Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Princess Olga of Greece and Denmark (Greek: Όλγα; 11 June 1903 – 16 October 1997) was a Greek princess who married Prince Paul, Regent of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. After her marriage, she was known as Princess Paul of Yugoslavia.

  2. La princesa Olga de Grecia y Dinamarca (griego: Όλγα; 11 de junio de 1903 - 16 de octubre de 1997) fue una princesa griega que se casó con el príncipe Pablo. Regente del Reino de Yugoslavia. Después de su matrimonio, fue conocida como Princesa Pablo de Yugoslavia .

  3. 11 de jun. de 2018 · After a failed engagement to King Frederik IX of Denmark, in 1922, Princess Olga married Prince Paul of Yugoslavia in Belgrade, with whom she had three children. After the assassination of King Alexander in 1934, Prince Paul served as regent for the young King Peter II, until being ousted by a British backed coup during WWII, when he ...

  4. Princess Olga, Duchess of Aosta, also known as Princess Olga Isabelle of Greece (Greek: Πριγκίπισσα Όλγα της Ελλάδας; born 11 November 1971), is the younger daughter of author Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark and his wife, Marina Karella, an artist and daughter of the Greek business magnate Theodore Karella.

    • Prince Umberto of Savoy-Aosta, Prince Amedeo of Savoy-Aosta, Princess Isabella
    • Glücksburg
  5. La princesa Olga y el príncipe Pablo en el día de su boda. El 22 de octubre de 1923 se casó con el príncipe Pablo de Yugoslavia en Belgrado, siendo el entonces Duque de York (quien luego reinaría como Jorge VI) el padrino de boda de Pablo. La princesa Olga y el príncipe Pablo y tuvieron tres hijos: El príncipe Alejandro (1924-2016).

    • Olga de Grecia y Dinamarca
  6. Princess Olga of Yugoslavia: Her Life and Times. Robert Prentice. Grosvenor House Publishing, 2021 - Biography & Autobiography - 435 pages. Often called the 'most royal Princess in Europe',...

  7. In 2017 she published a memoir, Princess Olga, A Wild and Barefoot Romanov. She serves alongside Princess Katarina of Yugoslavia as a royal patron of the Queen Charlotte's Ball. Marriage and children