Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. María Teresa de Austria. (Madrid, 1638 - Versalles, 1683) Reina de Francia (1660-1683). Hija de Felipe IV de España, se casó en 1660 con Luis XIV de Francia. El matrimonio había sido concertado por Felipe IV en virtud del Tratado de los Pirineos (1659). María Teresa de Austria renunció a sus derechos hereditarios a la corona española a ...

  2. War of the Austrian Succession, 1740–48. Maria Theresa. In October 1740 the Holy Roman emperor Charles VI, the last male Habsburg ruler, died and was succeeded by his daughter Maria Theresa, the young wife of the grand duke of Tuscany, Francis Stephen of Lorraine. Although no woman had ever served as Habsburg ruler, most assumed at the time ...

  3. Impressions. Other exhibitions. The Belvedere has taken the occasion of Maria Theresia’s 300th birthday as an opportunity to illuminate her relationship with the visual arts. In doing so, exciting details have come to light. First and foremost, with her free and unaffected perspective on art, Maria Theresia did not venture to expand ...

  4. Maria Teresa Valburga Amália Cristina da Áustria[ 1] (em alemão: Maria Theresia Walburga Amalia Christina von Österreich, em húngaro: Habsburg Mária Terézia; Viena, 13 de maio de 1717 – Viena, 29 de novembro de 1780 ), foi a primeira e única mulher a governar sobre os domínios habsbúrgicos e a última chefe da Casa de Habsburgo (a ...

  5. Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily (6 June 1772 – 13 April 1807) was the first Empress of Austria and last Holy Roman Empress as the spouse of Francis II. She was born a Princess of Naples as the eldest daughter of King Ferdinand I of the Two Sicilies and Queen Maria Carolina .

  6. Marie-Thérèse of Austria (born September 10, 1638, El Escorial, Spain—died July 30, 1683, Versailles, France) was the queen consort of King Louis XIV of France (reigned 1643–1715). As the daughter of King Philip IV of Spain and Elizabeth of France, Marie-Thérèse was betrothed to Louis by the Peace of the Pyrenees (1659), which ended a ...

  7. 26 de nov. de 2021 · By contrast, Maria Theresa of Austria was highly coquettish, at least until she was widowed. The German chancellor’s model is more one of gender neutrality. Today, women are practically forced to wear a neutral suit, as if the aim were to make their femininity invisible. Hillary Clinton and Theresa May are elegant, but no more than that.