Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Ingeborg of Mecklenburg (1343/45 [1] – 25 July 1395) was a daughter of Albert II, Duke of Mecklenburg and his wife, Euphemia of Sweden. Euphemia was a daughter of Ingeborg of Norway, who was the only legitimate child of King Haakon V of Norway. Thus, Ingeborg of Mecklenburg was Haakon V's great-granddaughter.

  2. Ingeborg of Denmark (Danish: Ingeborg Valdemarsdatter) (4 January 1347 – 16 June 1370) [citation needed] was the eldest daughter of Valdemar IV of Denmark and his wife Helvig of Schleswig. By marriage she was Duchess of Mecklenburg, although she died before her husband succeeded her father-in-law.

  3. Brief Life History of Ingeborg of Mecklenburg. When Ingeborg of Mecklenburg was born in 1336, in Schwerin, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany, her father, Albert II Duke of Mecklenburg, was 18 and her mother, Euphemia of Sweden, was 19. She had at least 3 sons and 1 daughter with Henry II Count of Holstein-Rendsburg.

  4. Ingeborg Alix, Princess Stephan Alexander of Schaumburg-Lippe Altburg, Hereditary Princess of Waldeck and Pyrmont: House: Mecklenburg-Schwerin: Father: Frederick Francis II, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg: Mother: Princess Marie of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt

  5. Ingeborg of Denmark (Danish: Ingeborg Valdemarsdatter) (4 January 1347 – 16 June 1370) was the eldest daughter of Valdemar IV of Denmark and his wife Helvig of Schleswig. By marriage she was Duchess of Mecklenburg, although she died before her husband succeeded her father-in-law.

  6. Marie of Mecklenburg, (born c. 1363–1367, died after 13 May 1402), was a duchess of Pomerania. [1] . She was the daughter of Duke Henry III of Mecklenburg (died 1383) and Princess Ingeborg of Denmark (died 1370), elder sister of Queen Margrete I of Denmark. [2] History.

  7. Origen. Historia. Desenlace. Referencias. Enlaces externos. Ducado de Mecklemburgo-Schwerin. Apariencia. ocultar. Mecklemburgo-Schwerin fue un ducado en el norte de Alemania creado en 1701, cuando Federico Guillermo y Adolfo Federico II dividieron el Ducado de Mecklemburgo, entre Mecklemburgo-Schwerin y Mecklemburgo-Strelitz.