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  1. 13 de ene. de 2024 · Johannes Sigismund Zápolya oder Szapolyai war von 1540 bis 1551 und von 1556 bis 1570 als Johannes II. König von Ungarn und von 1570 bis zu seinem Tod der erste Fürst von Siebenbürgen. Johann Sigismund Zápolya | Dafato - es ist eine Tatsache

  2. Andrzej: Sigismund I. Sigismund I, detail of a painting by Andrzej, 1546; in the State Collections of Art in the Wawel, Kraków, Poland. (more) Under the last two Jagiellonians, Poland reached its apogee. The king was the source of law (usually in tandem with the Sejm, though some decrees did not require the Sejm’s assent), supreme judge ...

  3. John Sigismund was the King of Poland, acting as co-monarch with his wife, Catherine, Queen of Poland. As the nearest male relative and heir to the Polish throne, many Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth noblemen wanted him to become King instead of a woman. However, there were still some who remained loyal to Catherine, so they both compromised and married each other. They were the parents of ...

  4. King John Sigismund died at age 31, following a carriage accident. After his death, Unitarians were not always tolerated. Francis David was eventually imprisoned for his ideas, and he died in a dungeon. But because of King John Sigismund and Francis David, Unitarianism took hold in Transylvania, where it remains strong today.

  5. 11 de abr. de 2024 · Eine solche ,zweite Reformation‘ schwebte auch dem seit 1608 als Kurfürst herrschenden Johann Sigismund vor. An Weihnachten 1613 sollte ein demonstrativ calvinistisches Abendmahl im Berliner Dom den Auftakt dazu machen, so wie 1539 ein evangelisches Abendmahl der Auftakt zur ,ersten Reformation‘ im Kurfürstentum gewesen war.

  6. 9 de abr. de 2024 · In 1568 John Sigismund, Unitarian king of Transylvania, granted religious freedom to Catholics, Lutherans, the Reformed Church, and those who were soon to be called Unitarians, and in 1571 the Transylvanian Diet gave constitutional recognition to all four received religions.

  7. John Sigismund Tanner (1705 – 14 March 1775; German: Johann Sigismund Tanner) was an engraver of the Kingdom of Great Britain, making dies for coins and medals. Tanner, a native of Saxe-Coburg , worked mostly for the Royal Mint at the Tower of London and was its Chief Engraver from 1741 until his death in 1775.