Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William IV of Jülich-Berg (9 January 1455 – 6 September 1511) was the last ruler of the Duchy of Jülich-Berg. (en) Willem II van Gulik-Berg (9 januari 1455 - Düsseldorf, 6 september 1511) was van 1475 tot aan zijn dood hertog van Gulik, hertog van Berg en graaf van Ravensberg.

  2. William IV, Duke of Bavaria. William IV ( German: Wilhelm IV; 13 November 1493 – 7 March 1550) was Duke of Bavaria from 1508 to 1550, until 1545 together with his younger brother Louis X, Duke of Bavaria . He was born in Munich to Albert IV and Kunigunde of Austria, a daughter of Emperor Frederick III .

  3. dewiki Wilhelm (Jülich-Berg) elwiki Γουλιέλμος Δ΄ του Γύλιχ-Μπεργκ; enwiki William IV, Duke of Jülich-Berg; frwiki Guillaume de Juliers-Berg; itwiki Guglielmo di Jülich-Berg; jawiki ヴィルヘルム (ユーリヒ=ベルク公) kawiki ვილჰელმი (იულიხ-ბერგის ჰერცოგი)

  4. 2 de jul. de 2021 · Count Adolf IV of Cleves and the Mark shifted the orientation of his family’s history to the west. He acquired the lordship of Ravenstein, on the Maas, west of Nijmegen, by conquest in 1397, and entered the service of the Duke of Burgundy, John the Fearless, the most powerful man in the Low Countries, and marrying his daughter, Marie, in 1406.

  5. William was the son of Gerhard VII, Duke of Jülich-Berg and Sophie of Saxe-Lauenburg. When his father died in 1475, William became Duke of Jülich-Berg. He married the rich Countess Elisabeth of Nassau-Saarbrücken in 1472, but she died in 1479. In 1481, William remarried with Sibylle of Brandenburg, daughter of Albert III Achilles, Elector of ...

  6. 21 de sept. de 2023 · Language links are at the top of the page. Search. Search

  7. In 1509, John III, Duke of Cleves, made a strategic marriage to Maria von Geldern, daughter of William IV, Duke of Jülich-Berg, who became heiress to her father's estates: Jülich, Berg and the County of Ravensberg, which under the Salic laws of the Holy Roman Empire caused the properties to pass to the husband of the female heir (women could not hold property except through a husband or a ...