Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Charles de France dit Charles II d'Orléans, né le 22 janvier 1522 à Saint-Germain-en-Laye, et mort le 9 septembre 1545 à l'abbaye bénédictine de Forest-Montiers, près d’Abbeville, est le sixième enfant et le troisième fils du roi de France François I er et de son épouse Claude de France, duchesse de Bretagne.

    • Maison capétienne de Valois
    • Duc d'OrléansDuc d'AngoulêmeDuc de Bourbon
  2. Duke of Orléans. From his birth until the death of his oldest brother Francis, Dauphin of France (Francis I's eldest son), in 1536, Charles was known as the Duke of Angoulême. [1] After his brother's death, he became Duke of Orléans, [1] [2] a title previously held by his surviving brother Henry, who had succeeded Francis as ...

  3. A depiction of Charles' imprisonment in the Tower of London from an illuminated manuscript of his poems. Charles of Orléans (24 November 1394 – 5 January 1465) was Duke of Orléans from 1407, following the murder of his father, Louis I, Duke of Orléans.

  4. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Charles d'Angoulême, Duke of Orléans (January 22, 1522 – September 9, 1545) was the third son of King Francis I of France and Claude of France, daughter of Louis XII of France. Duke of Orléans. Upon the death of Francis, Dauphin of France (Francis I's eldest son) in 1536, Charles became Duc d'Orléans, a titled he received from ...

    • Saint-Germain-en-Laye, Île-de-France
    • Île-de-France
  5. Charles I er d'Orléans, né à Paris le 24 novembre 1394 et mort à Amboise le 5 janvier 1465, duc d'Orléans et de Valois, est un prince connu surtout pour ses œuvres poétiques écrites lors de sa longue captivité anglaise à la suite de la bataille d'Azincourt.

  6. Second fils du roi de France Charles V, des Valois, il reçoit l'Orléanais en apanage de son frère en 1392, puis le comté de Blois à la mort de Guy II. Chef du parti des Armagnacs , il est assassiné sur ordre du duc de Bourgogne , Jean sans Peur .

  7. Charles, duc d’Orléans (born November 24, 1394, Paris, France—died January 4, 1465, Amboise) was the last, and one of the greatest, of the courtly poets of France, who during exile in England also earned a reputation for his poems in English.