Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. El barón Tamás Nádasdy de Nádasd y Fogarasföld (españolizado como Tomás Nádasdy) (I), apodado el Gran Palatino (1498-1562), fue un estadista húngaro, hijo de Ferenc I Nádasdy y su primera mujer Orsolya Therjék de Szenterzsébet. Después de la muerte de su madre, su madrastra fue Orsolya Véssey de Vésse. Fue educado en Graz ...

  2. Tamás Nádasdy. Baron Tamás Nádasdy de Nádasd et Fogarasföld (I), called the Great Palatine (14981562), was Hungarian nobleman, great landowner and a statesman . Early life. Born into the House of Nádasdy, he was the son of Ferenc I Nádasdy de Nádasd (1492-1541) and his first wife, Orsolya Therjék de Szenterzsébet (d. 1529).

  3. References. Nádasdy family. Coat of arms of the Nádasdy family. Tamás I Nádasdy (1498–1562) Ferenc Nádasdy II (1555–1604) Ferenc Nádasdy (1708–1783) Borbála Nádasdy (1939-) The House of Nádasdy, also spelled Nadasdy in English, is a major Hungarian aristocratic family whose roots reach into the Middle Ages. [1] .

  4. Tamás Nádasdy (1498–1562); Ferenc Nádasdy II (the “black bey” 1555–1604); Ferenc Nádasdy III (1622–1671) History: Sárvár Castle had been royal property since the Middle Ages when in 1411 it was given to Filippo Scolari (Pippo Spano, Ozorai Pipo) by Sigismund of the House of Luxemburg.

    • Tamás Nádasdy1
    • Tamás Nádasdy2
    • Tamás Nádasdy3
    • Tamás Nádasdy4
    • Tamás Nádasdy5
  5. Baron Tamás Nádasdy de Nádasd et Fogarasföld (I), called the Great Palatine (1498–1562), was Hungarian nobleman, great landowner and a statesman.

  6. Count Ferenc II Nádasdy de Nádasd et Fogarasföld (6 October 1555 – 4 January 1604) was a Hungarian nobleman. His family, Nádasdy, was one of the wealthiest and most influential of the era in Hungary. In 1571, when Ferenc was 16, his mother, Orsolya Nádasdy ( née Kanizsay), using her association with many noble families in Hungary ...

  7. NÁDASDY, TAMÁS I., Count, called the great palatine (1498–1562), Hungarian statesman, was the son of Francis I. Nádasdy and was educated at Graz, Bologna and Rome. In 1521 he accompanied Cardinal Cajetan (whom the pope had sent to Hungary to preach a crusade against the Turks) to Buda as his interpreter.