman Catholic Diocese , principality
Wunder von Lengede
mining accident
Kehdingen
Kehdingen is the name of a landscape in the north German district of Stade on the Lower Elbe, the lower reaches of the River Elbe. It extends roughly from the mouth of the Oste in the north to the town of Stade in the south. Kehdingen is one of the Elbe Marshes. Until 1932 there was a Prussian district known as Land Kehdingen, and until 1975 there was an Evangelical-Lutheran deanery of Kehdingen with its base in Drochtersen, which was absorbed on 1 January 1976 into the deanery of Stade.
Emslandlager
thumb|Location of Emslandlager
County of Brunswick
historic Saxon vassal county, elevated to Duchy of Brunswick-Lüneburg in 1235
Battle of Detern
1426 battle
Bardengau
The Bardengau was a medieval county (Gau) in the Duchy of Saxony. Its main town was Bardowick; other important towns were Lüneburg and Oldenstadt (today Uelzen).
Derlingau
thumb|240px|Derlingowe in Saxony, about 1000
The Derlingau was an early medieval county (Gau) of the Duchy of Saxony.
Brunswick Land
landscape
Bentheim-Bentheim
Bentheim-Bentheim was a county in southeastern Lower Saxony, Germany. By 1806, the borders were the modern borders of the District of Bentheim. The last Count of Bentheim-Bentheim died on 19 February 1803.
Hildesheim–Groß Gleidingen line
railway line
Weddel loop
railway in Germany
South Lower Saxony
southern part of the German federal state of Lower Saxony
Wildeshausen Geest Nature Park
nature park in Lower Saxony, Germany
Bentheim-Lingen
Bentheim-Lingen was a county seated in Lingen in Germany. Bentheim-Lingen emerged as a partition of Bentheim-Tecklenburg in 1450, and was absorbed by Spain in 1555. Over the next century, ownership of Bentheim-Lingen passed between Spain and Nassau-Orange, before being annexed by Prussia 1702.
Battle of Ölper
1761 battle
Route of Megalithic Culture
tourist route in North-West Germany
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Schaumburg-Lippe
lutheran Christian church in Germany
Lehrte–Nordstemmen railway
railway line
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Oldenburg
church in Germany

Gau Southern Hanover-Brunswick
Celle massacre
1945 massacre of Nazi concentration camp escapees
Siege of Lingen
1605 siege
Elbe-Weser Waterway
canal in Germany
Hildesheim–Goslar railway
German railway line
Vienenburg–Goslar railway
railway line in Germany
Oldenburg Land
historical region in Lower Saxony, covering the former free state
Brunswick–Bad Harzburg railway
railway line
Morgenland Festival Osnabrück
music festival
Wangerooge Island Railway
Narrow-gauge railway on the North Sea island
Innerste Valley Railway
railway line in Germany