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  1. 26 de abr. de 2022 · She was widowed, at age 24, at his death in 1299. Isabel never remarried, despite surviving her husband by 59 years. Their marriage did not produce a male heir, though it did produce a daughter, Ingeborg Eriksdottir of Norway, who, having firstly been engaged to Jon II, Earl of Orkney, married Valdemar Magnusson of Sweden, Duke of Finland, in 1312.

  2. Ingeborg Haakonsdottir Fairhair of Norway was born 1301 to Haakon V of Norway (1270-1319) and Euphemia von Rügen (c1280-1321) and died 1361 of unspecified causes. She married Erik of Sweden (1282-1318) 1312 JL .

  3. 1) Ingebjørg Guttormsdatter (12th-century) was a medieval Norwegian Queen consort and spouse of King Eystein I of Norway (Øystein Magnusson). 2) Ingeborg of Denmark (1175–1236) was a French queen. She was a daughter of Valdemar I of Denmark and Sofia of Minsk, and wife of Philip II of France.

  4. 2 de mar. de 2020 · She, along with her cousin and sister-in-law, Valdemar’s wife Ingeborg Eriksdotter of Norway, had already become the leader of the duke’s faction following Erik’s imprisonment in Nyköping. On 16 April 1318 an agreement, between the two duchesses named Ingeborg and the Danish duke Kristoffer of Halland-Samsö and Archbishop Esger of Lund, was signed in Kalmar.

  5. Norwegian royal family. Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner (Astrid Maud Ingeborg; born 12 February 1932) is the second daughter of King Olav V and his wife, Princess Märtha of Sweden. She is the older sister of King Harald V of Norway and younger sister of the late Princess Ragnhild .

  6. 28 de dic. de 2023 · Daughter of Erik Magnusson, hertig av Södermanland and Ingeborg of Norway. Birth: 1317 in Stockholm, Sweden. Death: April 10, 1370 (53) in Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. EUPHEMIA Eriksdotter ( [1317]- [27 Oct 1363/16 Jun 1370]). The late 14th century Doberaner Genealogie records that “Albertus” married “Eufemia soror domini ...

  7. In 1906 Roald Amundsen’s Gjøa Expedition returned to Norway after three years in the Arctic. The first to complete a Northwest Passage by sea, the expedition also brought back a substantial amount of ethnographic material concerning the Netsilik Inuit, with whom Amundsen and his crew had been in sustained contact during their stay on King William Island in Nunavut between 1903 and 1905.