Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. François Joseph de Lorraine (28 August 1670 – 16 March 1675), Duke of Guise, Duke of Alençon and Duke of Angoulême, was the only son of Louis Joseph de Lorraine, Duke of Guise and Élisabeth Marguerite d'Orléans, suo jure duchess of Alençon.

  2. House of Guise, Noble French Roman Catholic family that played a major role in French politics during the Reformation. Claude de Lorraine (1496–1550) was created the 1st duke de Guise in 1527 for his service to Francis I in the defense of France. Claude’s sons François, 2nd duke de Guise, and.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Francis I of Lorraine, 2nd Duke of Guise, 1st Prince of Joinville, and 1st Duke of Aumale (French: François de Lorraine; 17 February 1519 – 24 February 1563), was a French general and statesman. A prominent leader during the Italian War of 15511559 and French Wars of Religion , he was assassinated during the siege of Orleans in ...

  4. The last duke of Guise, François Joseph, died in 1674, and by 1688 the entire house of Guise-Lorraine had come to an end. (See alsoAristocracy; France; Henry IV; Protestant Reformation.) * duchy. territory ruled by a duke or duchess * medieval

  5. Louis Joseph (1650–1671; s. 1664), nephew of the above; Francis Joseph (1670–1675 s. 1671), son of the above; Marie (1615–1688; s.1675), sister of Henry II. Marie did not marry and had no descendants. She willed Guise to a relative, Charles François de Stainville on 8 January 1688.

  6. François de Guise (1520-1563) François de Lorraine, duke de Guise (1519-1563) © S.H.P.F. François de Guise was married to Anne d’Este, Louis XII’s granddaughter, and was appointed General Lieutenant of the Kingdom by Henri II. Taking Calais in 1558 ensured him a reputation as one of the best warlords of his time.

  7. 10 The chief mourners, unsurprisingly, comprised the Guises and close friends. 42 Renée, Marquis d’Elbeuf, who had been mooted as a replacement Regent for Guise shortly before her death, appeared alongside the “princes de Joinville” – although Joinville was made a principality for François in 1552 the plural perhaps suggests the phrase stretched to encompass his brother Claude, Duke ...