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  1. I think that "Elizabeth of Bohemia" with no context, would generally be taken to refer to this Elizabeth (although of course not necessarily - Elizabeth's likenamed daughter is often called Elizabeth of Bohemia, as are the previous queens of that name, and probably some others). "Elizabeth Stuart" is a much more ambiguous name.

  2. 16 de dic. de 2015 · Elizabeth, Electress Palatine of the Rhine and Queen of Bohemia Elizabeth; ... Russian Wikipedia. stated in. datos.bne.es. retrieved. 25 February 2024.

  3. Archivo:Princess Elizabeth (Elizabeth of Bohemia, 'The Winter Queen'), 1596–1662, aged seven RMG BHC4237.tiff Añadir idiomas Contenido de la página no disponible en otros idiomas.

  4. Daughter of James I; wife of Frederick V, Elector Palatine Elizabeth was the only surviving daughter of James I. In 1613 she married Frederick, the Protestant ruler of the Palatinate, an area of present-day Germany. In 1619, following a rebellion against the Catholic Habsburg rulers, Frederick accepted the throne of Bohemia. He and Elizabeth were expelled after less than a year, however, in ...

  5. Elizabeth of Bohemia's parents, Frederic V and Elizabeth Stuart (also known as Elizabeth of Bohemia [1596–1662]), were deposed as king and queen of Bohemia while she was still a child. In exile, Elizabeth was raised by her grandmother Louisa Juliana and an aunt in Silesia until the age of nine, when she joined her parents in Holland at the Hague Court.

  6. Elisabeth of Greater Poland ( Polish: Elżbieta Mieszkówna; Czech: Eliška Polská) ( c. 1152 – 2 April 1209) was a Polish princess of the House of Piast and, by her two marriages, Duchess of Bohemia and Margravine of Lusatia . She was a daughter of Mieszko III the Old, Duke of Greater Poland and from 1173 High Duke of Poland, by his first ...

  7. Elizabeth of Bohemia was an extraordinary political and cultural figure in seventeenth-century Europe. The daughter of James VI of Scotland and I of England, at sixteen she was married to a German count, Frederick, Elector Palatine and was drawn into the European wars of religion when the Protestant Frederick was offered, and accepted, the crown of Bohemia.