Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Prince Arsenije "Arsen" of Yugoslavia (Serbian: Арсеније Карађорђевић / Arsenije Karađorđević; 16/17 April 1859 – 19 October 1938) was a dynast of the House of Karađorđević and ancestor of the current cadet branch of the Royal Family which ruled Yugoslavia until 1945.

  2. Arsenio Karađorđević, Príncipe de Yugoslavia (llamado Арсен Карађорђевић (en Serbo-croata); Timișoara, Rumania, 16 de abril de 1859 - París, Francia, 19 de octubre de 1938) fue un príncipe de la Casa Real de Karađorđević, hermano menor del rey Pedro I de Serbia y oficial del ejército ruso.

  3. Arsenio Karađorđević, Príncipe de Yugoslavia (llamado Арсен Карађорђевић (en Serbo-croata ); Timișoara, Rumania, 16 de abril de 1859 - París, Francia, 19 de octubre de 1938) fue un príncipe de la Casa Real de Karađorđević, hermano menor del rey Pedro I de Serbia y oficial del ejército ruso.

    • Name
    • Ancestry
    • Current Claims to The Throne
    • Serbia and Yugoslavia
    • Heraldry
    • References
    • External Links

    In English, it is typically spelled Karadjordjevic while pronunciation is roughly anglicized as Karageorgevich, and was in previous times rendered also as Kara-Georgevich.

    According to some researchers, Karađorđe's paternal ancestors most likely migrated from the Highlands (in what is today Montenegro) to Šumadija during the Second Great Serb Migration in 1737–39 under the leadership of Patriarch Šakabenta, as a result of the Austro-Turkish War (in which Serbs took part). Serbian historiography accepted the theory th...

    The Karađorđevićs are active in Serbian society in various ways. There is a view that constitutional parliamentary monarchy would be the ultimate solution for stability, unity and continuity. In addition, they support Serbia as a democratic country with a future in the European Union. The last crown prince of Yugoslavia, Alexander, has lived in Bel...

    The Karadjordjević family initially was a Serbian Royal House, then the Royal House of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and then the Royal House of Yugoslavia. When they last reigned they were called the Royal House of Yugoslavia. Crown Prince Alexander was born in London but on property temporarily recognised by the United Kingdom's government as su...

    Coat of arms of Serbia
    Coat of arms of Yugoslavia
    Gavro Vuković (1985). Slobodan Tomović (ed.). Memoari, Volume 2. Obod.
    Felix Phillip Kanitz (1987). Srbija: zemlja i stanovništvo od rimskog doba do kraja XIX veka, Volume 1(3 ed.). Srpska književna zadruga.
    Milenko M. Vukićević (1907). Karađorđe: 1752-1804. Štampano u Državnoj štampariji Kraljevine Srbije.

    Media related to House of Karađorđevićat Wikimedia Commons 1. Official site of the Serbian Royal Family 2. Crown Prince Alexander's Foundation for Culture and Education Archived 2020-01-17 at the Wayback Machine 3. Princess Katherine's Humanitarian Foundation

  4. El príncipe Arsenije "Arsen" de Yugoslavia (en serbio: Арсеније Карађорђевић / Arsenije Karađorđević; 16/17 de abril de 1859 - 19 de octubre de 1938) fue una dinastía de la Casa de Karađorđević y antepasado de la actual rama cadete de la Familia Real que gobernó Yugoslavia hasta 1945.

  5. Príncipe Alejandro de Yugoslavia (serbio: Александар П. Карађорђевић / Aleksandar P. Karađorđević; 13 de agosto de 1924 – 12 de mayo de 2016) era el hijo mayor del Príncipe Pablo, quien sirvió como Regente de Yugoslavia en la década de 1930, y su esposa, la Princesa Olga de Grecia y Dinamarca.

  6. 25 de jun. de 2021 · Por qué se desintegró Yugoslavia. Durante décadas fue un sueño compartido por muchos: el gran Estado de los eslavos del sur. La antigua Yugoslavia aunó diversas etnias, religiones y naciones ...