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  1. Barón Jorge Rákóczi II de Felsővadász (en húngaro: II. Rákóczi György) (Sárospatak, Hungría 30 de enero de 1621 – Nagyvárad, Transilvania 7 de junio de 1660). Noble húngaro, Príncipe de Transilvania (1648–1660). Hijo del Príncipe Jorge Rákóczi I y Susana Lorántffy. Biografía

  2. Barón Jorge Rákóczi II de Felsővadász (en húngaro: II. Rákóczi György) (Sárospatak, Hungría 30 de enero de 1621 – Nagyvárad, Transilvania 7 de junio de 1660). Noble húngaro, Príncipe de Transilvania (1648–1660). Hijo del Príncipe Jorge Rákóczi I y Susana Lorántffy.

  3. Hijo de Segismundo Rákóczi y hermano menor de Jorge Rákóczi I. Gobernador de la privincias de Sáros y Torna. En 1607 obtuvo el título de conde. Jorge Rákóczi II de Felsővadász (1621–1660). Hijo de Jorge Rákóczi I. Príncipe de Transilvania. Francisco Rákóczi I de Felsővadász (1645–1676).

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RákócziRákóczi - Wikipedia

    • Family Legacy
    • History
    • Major Events
    • External Links

    The last member of the family was György (George) Rákóczi, the son of Francis II Rákóczi, who died in France in 1756. The mysterious Count of St. Germainis believed by some to have been the son of Prince Francis (Ferenc) II Rákóczi. The Rákóczi March by János Bihari and (memorably orchestrated by Hector Berlioz) refers to them. The Hungarian Rhapso...

    Sigismund Rákóczi

    Sigismund Rákóczibriefly reigned as Prince of Transylvania from 1607 to 1608.

    George Rákóczi I

    George Rákóczi I (born June 8, 1593, Szerencs – Oct. 11, 1648) was the prince of Transylvania from 1630. In 1643, Rákóczi formed an alliance with Sweden. In February 1644, leading a 30,000-man army, he launched a campaign against the Habsburgs in the Thirty Years War. Peasants who struggled for national liberation in the Kingdom of Hungarysupported him. He also encouraged the development of the mining industry and commerce.

    George Rákóczi II

    George Rákóczi II (30 January 1621, Hungary – June 7, 1660) was a Hungarian nobleman and prince of Transylvania (1648-1660). In 1657, he led an army of 40,000 men against King John II Casimir of Poland in the third part of the Second Northern War (1655-1660). He took Kraków and entered Warsaw with the Swedes, but the moment his allies withdrew, he was defeated by the Poles at Czarny Ostrów. Finally, the Poles allowed him to return to Transylvania. When the Turks invaded Transylvania, he died...

    War for Independence

    In 1678, anti-Habsburg revolutionaries led by Imre Thököly and aided by Louis XIV of France and the Ottomans rose in uprising against the Habsburgs. After the failed Battle of Vienna in 1683, Thököly lost support and was defeated in 1685. Around 1700, Louis XIV reached out again, this time to Francis II Rákóczi, in his attempt to mitigate Austrian power. Francis was arrested for this correspondence but eventually escaped to Poland. The War of the Spanish Succession forced much of the Austrian...

    Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Rákóczy" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). pp. 867–869.
    Marek, Miroslav (2009). "Rákóczi family" (in Hungarian). genealogy.euweb.cz. Archived from the original on 7 April 2023. Retrieved 14 August 2023.
    • Francis II
    • Princeps of Transilvania, Princep of Hungary, Count
  5. Jorge II Rákóczi (30 de enero de 1621 - 7 de junio de 1660), fue un noble húngaro , Príncipe de Transilvania (1648-1660), el hijo mayor de Jorge I y Zsuzsanna Lorántffy. Fue elegido Príncipe de Transilvania en vida de su padre (19 de febrero de 1642).

  6. El 11 de octubre de 1648 murió Jorge Rákóczi I, siendo elegido en su lugar su propio hijo del mismo nombre, conocido como Jorge Rákóczi II a partir de su nombramiento como príncipe. Declive de la figura del príncipe transilvano

  7. 3 de abr. de 2024 · György Rákóczi, II (born Jan. 30, 1621, Sárospatak, Hung.—died June 7, 1660, Nagyvárad, Transylvania, Hung.) was the prince of Transylvania from 1648, who had the laws of the principality codified, but whose foreign policy led to the restoration of Turkish hegemony over Transylvania.