Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The painting is believed to have previously been a part of the private collection of Spanish and Portuguese King Philip IV and is one of just 60 known works by the famed Italian master. According to the BBC, it is valued at nearly $40 million.

  2. Hace 1 día · Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria was a member of the European House of Habsburg. She called herself Mariana after her October 1649 marriage to her biological uncle, widower King Felipe IV of Spain, III of Portugal. She was 14 years old and he was 30 years her senior. The Habsburgs were renowned for marrying members to each other in consanguine ...

  3. Hace 4 días · King Philip II of Spain. Philip II was King of Spain and was one of the dominant figures on the world stage for three decades in the 16th Century. He was born on May 21, 1527, in Valladolid, the capital of Castile, in Spain. His father was King Charles I, who was also Emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire; his mother was Isabella of Portugal.

  4. Hace 2 días · Philip IV King of Spain 1605–1665: Mariana of Austria 1635–1696: Louis XIV King of France 1638–1715: Maria Theresa of Spain 1638–1683: Charles II ...

  5. Hace 3 días · The depiction of a suffering Jesus Christ in a crown of thorns was painted between 1605 and 1609, shortly before Caravaggio’s death, and is believed to have once belonged to King Philip IV of Spain.

  6. Hace 3 días · October 1558, 1–15. 473. Christophe d'Assonleville to Philip. Westminster, 10 October. Sire: Count Lalaing wrote to me recently by your Majesty's orders that I was to endeavour discreetly to find out what intelligences the English may have with the Kings of Denmark and Sweden, and also those that may exist between the King of Sweden and the ...

  7. Hace 2 días · Sailing out of New Spain (Mexico), Miguel Lopez de Legazpi, a prosperous landowner from Mexico City, officially took Guam as a formal possession of Spain in 1565. But a continuous Spanish colonial presence did not begin on Guam until 1668, after King Philip IV of Spain approved Father Diego Luis de San Vitores ’, S.J., mission to Guam.