Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Philippine Welser (1527 – 24 April 1580) was the morganatic wife of Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria. She was granted the titles Baroness of Zinnenburg, Margravine of Burgau, Landgravine of Mellenburg and Countess of Oberhohenberg and Niederhohenberg.

  2. Philippine Welser, Ambras Castle and a Secret Love. As refuge for his secret wife, Philippine Welser, Archduke Ferdinand II. built Ambras Castle on the foundations of a medieval fortress. At Ambras Castle today, visitors get a chance to experience the world of the 16th century, the legendary life of the lady of the castle, as well as the ...

    • 080040020000
  3. 15 de jun. de 2021 · Philippine Welser's is a singular story: the morganatic wife of the governor of Tyrol, Ferdinand II of Habsburg, she received as a gift from him the Castle of Ambras and... was the first woman to write a cookbook in the German area.

  4. History. Philippine Welser, wife of Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria, portrait at Ambras Castle. The history of the family can be traced back to the 13th century, when its members held official positions in the city of Augsburg. Later, the family became widely known as prominent merchants.

  5. Overview. Philippine Welser. (1527—1580) Quick Reference. (Augsburg, 1527–80, Schloß Ambras, Innsbruck), the beautiful daughter of the Augsburg patrician Bartholomäus Welser (see Welser), married in 1557 the Archduke Ferdinand of Tyrol. Her father-in-law, the Emperor Ferdinand I ...

  6. Quando foi elevado à categoria de soberano provincial do Tirol, em 1563, o arquiduque ordenou a dois arquitectos italianos que transformassem a fortaleza medieval existente num palácio renascentista para a sua esposa morganática, Filipina Welser ( 1527 - 1580 ). Galeria de imagens históricas e artísticas[editar | editar código-fonte]

  7. Wall painting in the baths of Philippine Welser. Inventories and receipts give us a good picture of the original equipment: a waterspout fountain, decorated with paintings of animals, stood on a marble shelf in front of the window of the baths. In addition, there were numerous copper tubs and brass basins, ‘Lassköpfe’ (bowls for letting of ...