Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Landgravine Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg (May 1466 – 17 January 1523), German: Elisabeth Landgräfin von Hessen-Marburg, was a landgravine from the House of Hesse-Marburg and through marriage Countess of Nassau-Siegen.

    • Anne of Katzenelnbogen
    • May 1466, Marburg
  2. 27 de abr. de 2022 · Elisabeth, Landgravin van Hessen-Marburg (Marburg, mei 1466 - Keulen, 7 of 17 januari 1523) was een dochter van Hendrik van Hessen-Marburg (de Rijke) en Anna van Katzenelnbogen. Elisabeth trouwde op 11 februari 1482 met Jan V van Nassau.

    • Marburg, Landgrafschaft Hessen
    • May 1466
    • "of Hesse-Marburg"
    • GERMAN NOBLE WOMAN
  3. Landgravine Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg (May 1466 – 17 January 1523), German: Elisabeth Landgräfin von Hessen-Marburg, was a landgravine from the House of Hesse-Marburg and through marriage Countess of Nassau-Siegen.

  4. When Elisabeth von Hessen was born in May 1466, in Marburg, Marburg-Biedenkopf, Hesse, Germany, her father, Heinrich von Hessen III., was 25 and her mother, Anna von Katzenelnbogen, was 22. She married Johann von Nassau-Dillenburg V. on 11 February 1482, in Kreis Marburg, Hesse-Nassau, Prussia, German Empire.

  5. Landgravine Elisabeth of Hesse-Marburg (May 1466 in Marburg - 7 or 17 January 1523 in Cologne) was a German noblewoman. She was a daughter of Landgrave Henry III of Upper Hesse (nicknamed Henry the Rich) and his wife, Anna of Katzenelnbogen. On 11 February 1481, Elisabeth married Count John V of Nassau-Dillenburg. Together, they had six children:

  6. The Landgraviate of Hesse-Marburg ( German: Landgrafschaft Hessen-Marburg) was a German landgraviate, and independent principality, within the Holy Roman Empire, that existed between 1458 and 1500, and between 1567 and 1604/1650. It consisted of the city of Marburg and the surrounding towns of Gießen, Nidda and Eppstein ...

  7. Picturesquely embedded in a beech-covered hillside, the Elisabeth Well a few kilometres east of Marburg fascinates with its mighty sandstone façade in Renaissance style. It is a monument to Landgravine Elisabeth of Thuringia, one of the most remarkable female figures of the Middle Ages.