Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 18 de may. de 2024 · Counts of Ponthieu Vermandois & Ponthieu King of France William IV, Count of Ponthieu (1191-1221) Simon, Count of Ponthieu (1221-1239) Joan, Countess of Ponthieu (1239-1251) Ferdinand III of Castile (1251-1252) Joan, Countess of Ponthieu (1252-1279) Edward I of England (1279-1307 by right of his wife) Counts of Poitou Poitou King of France

  2. Hace 3 días · Jeanne of Dammartin or Joan of Dammartin (b.1216 – d. Abbeville, 1279) Queen consort of Castile and León (1252–1252), Countess of Ponthieu (1237–1279) and Montreuil. She was daughter of Simon de Dammartin, Count of Ponthieu (1251–1276) and his wife Marie of Ponthieu, Countess of Montreuil (1221–1251).

    • 1220
    • Argoules, Picardy, France
    • Private User
  3. Hace 5 días · Edward II was the fourth son of Edward I, King of England, Lord of Ireland, and ruler of Gascony in south-western France (which he held as the feudal vassal of the king of France), and Eleanor, Countess of Ponthieu in northern France.

  4. 10 de may. de 2024 · Hugh Capet (c. 940 – 24 October 996) was the King of the Franks from 987 to 996. He is the founder of and first king from the House of Capet. The son of the powerful duke Hugh the Great and his wife Hedwige of Saxony, he was elected as the successor of the last Carolingian king, Louis V. Hugh...

  5. 23 de may. de 2024 · Marie Adélaïde de France (23 March 1732 – 27 February 1800) was a French princess, the sixth child and fourth daughter of King Louis XV and Queen Marie Leszczyńska. As a legitimate daughter of the King, Adélaïde was a fille de France.

  6. Hace 3 días · All four women and their mother, the dowager countess of Provence, were present at the meeting at Paris in 1254 between Henry III and Louis IX (pp. 136-138). Yet Howell finds it only ‘incidentally interesting that the family structure which underlay the 1254 meeting depended on a group of five women’ (p. 138).

  7. 17 de may. de 2024 · It began as an intrigue on the part of an adventuress, the comtesse (countess) de La Motte, to procure, supposedly for Queen Marie-Antoinette but in reality for herself and her associates, a diamond necklace worth 1,600,000 livres.