Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Eleanor de' Medici (28 February 1567 – 9 September 1611) was a Duchess of Mantua by marriage to Vincenzo I Gonzaga. She served as regent of Mantua 1595, 1597 and 1601, when Vincenzo served in the Austrian campaign in Hungary, and in 1602, when he left for Flanders for medical treatment.

  2. Leonor de Médici (em italiano: Maria Eleonora de' Medici; Florença, 28 de fevereiro de 1567 [1] – Cavriana, 9 de setembro de 1611) foi uma nobre italiana, a primogênita do grão-duque Francisco I da Toscana e da arquiduquesa austríaca Joana de Habsburgo, filha do imperador Fernando I e de Ana da Boêmia e Hungria.

  3. 31 de out. de 2022 · Eleonora de’ Medici also known as Eleonora of Toledo was the first wife of Cosimo I de’ Medici. She was the second daughter of the Viceroy of Naples, Don Pedro di Toledo, Marquis of Francavilla, the Emperor Charles V’s senior lieutenant.

  4. Leonor de Toledo (em italiano: Eleonora; Alba de Tormes, 1522 — Pisa, 17 de dezembro de 1562) foi duquesa de Florença como esposa de Cosmo I da Toscana. Biografia. Ela era filha de Pedro Álvarez de Toledo, vice-rei de Nápoles, e de Maria Osorio Pimentel, 2.° marquesa de Villafranca.

  5. Eleonora de Medici was a noblewoman who married the Italian prince Cosimo I de Medici. Sixteenth-century Italy was a place of incessant civil warfare carried on by the lords of its powerful city-states, and Cosimo was no exception to the rule.

  6. Eleonora de Medici was born in Tuscany in 1591, the daughter of Christine of Lorraine (c. 1571–1637) and Ferdinand I de Medici, grand duke of Tuscany. She was betrothed to Philip III, king of Spain, but he reneged on the agreement, and it is said that she died of a broken heart.

  7. 28 de ago. de 2019 · Em tese, todo integrante de guilda com mais de 30 anos e sem dívidas podia ser eleito, por sorteio, para cargos públicos como a signoria, principal magistratura, com nove vagas. Mas só um quarto dos postos era ocupado pelas guildas menores, da classe média baixa.