Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Charles de Luynes. Apariencia. ocultar. Luynes por Montcornet. Escudo de Carlos de Luynes. Carlos, marqués de Albert, duque de Luynes (5 de agosto de 1578, Pont-Saint-Esprit – 15 de diciembre de 1621, Longueville cerca de Agen ). Fue un político francés, condestable y primer duque de Luynes. Primeros años de vida.

  2. Charles d’Albert, marquis d'Albert, premier duc de Luynes, né le 5 août 1578 à Pont-Saint-Esprit, mort le 15 décembre 1621 au château de Longuetille, commune de Saint-Léger, lors du siège de Monheurt (47160), est un homme d'État français, pair et connétable de France .

  3. Charles d'Albert, 1st Duke of Luynes ( French pronunciation: [ʃaʁl dalbɛʁ]; 5 August 1578 – 15 December 1621) was a French courtier and a favourite of Louis XIII. In 1619, the king made him Duke of Luynes and a Peer of France, and in 1621, Constable of France.

  4. Charles d’Albert, duke de Luynes (born Aug. 5, 1578—died Dec. 15, 1621, Longueville, Fr.) was a French statesman who, from 1617 to 1621, dominated the government of young King Louis XIII. The son of Honoré d’Albert, Seigneur (lord) de Luynes, he became the king’s falconer in 1611.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Charles-Philippe d’Albert, IV duque de Luynes ( París, 1695- Versalles, 2 de noviembre de 1758) fue un noble, cortesano y memorialista francés. Biografía. Fue uno de los hijos del matrimonio formado por Honoré-Charles d'Albert de Luynes (1669-1704), duque de Montfort y de Marie Anne Jeanne de Courcillon de Dangeau.

  6. Charles (1578–1621), a favorite of Louis XIII, became the first Duke of Luynes in August 1619. He had recently purchased the Comté de Maillé on the Loire, about 10 miles west of Tours, and the king erected Maillé into the Duchy of Luynes, which included about 50 parishes and extended to the western wall of Tours and around it on ...

  7. Charles Honoré d'Albert de Luynes (7 October 1646 – 5 November 1712) was a French nobleman and Duke of Luynes. He is best known as the Duke of Chevreuse, his family's subsidiary title which he used until his father's death in 1690. He was a high-ranking French official under King Louis XIV .