Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Isabella Jagiellon (Hungarian: Izabella királyné; Polish: Izabela Jagiellonka; 18 January 1519 – 15 September 1559) was the queen consort of Hungary. She was the oldest child of Sigismund I the Old, King of Poland, and his Italian wife Bona Sforza. In 1539, she married John Zápolya, Voivode of Transylvania and King of Hungary.

  2. Despite her wishes, in 1549 Isabella was compelled to renounce her part of the realm in favour of Ferdinand and to travel to the court of her brother King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland. In: Máté, Ágnes; Oborni, Teréz (ed.) Isabella Jagiellon, Queen of Hungary (1539-1559). Studies.

    • Karolina Mroziewicz
  3. Like Catherine de' Medici's 1562 edict of Saint Germain, Isabella Jagiellon's own act of toleration, passed forty years before the edict of Nantes, has not received nearly the recognition of Henry IV's, always praised in all our history textbooks.

  4. Isabella Jagiellon ( Hungarian: Izabella királyné; Polish: Izabela Jagiellonka; 18 January 1519 – 15 September 1559) was the queen consort of Hungary. She was the oldest child of Sigismund I the Old, King of Poland, and his Italian wife Bona Sforza.

  5. Isabella Jagiellon, Queen of Hungary. Born in Cracow, Isabella Jagiellon, the wife of King John I (Szapolyai) (1526-1540), received an Italian education and usually corresponded in Italian with her relatives, as her mother was Bona Sforza, who came to Poland from Italy.

  6. MOHÁCS 1526–2026 RECONSTRUCTION AND REMEMBRANCE The first English-language volume of the series discusses the life of Queen Isabella Jagiellon (1539–1559), wife of King John I Szapolyai. In 1539, Isabella, a princess whose Italian mother had prepared her for court life in the spirit of the Renaissance, arrived in Hungary.

  7. 15 de set. de 2022 · Isabella Jagiellon, Queen of Hungary (1539-1559) 15 September 2022. The first English-language volume of the series Mohács 1526-2026, Reconstruction and Remembrance, edited by Ágnes Máté and Teréz Oborni, discusses the life of Queen Isabella Jagiellon (1539-1559), wife of King John I Szapolyai.