Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Catherine of Austria (German: Katharina von Habsburg; French: Catherine d'Autriche; 9 February 1320 – 28 September 1349) was the daughter of the Habsburg Duke Leopold I of Austria and the wife successively of the French nobleman Enguerrand VI, Lord of Coucy and the German Konrad von Hardeck, Burgrave of Magdeburg.

  2. Catalina de Austria (en alemán, Katharina von Habsburg; en francés: Catherine d'Autriche; Viena, 9 de febrero de 1320-ibidem, 28 de septiembre de 1349) era la hija del duque Leopoldo I de Austria. Fue la esposa del noble francés Enguerrand VI, señor de Coucy, y luego de Conrado de Hardeck, burgrave de Magdeburgo. [1]

    • 28 de septiembre de 1349jul. (29 años), Viena (Ducado de Austria)
    • Catherine d'Autriche
    • Katharina von Habsburg
    • Early Years
    • Between England and France
    • French Sire
    • Family
    • Coucy's Campaigns
    • Coucy Estate
    • In Later Culture
    • Sources
    • Further Reading

    Coucy became Lord of Coucy at the death of his father, Enguerrand VI, Lord of Coucy, during the sequence of battles ending with the Battle of Crécy in 1346. He also gained the titles of 4th Lord Gynes, Sire d' Oisy, in the district of Marle, and the Sire de La Fère. His mother, Catherine of Austria, oldest daughter of Leopold I, Duke of Austria, ha...

    Young Coucy first met King Edward III of England in 1359, as one of forty royal and noble hostages exchanged for the future release of the captured King John II of France. He was retained as a hostage in 1360, when the Treaty of Brétigny established territorial adjustments between the two countries, and set the monetary payments for King John's rel...

    In the autumn of 1375 Coucy engaged a number of Free Companies, including one led by Owain Lawgoch, to seize some Habsburg lands which he claimed through his mother. However, in the resulting Gugler WarCoucy's troops were attacked when passing through Switzerland, and after a number of reverses, the expedition had to be abandoned. In 1379, after th...

    Coucy married as his first wife, Isabella of England,and had two children by her: 1. Marie de Coucy, Countess of Soissons (1366-1405), married Henry of Bar, Marquis de Pont-à-Mousson and Lord of Marle. 2. Philippa de Coucy (1367-1411), married Robert de Vere, 9th Earl of Oxford. Coucy married as his second wife, Isabelle of Lorraine, daughter of Jo...

    Enguerrand participated in the following campaigns: 1. 1358 Suppression of the Jacquerie 2. 1369 Alsace campaign 3. 1372-3 Papal Visconti campaign 4. 1375 Guglerwar 5. 1378 Normandy campaign, Hundred Years War(HYW) 6. 1379 Defense of the Picardy, (HYW) 7. 1382 Suppression of Flemish uprising 8. 1384 Italian campaign 9. 1386 Preparation for invasion...

    Coucy inherited the most awesome fortress in Europe at the death of his father, Enguerrand VI in 1346. The castle is known as the Château de Coucy and is considered a spectacular architectural achievement for its time. Coucy was responsible for the maintenance of the castle and additional construction on his familial estates, which consisted of the...

    The courtship of Coucy and his first wife comprises a large portion of the plot of The Lady Royal, a novel by Molly Costain Haycraft. A fictionalized account of the life of Princess Isabella of England, it paints an extremely romantic portrait of the couple. Coucy and his first wife Isabella of England are supporting characters in the historical fi...

    Bradbury, Jim (2004). Medieval Warfare. Routledge.
    Cokayne, George Edward (1926). The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain. Vol. 6. St. Catherine Press, Limited.
    Glendinning, Miles (2013). The Conservation Movement: A History of Architectural Preservation, Antiquity to Modernity. Routledge.
    Lutkin, Jessica (2010). "Isabella de Coucy, daughter of Edward III: The Exception Who Proves the Rule". In Given-Wilson, Chris; Saul, Nigel (eds.). Fourteenth Century England VI. The Boydell Press.
    "Coucy–Le Château." Encyclopædia Britannica11th edition. Volume 7. Cambridge University Press, 1910: page 307.
    Tuchman Barbara. A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century. Knopf, 1978. ISBN 978-0394400266
  3. 6 de ago. de 2021 · Katharina von Habsburg was born in 1320. She was the daughter of Leopold I Herzog von Österreich and Catherine de Savoie. She married, firstly, Enguerrand VI de Coucy, Sire de Coucy before 12 January 1337. She married, secondly, Graf Conrad von Hardegg in 1348. She died in 1349. Katharina von Habsburg was also known as Catherine of ...

  4. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Media in category "Catherine of Austria, Lady of Coucy" This category contains only the following file. Catherine of Austria (1320-1349).jpg 394 × 486; 121 KB. Categories: Catherine (given name) 1320 births. 1349 deaths. Deaths from plague (disease) House of Habsburg. Ladies of Coucy.

  5. Eventually, she was permitted to marry Enguerrand VII, Lord of Coucy, a wealthy French lord with whom she had fallen in love. Seven years her junior, he was the son and heir of Enguerrand VI, Lord of Coucy and Catherine of Austria. Marriage and issue

  6. Catherine of Austria (German: Katharina von Habsburg; French: Catherine d'Autriche; 9 February 1320 – 28 September 1349) was the daughter of the Habsburg Duke Leopold I of Austria and the wife successively of the French nobleman Enguerrand VI, Lord of Coucy and the German Konrad von Hardeck, Burgrave of Magdeburg.