Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Hun var gift hele fem ganger : • Antagelig Godfrey av Hainaut, greve av Ostervant ( død 1163 ). • En gang ... I. Thierry flamand gróf... Aélis ( Petronille ) d ' Aquitaine lánya , Godfrey de Hainaut oostrevanti és IV .

  2. Boydell Press, 2005 - History - 221 pages. First full English translation of the 12C Chronicle of Hainaut, offering fascinating insights into European history of the time. The importance of the late twelfth-century Chronicle of Hainaut (Chronicon Hanoniense) as an historical record cannot be overestimated. Gilbert of Mons was an eye-witness to ...

  3. Godfrey I, Count of Louvain (1060–1139). He married Ida de Chiny & Namur, who bore at least five children e.g. Godfrey II of Louvain, Duke of Lower Lorraine. later he married Clementia of Burgundy and bore Joceline of Louvain. Albero I of Louvain, Bishop of Liège; Ida of Louvain, who married Baldwin II, Count of Hainaut. Ancestry

  4. Hersinda. Reginar (or Rainier) II (890–932) was Lotharingian magnate who was active from approximately 915 to 932. He was brother of Duke Gilbert of Lotharingia, who died at the Battle of Andernach in 939, and because his son and grandson claimed it, he probably already personally held the fort of Mons in Hainaut as the seat of a county.

  5. Ida, Countess of Hainaut (Ida of Louvain) (died 1139), daughter of Henry II, Count of Louvain, and Adela of Thuringa. Ida was sister to Godfrey I, Count of Louvain. Ida was married to Baldwin II, Count of Hainaut, who served in the First Crusade with Godfrey of Bouillon. Ida and Baldwin had: While on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in 1106, Ida organized a search for her lost husband in Anatolia but ...

  6. Family Group Sheet for Godfrey of Hainaut, Count of Ostervant/Eleanor, Countess of Vermandois and Valois (F13902) m. 1162 : Cook Ancestry

  7. Baldwin V served as the Count of Flanders from 1035 until his passing in 1067. His rule was marked by the strategic union of the counties of Flanders and Hainaut, and he maintained strong connections with the Anglo-Saxon monarchy. His son-in-law, William the Conqueror, who was married to his daughter Matilda, eventually overthrew this monarchy.