Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 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 . Casamento de Leonor e Vicente.

  2. 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.

    • 14 August 1587 – 9 September 1611
  3. Eleanor of Toledo (Spanish: Leonor Álvarez de Toledo y Pimentel-Osorio, Italian: Eleonora di Toledo; 11 January 1522 – 17 December 1562) was a Spanish noblewoman who became a Duchess of Florence as the first wife of Cosimo I de' Medici.

  4. Medici, Eleonora de (15911617) Tuscan noblewoman . Born in 1591; died, age 26, in December 1617; daughter of Christine of Lorraine (c. 1571–1637) and Ferdinand I de Medici (1549–1609), grand duke of Tuscany (r. 1587–1609); sister of Cosimo II de Medici (1590–1620), grand duke of Tuscany (r. 1609–1620).

  5. Biografia. Casamento. Posteridade. Leonor de Toledo (1522–1562) 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.

  6. Medici, Eleonora de (15671611) Duchess of Mantua . Name variations: Eleonora Gonzaga. Born Eleonora de Medici in 1567; died in 1611; daughter of Joanna of Austria (1546–1578) and Francis or Francesco I de Medici (1541–1587), grand duke of Tuscany (r. 1574–1587); sister of Marie de Medici (c. 1573–1642); married Vincenzo I (1562 ...

  7. 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.