In 1684, Maria Elisabeth donated one of the stained glass windows in the Carmelite convent in Boxmeer. She may have done this at the request of her cousin Oswald III Van den Bergh, who had been lord of
Boxmeer since the death of his father, the founder of the monastery. It seems that Count Oswald had asked his family for more windows, because also dating from 1684, apart from his own window and that of Maria Elisabeth, are those donated by Maria Clara Van den Bergh and her husband
Maximiliaan van Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, by Elisabeth Catharina van den Bergh, and by Herman Frederik van den Bergh – and possibly one or more of the undated windows. Maria Elisabeth's window is dedicated to Saint
Serapion of Thmuis, a fourth-century Egyptian hermit. He is depicted in a Carmelite habit. The mitre next to him refers to his appointment as bishop of Antioch. The coat of arms at the top of the window is a combination of the Hohenzollern and van den Bergh coats of arms. The same combination can also be seen on the gable stone of the Kaarschotse mill. The crown above the coat of arms is a
Fürstenhut, which in Imperial Germany symbolized a monarch in the sense of head of state of a principality. Her husband was Prince of
Hohenzollern-Hechingen, making the title of Princess her highest title of nobility. In the French text below the coat of arms, this dignity is mentioned first, with the title queen translated as
princesse. The text:
Elizabeth, par la grace de Dieu Princesse de Zollern, née Comtesse Bergh, Marquise de Berghes sur le Zoom, Baronne de Hedel, Dame de Gestel, S. Michiel, Outherlaer, Borghuliet, Spalbeeck, Braine Laleud, Opvelp, Muijlsteden, Beersele, Baronne hereditary de la Duché de Gueldres et Comté de Zutphen, etc. 1684. ==Portrait==