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  1. ast.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cecilia_VasaCecilia Vasa - Wikipedia

    Cecilia Vasa (nacida Cecilia Gustavsdotter) ( 6 de payares de 1540 (greg.) , Estocolmu – 27 de xineru de 1627 , Bruxeles ). Princesa sueca, fía de Gustavo I de Suecia y Margarita Leijonhufvud. Foi consorte del margrave Cristóbal de Baden-Baden . Cecilia viose arreyada en 1559 nel llamáu escándalu de Vadstena, de tipu sexual, mientres la ...

  2. Elisabet Vasa (syskon) Karl IX (syskon) Redigera Wikidata. Cecilia Vasa, född 6 november 1540, död 27 januari 1627 i Bryssel, var svensk prinsessa, och markgrevinna av Baden -Rodemachern genom sitt giftermål med markgreve Kristoffer II av Baden-Rodemachern. Hon var dotter till kung Gustav Vasa och drottning Margareta Leijonhufvud.

  3. Princess Cecilia Vasa is the best-known and most famous of Gustav Vasa and Margareta Leijonhufvud ’s five daughters. Cecilia Vasa, like her sisters, had a caring childhood, which was intended to prepare her for her future as the wife of a foreign prince. It was hoped that all the princesses’ marriages would serve as useful political ...

  4. 27 de ene. de 2015 · Gustav Vasa, before his daughter gave him grey hair. The scandal exploded like a plugged cannon – skyhigh. A princess, cavorting in bed with a man! Erik made a huge thing of it, locking John up in one of the castle’s towers, holding lengthy interrogations before an interested auditorium.

  5. Cecilia Gustavsdotter Vasa (6. november 1540 - 27. januar 1627) var en svensk prinsesse, der var markgrevinde af Baden-Rodemachern fra 1564 til 1575. Hun var datter af kong Gustav Vasa og dronning Margareta Leijonhufvud og gift med markgreve Christoffer 2. af Baden-Rodemachern .

  6. 21 de sept. de 2023 · Princess Cecilia of Sweden's Early Life. Princess Cecilia of Sweden was the youngest child of King Gustaf IV Adolf of Sweden from the House of Vasa (1778-1837) and Princess Frederica of Baden (1781-1826). Through her paternal line, she was a great-granddaughter of Britain's King George II (1683-1760) and Caroline of Ansbach (1683-1737).