Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Margaret of Guelders (11 August 1436, Grave, North Brabant – 2 November 1486, Simmern) was a noblewoman from what is now the Netherlands. She was part of the Egmond Family. She was married to the Count Palatine of Simmern and was the Countess of Palatinate-Simmern .

  2. Mary of Guelders ( Dutch: Maria van Gelre; c. 1434/1435 – 1 December 1463) was Queen of Scotland by marriage to King James II of Scotland. She ruled as regent of Scotland from 1460 to 1463. Background. She was the daughter of Arnold, Duke of Guelders, and Catherine of Cleves. She was a great-niece of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy.

  3. Margaret of Flanders (died 1331) was a consort of Alexander, Prince of Scotland and later wife of Reinauld I, Count of Guelders. She was the daughter of Guy, Count of Flanders and his second wife Isabelle of Luxembourg .

  4. the then queen, Mary of Guelders (c. 1434–63), possessed Margaret’s sark when she was delivered of a baby and in 1512 her successor, Margaret Tudor, also used the sark during childbirth.7 Nevertheless, at first sight Margaret seems to have particularly attracted male, rather than female, pilgrims.

  5. 28 de mar. de 2024 · Mary of Guelders married King James II and became Queen of Scots. Explore her fascinating life, her political influence and her charitable work that ensured her legacy in Scottish history. In 1449 Mary of Guelders arrived in Scotland with a convoy of fourteen ships.

  6. Articles. Mary of Guelders, Queen of Scotland. By Susan Abernethy. Mary of Guelders had a singular upbringing for a Scottish Queen. She was the great-niece of Philip the Good, 3rd Duke of Burgundy and his third wife and Duchess, Isabel of Portugal.

  7. 23 de ene. de 2019 · 23 January 2019. |. Stained glass window in the Great Hall at Stirling Castle. Dr Amy Hayes explores the life of Margaret of Denmark, wife of James III, mother of James IV and possibly the most mysterious of all the royal consorts. Margaret of Denmark was queen of Scotland from her marriage to James III in 1469 until her death in 1486.