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  1. Infanta Antónia of Portugal (or of Braganza; Portuguese pronunciation: [ɐ̃ˈtɔniɐ]; Antónia Maria Fernanda Micaela Gabriela Rafaela Francisca de Assis Ana Gonzaga Silvéria Júlia Augusta de Saxe-Coburgo e Bragança; 17 February 1845 – 27 December 1913) was a Portuguese infanta (princess) of the House of Braganza, daughter of Queen Maria II of Portugal and her King consort Ferdinand II ...

  2. Urraca of Castile. Sancho II ( Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈsɐ̃ʃu]; 8 September 1209 – 4 January 1248), nicknamed the Cowled or the Capuched ( Portuguese: o Capelo ), alternatively, the Pious ( Portuguese: o Piedoso ), was King of Portugal from 1223 to 1248. He was succeeded on the Portuguese throne by his brother, King Afonso III, in 1248.

  3. Queen Maria II ordered the reinstatement of the 1826 Charter, but little progress was made in reconciling the moderate and radical left, nor in recognition of the constituent power of the nation. When a military insurrection broke out at Torres Novas in 1844, Count Bomfim, leader of the revolutionary party, took command of the insurgents and seized the fortress of Almeida. [28]

  4. Maria I (English: Mary I) (17 December 1734 – 20 March 1816) was the Queen of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. Known as Maria the Pious (in Portugal), or Maria the Mad (in Brazil), she was the first undisputed Queen (in her own right) of Portugal. Her court, then under the direction of her eldest son and heir Dom João, the Prince Regent ...

  5. Pedro II de Portugal, apodado el Pacífico (Lisboa, 26 de abril de 1648-Alcântara, 9 de diciembre de 1706), fue regente y rey de Portugal entre 1683 y 1706. Biografía [ editar ] Fue el último de los ocho hijos del duque Juan II de Braganza -luego rey Juan IV de Portugal - y de Luisa Francisca de Guzmán .

  6. Born at Schloss Bronnbach in Bronnbach, Wertheim am Main, Kingdom of Württemberg, Infanta Marie Anne (or Maria Ana) was the fifth child and second-youngest daughter of the deposed King Miguel of Portugal and his wife Princess Adelaide of Löwenstein. She was a member of the House of Braganza. At the time of her birth, her father had been ...

  7. D. Maria II (D. Maria da Glória), Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira, Editorial Enciclopédia, Lisszabon, Rio de Janeiro, 1936–1960, 311–317. Külső hivatkozások [ szerkesztés ] Paul Theroff: The Online Gotha/Portugal – 2014. június 16.