Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Morganatic marriage, sometimes called a left-handed marriage, is a marriage between people of unequal social rank, which in the context of royalty or other inherited title prevents the principal's position or privileges being passed to the spouse, or any children born of the marriage.

  2. Morganatic branches House of Löwenstein 1494 – Present Counts of Löwenstein 1494– 1571. Louis I (1463–1524) Count of Löwenstein. Son of Frederick I, the Victorious (1425 – 1476) Count Palatine of the Rhine and Elector Palatine and his morganatic wife Clara Tott (c. 1440 – 1520). Ancestor of all the Lowenstein branches.

  3. Morganatic marriage, legally valid marriage between a male member of a sovereign, princely, or noble house and a woman of lesser birth or rank, with the provision that she shall not thereby accede to his rank and that the children of the marriage shall not succeed to their father’s hereditary.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. In other words, the main function of the concept of morganatic marriage is to devise a category between legitimate issue and illegitimate issue: that of legitimate but ineligible issue. An interesting feature of Old Regime private law does, in fact, turn secret marriages into the equivalent of morganatic marriages.

  5. Morganatic vs. inválida (feminine) La Ley de Matrimonios Reales de 1772 hizo ilegal que todas las personas nacidas en la familia real británica se casaran sin el permiso del soberano, y cualquier matrimonio contraído sin el consentimiento del soberano se consideraba inválido.

  6. 1 de nov. de 2021 · Some royal rebels bucked this practice. Most often, a man, particularly a man who had already produced heirs, would enter into what is called a morganatic marriage, also called left handed...

  7. 69 Christian IV of Denmark had a particularly complicated private life, which included a morganatic marriage and mistresses who produced the illegitimate children styled as the "Gyldenløve", the family name which subsequent Danish kings bestowed upon their bastard offspring The Danish crown made use of the issue both from private, but legal, unions and from illicit liaisons.