Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. La Casa de Solms es una antigua familia de la alta nobleza alemana, que pretende remontarse a Otón, hermano del rey Conrado I de Alemania († 918), mientras que su primer miembro conocido es el señor Marquardus de Sulmese, mencionado como testigo del monasterio de Schiffenberg en Giessen en 1129.

  2. La maison de Solms est une ancienne famille de la haute noblesse allemande, dont le premier membre connu est le seigneur Marquardus de Sulmese, mentionné comme témoin au monastère de Schiffenberg à Giessen, en Hesse, en 1129.

  3. La Casa de Solms es una antigua familia de la alta nobleza alemana, que pretende remontarse a Otón, hermano del rey Conrado I de Alemania († 918), mientras que su primer miembro conocido es el señor Marquardus de Sulmese, mencionado como testigo del monasterio de Schiffenberg en Giessen en 1129.

  4. Solms-Wildenfels. Solms-Wildenfels was a minor Imperial county around Wildenfels in what is now part of south-western Saxony, Germany. The House of Solms [1] had its origins at Solms, Hesse. Solms-Wildenfels was a partition of Solms-Baruth. In 1741 it was partitioned between itself and Solms-Sachsenfeld, and reintegrated that county upon its ...

  5. Solms-Baruth est le nom d'une seigneurie du Saint-Empire romain germanique, située en Basse- Lusace, et dont la famille, une branche de la Maison de Solms, put jouir des droits entre le XVIe siècle et 1945.

  6. Hohensolms was an old territory of the lords and counts of Solms, with Alt-Hohensolms Castle built in 1321 and destroyed in 1349, and Neu-Hohensolms Castle built in 1350. The latter was owned by the princely family until 1969. The county of Lich was inherited by the Counts of Solms-Braunfels after the Counts of Falkenstein -Münzenberg died out ...

  7. Solms-Laubach was originally created as a partition of Solms-Lich. In 1537 Philip, Count of Solms-Lich, ruling count at Lich, purchased the Herrschaft Sonnewalde in Lower Lusatia which he left to his younger son Otto of Solms-Laubach (1496–1522), together with the county of Laubach. While Lich and Laubach were counties with imperial immediacy ...