Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 16 de abr. de 2024 · King of West Francia from 922 to 923. Robert Robert I Roi de France de France (Robertian) (est. 860 - certain 15 Jun 923)

  2. 17 de feb. de 2024 · When Robert's elder brother Eudes became king of France in 888, Robert succeeded his brother as marquis of Neustria and other dignities, and he appears often at his brother's side in his charters . 897 Marriage of Robert to Beatrice. Robert is frequently named as the husband of Béatrice of Vermandois, supposed daughter of Heribert I of Vermandois.

  3. Born in Paris, Robert was born either in 1296 or 1297. He was the youngest child of Philip IV of France and his wife Joan, the reigning Queen of Navarre. In 1306, at the age of ten, he was betrothed to Constance of Sicily, [2] daughter of Frederick III of Sicily and Eleanor of Anjou. [3] However, Robert died in 1308, and the marriage alliance ...

  4. Robert I. King of France, 922-3. Marquis of Neustria, 888-922. count of Paris, Orléans, Tours. Abbot of Saint-Martin de Tours. Lay-abbot of Marmoutier. Robert is found in 884 as a count in Lorraine in the service of the emperor Charles the Fat [" ... quidam vir nobilis Rotbertus comes fidelissimus noster ... ", MGH DD Karl 169 (#105)].

  5. Father. Robert the Strong. Robert I (15 August 866 – 15 June 923) was the King of West Francia from 922 until his death in 923. He was the younger son of Robert the Strong, count of Anjou, and the brother of Odo of France. Robert I was at the Siege of Paris in 885. Robert had the title of Dux Francorum. He did not call himself king of West ...

  6. Robert I of France (866–923), King of Western Francia; Robert II of France (972–1031), King of France This page was last edited on 29 April 2023, at 20

  7. Robert le Fort is the stem of France’s third race of kings known as the Capetians (Robertians or Robertines). Once the throne finally settled into the hands of his descendants, they ruled France for almost eight hundred years. France’s first two races of kings are the Merovingian and Carlovingian.