Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. House. House of Hanover. Father. George III. Mother. Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Prince Octavius (23 February 1779 - 3 May 1783) was the eighth son of the British king George III and his queen, Charlotte. He died at the age of four. His father King George once said "There will be no heaven for me if Octavius is not there."

  2. Frederick the Great of Prussia (1712–86) befriended Voltaire; his cousin, Frederick, Prince of Wales (1707–51), visited Alexander Pope at his Twickenham villa, joined the Freemasons and became an active supporter of the parliamentary opposition to his father’s first minister, Sir Robert Walpole. Conversation pieces show the Prince, who ...

  3. Anne of Denmark, Queen of Great Britain (1574-1619) Prince Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales (1594-1612) Charles I, King of Great Britain (1600-49) Henrietta Maria, Queen of Great Britain (1609-69) Charles II, King of Great Britain (1630-85) James II, King of Great Britain (1633-1701) William III, King of Great Britain (1650-1702)

  4. George IV (born as George Augustus Frederick on 12 August 1762, died on 26 June 1830) was king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Hanover from 29 January 1820 until his death. The Regency , George's nine-year time as "Prince Regent", which started in 1811 and ended with George III's death in 1820, included winning the Napoleonic Wars in Europe .

  5. Louise of Great Britain (originally Louisa; 18 December [O.S. 7 December] 1724 – 19 December 1751) was Queen of Denmark and Norway from 1746 until her death, as the first wife of King Frederick V. She was the youngest surviving daughter of King George II of Great Britain and Caroline of Ansbach .

  6. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 11940063. Source citation. British Royalty. Born as Duke Friedrich Ludwig of Brunswick-Lüneburg in Hanover, Germany. He was the eldest son of George II and his wife Caroline of Ansbach. He is perhaps best remembered as the father of King of England George III, and as the subject of the epigram which reads: But since ...

  7. 15 Kimerly Rorschach's work has been vital to the resuscitation of Frederick's artistic patronage and collecting: see Rorschach, K., ‘ Frederick, prince of Wales, 1707–1751, as collector and patron ’, Walpole Society, 55 (1989–90), pp. 1 – 76 Google Scholar; and at greater length, idem, ‘Frederick, prince of Wales (1707–1751) as a patron of the visual arts: princely patriotism ...