Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Helen of Sweden (c. 1190 – 1247, [citation needed] Swedish: Helena) was a Swedish princess and daughter of King Sverker II of Sweden. She was the mother of Queen Catherine of Sweden. She was later Abbess of Vreta Abbey.

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Helena Sverkersdotter, död 1247, var en svensk prinsessa och sedan abbedissa, dotter till kung Sverker den yngre och drottning Benedikta (Hvide). Hon var enligt Magnus Boræn föreståndare i Vreta och gifte sig med jarlen Sune Folkesson efter att ha blivit bortrövad av honom från klostret 1210.

  3. Helena Sverkersdottir (bef. 1130 - aft. 1157) Born before 1130 in Sweden. Ancestors. Daughter of Sverker (Eriksson) Kolsson and Ulvhild Hakonsdottir. Sister of Johan Sverkersson, Karl Sverkersson, Ingegerd Sverkersdotter, Burislev Sverkersson [half] and Sune Sverkersson [half] Wife of Knud Magnussen — married 1156 [location unknown]

  4. Helena Sverkersdotter, död troligen före 1251, var en svensk kungadotter, gift med Sune Folkesson. Hon var dotter till kung Sverker den yngre och drottning Benedikta (Hvide).

  5. Around 1210, Helena Sverkersdotter, the only daughter of the deposed King Sverker II, was studying at the Vreta convent when her father fell in battle. The young Sune Folkason, son of an earl who had been among Sverker's opponents in that battle and had also fallen, wished to marry her, but her relatives would not hear his proposal.

  6. Helen (Swedish: Helena or Elin - 1130s – fl. 1158), is the assumed name of a medieval Swedish princess and Danish queen, Queen consort of King Canute V of Denmark. The date of her birth is not known; her father was King Sverker I of Sweden and her mother has been assumed to be Sverker's first spouse, Queen Ulvhild .

  7. When Helena Sverkersdotter von Schweden was born about 1134, her father, King Swerker I Kettilsson den gamle, was 35 and her mother, Ulvhild Håkansdotter, was 40. She had at least 3 sons and 8 daughters with Knut V Magnusson von Dänemark. She died before 1172.