Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Kunigunde of Bohemia (January 1265 – 27 November 1321) was the eldest daughter of Ottokar II of Bohemia and his second wife, Kunigunda of Slavonia. She was a member of the Přemyslid dynasty . She was Princess of Masovia by her marriage to Boleslaus II of Masovia and later became abbess of the St. George's Convent at Prague Castle .

  2. Biography. Anne was the daughter of Polish Duke Henry II of Świdnica - Jawor from the Silesian branch of the Piast dynasty. Her mother was Katherine of Hungary, the daughter of Charles I of Hungary. In his autobiography written in Latin, [14] which covers only his youth prior to marrying Anna, emperor Charles mentions civitatem Swidnitz and ...

  3. During the interval, among others, Stephen Báthory, the husband of the childless Anna, reigned. Jagiellonian Kings of Bohemia, Hungary and Croatia. At one point, the Jagiellonians established dynastic control also over the kingdoms of Bohemia and Hungary (from 1490 onwards), with Vladislaus Jagiello whom several history books call Vladisla(u)s II.

  4. Anne was eventually married on 16 February 1335, to Otto, Duke of Austria. This was a second marriage for Otto; his first wife, Elizabeth of Bavaria, had died after bearing him two sons. Anne was seven years old at the time. The marriage lasted for eight years and resulted in a closer alliance between Anne's father and the Holy Roman Emperor ...

  5. Wikipedia Anna, Queen of Bohemia and Hungary , also sometimes known as "Anna Jagellonica" ( Buda (now Budapest ), Hungary , July 23 , 1503 – Prague , Bohemia , January 27 , 1547 ) was, by marriage to Ferdinand I , King of the Romans and later Holy Roman Emperor , Queen of the Romans, and heiress presumptive

  6. Anna of Bohemia and Hungary. When Anna of Bohemia and Hungary was born on 23 July 1503, in Hungary, her father, Vladislaus II of Hungary, was 47 and her mother, Anna de Foix, was 19. She married Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I of Habsburg on 25 May 1521, in Linz, Upper Austria, Austria. They were the parents of at least 4 sons and 11 daughters.

  7. Adelaide of Hungary ( c. 1040 – 27 January 1062) [1] was the only daughter of King Andrew I of Hungary. [2] It has generally been assumed that her mother was Anastasia of Kiev, [3] but it has been hypothesised that Adelaide could be the result of Andrew I and a different wife, due to the idea that Yaroslav the Wise wouldn't marry his daughter ...