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  1. Charles de Lorraine fue un popular Gobernador general de los Países Bajos austríacos mucho antes de que Bélgica existiera como estado (1744-1780). Lo que queda de su palacio en Bruselas ha sido cuidadosamente restaurado y recientemente reabierto al público. Ahora alberga exposiciones de la Biblioteca Real de Bélgica, como la exposición de ...

  2. Charles de Lorraine (17 February 1524 – 26 December 1574), Duke of Chevreuse, was a French Cardinal, a member of the powerful House of Guise. He was known at first as the Cardinal of Guise, and then as the second Cardinal of Lorraine , after the death of his uncle, Jean, Cardinal of Lorraine (1550).

  3. Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine (5 April 1604 – 18 September 1675) was Duke of Lorraine from 1624 until his death in 1675, with a brief interruption in 1634, when he abdicated under French pressure in favour of his younger brother, Nicholas Francis.

  4. Charles II (11 September 1365 – 25 January 1431), called the Bold ( French: le Hardi) was the Duke of Lorraine from 1390 to his death and Constable of France from 1418 to 1425. Charles joined the Barbary Crusade, fought at Nicopolis, and aided the Teutonic knights in Livonia. During the Hundred Years War, he sought closer ties to the French ...

  5. Charles V, Duke of Lorraine. Son of Nicolas François de Lorraine (who was briefly Duke of Lorraine in 1634) and nephew of Duke Charles IV; he succeeded his uncle, at least in name, as Duke of Lorraine, but actually never reigned as he had been deprived of his rights of succession following the French invasion; entered the service of the Holy ...

  6. Charles I (or II) (born 1365—died Jan. 25, 1431, Nancy, Lorraine [Germany; now in France]) was the duke of Lorraine and an ally of the Burgundian faction in the internal strife that divided France during the Hundred Years’ War. He succeeded in uniting Lorraine with the duchy of Bar. Becoming duke in 1391, he followed his father’s example ...

  7. Charles IV (5 April 1604, Nancy – 18 September 1675, Allenbach)[1] was Duke of Lorraine from 1624 until his death in 1675, with a brief interruption in 1634, when he abdicated under French pressure in favor of his younger brother, Nicholas Francis. He came to lose his duchy because of his notionally anti-French policy; in 1633, French troops invaded Lorraine in retaliation for Charles's ...