Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Peter I (9 October 1328 – 17 January 1369) was King of Cyprus and titular King of Jerusalem from his father's abdication on 24 November 1358 until his death in 1369. He was invested as titular Count of Tripoli in 1346.

  2. Pedro I de Chipre. Pedro I de Chipre o Pedro I de Lusignan ( Nicosia, 9 de octubre de 1328 - Nicosia, 17 de enero de 1369) fue rey de Chipre, y rey titular de Jerusalén desde la abdicación de su padre el 24 de noviembre de 1358 hasta su propia muerte en 1369. También fue rey latino de Armenia a partir de 1361 o 1368.

  3. Pedro II de Chipre o Pedro II de Lusignan, llamado el Gordo ( verso 1354 o 1357-13 de octubre de 1382), dicho Pere el Gros, fue rey de Chipre desde el 17 de enero de 1369 hasta su muerte en 1382. El período de su reinado presentó una decadencia en contraste con el período anterior de su padre.

  4. …who ruled in Cyprus was Peter I (Pierre I; d. 1369), who set forth on various expeditions against the Muslims in a last attempt to gain the Holy Lands. He was assassinated by discontented nobles in Cyprus.

  5. Peter II of Lusignan (c. 1357–1382), succeeded him as King of Cyprus and Jerusalem Margaret or Mary of Lusignan (ca. 1360 – ca. 1397), once engaged to Carlo Visconti and married in 1385 to her cousin Jacques de Lusignan (d. 1395/1397), Titular Count of Tripoli , grandson of John of Lusignan and wife Alix d'Ibelin , and had issue

  6. Peter I (9 October 1328 – 17 January 1369) was King of Cyprus and titular King of Jerusalem from his father's abdication on 24 November 1358 until his death in 1369. He was invested as titular Count of Tripoli in 1346.

  7. The brief Alexandrian Crusade, also called the sack of Alexandria, occurred in October 1365 and was led by Peter I of Cyprus against Alexandria in Egypt. Although often referred to as and counted among the Crusades , it was relatively devoid of religious impetus and differs from the more prominent Crusades in that it seems to have ...