Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Label. Description. Also known as. English. Princess Leonida Bagration of Mukhrani. Georgian-Russian Imperial and Royal. Leonida Georgiievna Bagration-Moukhranskya, Princess Bagration-Moukhranskya. Leonida Kirby.

  2. Early life. He was born in Tbilisi, Georgia (then part of Imperial Russia ), to Prince George Bagration of Mukhrani (1884–1957) and his wife Helena Sigismundovna, née Nowina Złotnicka. The 1921 Red Army invasion of Georgia forced the family to leave Georgia. Educated in Germany, Prince Irakli then settled in Italy in the 1930s.

  3. Aleksandr Bagration-Mukhrani (in georgiano ალექსანდრე ბაგრატიონ-მუხრანელი?; in russo Александр Ираклиевич Багратион-Мухранский?, Aleksandr Iraklievič Bagration-Muchranskij; Mchadijvari, 20 luglio 1853 – Pjatigorsk, 30 ottobre 1918) era un membro della casa reale della Georgia, capo della casa dei ...

  4. Se si utilizza il template {{}}, l'ordinamento avviene in automatico per cognome; per ordinare per nome, occorre usare il parametro ForzaOrdinamento (per tutte le categorie) oppure categorizzare la voce inserendo [[Categoria:Bagration-Mukhrani|Nome, Cognome]] (solo per questa).

  5. Nowina. Irakli Gueórguievich Bagratión de Mujrani ( Tiflis, Imperio ruso, 21 de marzo de 1909 - Madrid, España, 30 de octubre de 1977) fue un príncipe ruso-georgiano, pretendiente al trono por considerarse cabeza de la antigua casa de los Bagration entre 1957 y 1977.

  6. Prințesa Leonida. Născută la 6 octombrie 1914 la Tiflis, Georgia, Imperiul Rus ca Prințesa Leonida Bagration de Mukhrani, ea a fost fiica Prințului George Bagration de Mukhrani și a soției lui poloneze, Helena Sigismundovna născută Nowina Złotnicka (1886–1979).

  7. Leonida's grandfather, Prince Alexander Bagration of Mukhrani, was born in 1853 in Georgia's historical capital Tbilisi, then part of the Russian Empire, and was killed by Bolsheviks at Pyatigorsk in 1918 during the Russian revolution. [3] Fearing for their lives, the family took refuge in Constantinople, then spent eight months in Germany ...