Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. dewiki Carl Axel Löwenhielm; elwiki Κάρολος του Λέβενχηλμ; enwiki Carl Löwenhielm; eswiki Carl Axel Löwenhielm; fiwiki Carl Löwenhielm; frwiki Carl Löwenhielm; kowiki 칼 뢰벤옐름; nlwiki Carl Löwenhielm; nowiki Carl Axel Löwenhielm; ruwiki Лёвенхельм, Карл Аксель; svwiki Carl Axel Löwenhielm

  2. Descendants of greve Carl Axel Löwenhielm (1772-1861) Christina Augusta von Fersen (1754-1846) married in 1770 greve Fredrik Adolf Löwenhielm (1743-1810). She gave birth to four children, all acknowledged by Fredrik Adolf, even though contemporaries ascribe the paternity of her second child, Carl Axel, to [the future] King Carl XIII of Sweden ...

  3. 1 de may. de 2022 · Carl Axel Löwenhielm, grevliga ätten slöts's Timeline. 1772. November 3, 1772. Birth of Carl Axel Löwenhielm, grevliga ätten slöts. Stockholm. 1817. August 3, 1817. Birth of Alexandra Maria Augusta Charlotta Löwenhielm. Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire.

  4. 30 de jul. de 2021 · File: Löwenhielm, Carl (ur Löwenhielm 1927-1929).jpg. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Jump to navigation Jump to search. File; File ...

  5. runeberg.org › authors › lowencasCarl Axel Löwenhielm

    Carl Löwenhielm, Wikipedia français Carl A. Löwenhielm, Svenskt biografiskt lexikon. Project Runeberg has published the following works by this author: Carl Axel Löwenhielm, Om communal-styrelsen och penitentiär-systemet Swedish Read more about Carl Axel Löwenhielm in: Svenskt biografiskt handlexikon. Find other Nordic Authors named ...

  6. Count Carl Axel Löwenhielm (3 November 1772 – 9 June 1861) was a Swedish military officer, diplomat, and politician. He was an illegitimate son of King Charles XIII of Sweden and Augusta von Fersen (married to the Chancellor of the Royal Court Fredrik Adolf Löwenhielm) and a half-brother of general and diplomat Gustaf Löwenhielm.

  7. The couple had a son, Carl Axel Löwenhielm. The relationship was well known as accepted, but she was not an official royal mistress; the relationship was rather treated as equal to the other extramarital love affairs which was at that time accepted in the circles of the nobility and royal court.