Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Dyveke Sigbritsdatter or Dyveke Willomsdatter, (1490 – 21 September 1517), in Denmark normally known as "Dyveke" (in modern Dutch "duifje" means "little dove"), was the mistress to Christian II of Denmark. Dyveke was a commoner, the daughter of the Dutch merchant Sigbrit Willoms, who lived in Bergen in Norway. Dyveke became the ...

  2. Sigbrit Villoms, también escrito Villums, [1] que murió cerca de 1532, fue una política noruega y danesa de Ámsterdam, madre de la amante del rey Cristián II de Dinamarca, Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, asesora del rey y ministra de finanzas de facto entre 1519 y 1523.

    • Sigbrit Villumsdatter
    • Danesa
  3. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Dyveke Sigbritsdatter or Dyveke Willomsdatter, (1490 – 21 September 1517), in Denmark normally known as "Dyveke" ; in modern Dutch "duifje" means "little dove"), was known as the mistress to Christian II of Denmark. Dyveke was a "commoner", the daughter of the Dutch merchant Sigbrit Willoms, who lived in Bergen in Norway.

  4. Dyveke Sigbrittsdatter, også kaldet Dyveke Villomsdatter (ca. 1490, Amsterdam – 21. september 1517 i København) var den danske konge Christian 2.'s elskerinde. Dyveke, hvis navn betyder "lille due ", var datter af Sigbrit Villoms , også kaldet "mor Sigbrit".

    • Dyveke Villomsdatter
    • karmeliterklostrets kirke, Helsingør
    • Dyveke Sigbrittsdatter, 1490, Amsterdam
  5. Sigbrit Willoms (also spelled Villoms or Villums), (possible date of death 1532), was a Danish-Norwegian politician from Amsterdam, mother to the mistress of King Christian II of Denmark, Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, and advisor and de facto minister of finance for the king between 1519 and 1523.

  6. 24 de mar. de 2020 · The mistress, a commoner named Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, was 35. Dyveke’s mother Sigbrit, also a commoner, took up the role of advisor to the king after Christian was crowned in 1513.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Torben_OxeTorben Oxe - Wikipedia

    During the summer of 1517, Torben Oxe was accused of murdering Dyveke Sigbritsdatter, King Christian II's mistress, with some poisoned cherries. Dyveke's mother Sigbrit Willoms, the widow of a Dutch merchant, acted as an advisor to the king, to the displeasure of much of the Danish nobility.