Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Adbelahide, Adele, Adela or Adelaide of Aquitaine (also known as Adelaide of Poitiers; c. 945 or 952 – 1004), [1] was Queen of France by marriage to Hugh Capet, King of the Franks (c. 939 – 14 October 996). Adelaide and Hugh were the founders of the Capetian dynasty of France, which would rule France until the 18th and 19th centuries.

  2. Alicia Adélaide Needham (née Montgomery; 31 October 1863 – 24 December 1945) was an Irish composer of songs and ballads. A committed Suffragette , she was the first woman to conduct at the Royal Albert Hall, London, and the first female president of the National Eisteddfod of Wales (in 1906).

  3. Louis VI (16 April 1080 — 1 August 1137), nicknamed the Fat ( French: le Gros ), or the Fighter (French: le Batailleur) was the King of France from 1108 until his death in 1137. He was the second child and the only son of King Philip I of France and his first wife, Bertha of Holland. Louis was a great warrior king.

  4. Philip I. Boniface. Beatrice. Father. William I, Count of Geneva. Mother. Beatrice de Faucigny (c. 1160–1196) Margaret of Geneva (1180?–1252), was a countess of Savoy by marriage to Thomas I of Savoy. [1] She was the daughter of William I, Count of Geneva, and Beatrice de Faucigny (1160–1196).

  5. Adélaïde Alix, Alice, Adèle de Maurienne (Savoie) aka de Montmorency, de France, de Savoie (est. 18 Nov 1092 - certain 18 Nov 1154)

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SzékelysSzékelys - Wikipedia

    Székelys. The Székelys ( pronounced [ˈseːkɛj], Székely runes: 𐳥𐳋𐳓𐳉𐳗 ‎), also referred to as Szeklers, [b] are a Hungarian subgroup [5] [6] living mostly in the Székely Land in Romania. In addition to their native villages in Suceava County in Bukovina, a significant population descending from the Székelys of Bukovina ...

  7. Adelaide is a feminine given name from the English form of a Germanic given name, from the Old High German Adalheidis, meaning "noble natured". The modern German form is Adelheid, famously the first name of Queen Adelaide, for whom many places throughout the former British Empire were named. The French form is Adélaïde or Adélaide, and Czech ...