Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Giacomo Francesco Edoardo Stuart ritratto nel 1703 a quindici anni da Alexis Simon Belle Giacomo Francesco Edoardo nacque il 10 giugno 1688, a St. James's Palace . Era figlio di Giacomo II d'Inghilterra e Irlanda (VII di Scozia) e della sua seconda moglie, Maria Beatrice d'Este , [3] , di fede cattolica, e, in quanto tale, fu automaticamente duca di Cornovaglia e duca di Rothesay , tra gli ...

  2. Jaime Francisco Eduardo Stuart ( Londres, 10 de junho de 1688 — Roma, 1 de janeiro de 1766 ), um católico, foi pretendente aos tronos da Escócia e de Inglaterra conhecido geralmente como "O Velho Pretendente". Era filho do monarca deposto James II de Inglaterra, um católico romano e de sua segunda esposa Maria de Módena.

  3. Prince James Francis Edward Stuart (1688-1766), Known as 'The Old Pretender'; son of James II. Early Georgian Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter associated with 62 portraits The only son of James II and Mary of Modena, he was raised in exile in France after his father was deposed in 1688 in favour of the Protestant William of Orange.

  4. James Francis Edward Stuart. James Francis Edward Stuart (1688-1766) was born to James II (1633-1701) and his second wife, Mary of Modena (1658-1718) on 10 June 1688. His birth was a matter of national controversy. Mary had not conceived in five years, and James had no male heir to continue his Catholic programme in England.

  5. James Francis Edward Stuart lived from 10 June 1688 to 1 January 1766. He was the son of James VII/II and Mary of Modena, and in the Jacobite peerage was referred to as "Prince James" until he became James VIII/III of Great Britain on the death of his father on 16 September 1701. However, his father had been deposed in the Glorious Revolution ...

  6. 1688 (mid June) The birth of James Francis Edward secured the succession but also meant that there was a very strong likelihood that Catholicism would return to Britain, something the majority of people did not want. Rumours spread that James Francis Edward was not James’s true son but had been smuggled into the birthing room.

  7. James was involved in an attempted Spanish invasion of Scotland in 1719, but the next (and last) serious Jacobite uprising was led by his son Charles Stuart (1720-1788) in 1745. Charles's defeat at Culloden in 1745 effectively ended Jacobite hopes for the restoration of the throne.