Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Bavarian Alps ( German: Bayerische Alpen) are a section of the Northern Eastern Alps ( Nördlichen Ostalpen) in the international unified orographic classification of the Alps (SOIUSA) according to Sergio Marazzi. The same name is used in the Partizione delle Alpi for a mountain group of the Central Alps, but there it covers a larger area.

  2. ie.wikipedia.org › wiki › BavariaBavaria - Wikipedia

    Bavaria es un federal state in li sud de Germania. Bavaria es li maxim grand federal state de Germania. Li capital cité de Bavaria es München. Bavaria have 12 519 728 habitantes. Li official nómine del state es Líber State de Bavaria. Bavaria devenit un parte del Germanan Imperie ye 1871. De 1806 til 1918 Bavaria esset un índependent reyatu.

  3. Pretender (s) Franz, Duke of Bavaria. The Crown of Bavaria. The King of Bavaria ( German: König von Bayern) was a title held by the hereditary Wittelsbach rulers of Bavaria in the state known as the Kingdom of Bavaria from 1805 until 1918, when the kingdom was abolished. It was the second time Bavaria was a kingdom, almost a thousand years ...

  4. Bavaria (cerveza) Bavaria fue una marca de cerveza de la empresa Bavaria al principio de su historia, en 1920, y que se dejó de producir en los años 1980 en favor de otras marcas más comerciales y que, siendo de su mismo fabricante, eran su directa competencia ( Águila y Clausen ).

  5. Páginas en la categoría «Marcas de Cervecería Bavaria». Categorías: Cervecería Bavaria. Marcas de AB InBev. AB InBev. Marcas por empresa. Marcas de cerveza.

  6. Bavaria headquarters in Bogotá. Bavaria Brewery ( Spanish: Cervecería Bavaria ), formally known as Bavaria S.A., is a Colombian brewery company founded on April 4, 1889, by Leo S. Kopp, a German immigrant. In 2005, Bavaria Brewery became a subsidiary of SABMiller. [1] Before the merger, Bavaria was the second-largest brewery in South America .

  7. The Electorate of Bavaria consisted of most of the modern regions of Upper Bavaria, Lower Bavaria, and the Upper Palatinate. Before 1779, it also included the Innviertel, now part of modern Austria. This was ceded to the Habsburgs by the Treaty of Teschen, which ended the War of the Bavarian Succession.