Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Casualties and losses. 355–397. 930. The Battle of Hanover Court House, also known as the Battle of Slash Church, took place on May 27, 1862, in Hanover County, Virginia, as part of the Peninsula Campaign of the American Civil War . On May 27, elements of Brig. Gen. Fitz John Porter 's V Corps extended north to protect the right flank of Maj ...

  2. World War II. Ernst August, Hereditary Prince of Brunswick, Prince of Hanover [1] ( German: Ernst August Prinz von Hannover; 18 March 1914 – 9 December 1987) was head of the House of Hanover from 1953 until his death in 1987. From his birth until the German Revolution of 1918–1919 he was the heir apparent to the Duchy of Brunswick, a state ...

  3. Early life. Born Her Royal Highness Friederike Luise, Princess of Hanover, Princess of Great Britain and Ireland, and Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg on 18 April 1917 in Blankenburg am Harz, in the German Duchy of Brunswick, she was the only daughter and third child of Ernest Augustus, then reigning Duke of Brunswick, and his wife Princess Viktoria Luise of Prussia, herself the only daughter ...

  4. Marie of Saxe-Altenburg. Ernest Augustus, Crown Prince of Hanover, 3rd Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale ( German: Ernst August; 21 September 1845 – 14 November 1923), was the eldest child and only son of George V of Hanover and his wife, Marie of Saxe-Altenburg. Ernest Augustus was deprived of the throne of Hanover upon its annexation by ...

  5. 'Ernst August Albert Paul Otto Rupprecht Oskar Berthold Friedrich-Ferdinand Christian-Ludwig, Prince of Hanover, Duke of Braunschweig and Lüneburg, Royal Prince of Great Britain and Ireland'; born 26 February 1954) is the head of the House of Hanover, members of which reigned in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (Great Britain and Ireland were separate kingdoms, 1714 to 1801 ...

  6. Hanover was not a part of the Holy Roman Empire in 1837. It was a part of the Germanic Confederation. I believe that the succession laws of Hanover could not be changed, because the Duke of Brunswick (representative of the senior line of the Guelph house) had a reversionary right to Hanover, so there was no way to make Victoria inherit it.

  7. A. Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen. Prince Alfred of Great Britain. Princess Amelia of the United Kingdom. Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex.