Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Charles de Lorraine, Prince de Commercy (11 July 1661 – 15 August 1702), was a French field marshal of the Holy Roman Empire and a military advisor to Prince Eugene of Savoy. He acquired military prominence after leading imperial troops in the Great Turkish War , in the Nine Years' War , and the War of Spanish Succession .

  2. Charles Henri of Lorraine (French: Charles Henri, Prince de Commercy, Prince de Vaudémont, pronounced [ʃaʁl ɑ̃ʁi pʁɛ̃s də kɔmɛʁsi pʁɛ̃s də vodemɔ̃]; 17 April 1649 – 14 January 1723) was the legitimated son of Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine, and Béatrix de Cusance.

    • Anne Elisabeth de Lorraine
    • Lorraine
  3. Prince Charles of Lorraine, Prince of Commercy (Charles François; 11 July 1661 – 15 August 1702), was a French nobleman and field marshal of the Holy Roman Empire and a military advisor to Prince Eugene of Savoy.

  4. The Château de Commercy is a castle in the town of Commercy, in the Meuse department of France. It was the principal residence of the reigning Prince of Commercy and was built by Charles Henri de Lorraine. The site, château and grounds, was classified Monument historique in 1960, with the roofs and façades of the wings being ...

  5. 1 de oct. de 2013 · Charles, Prince of Commercy (Charles-François de Lorraine) 1661-1702 French field marshal of the Holy Roman Empire and a military adivisor to Prince Eugene of Savoy. He acquired military prominence after leading imperial troops in the Great Turkish War, in the Nine Years’ War, and the War of Spanish Succession.

  6. 9 de mar. de 2022 · Charles de Lorraine, Prince de Commercy (11 July 1661 - 15 August 1702), was a French field marshal of the Holy Roman Empire and a military advisor to Prince Eugene of Savoy. He acquired military prominence after leading imperial troops in the Great Turkish War , in the Nine Years' War , and the War of Spanish Succession .

  7. Charles Henri of Lorraine (French, pronounced: [ʃaʁl ɑ̃ʁi pʁɛ̃s də kɔmɛʁsi pʁɛ̃s də vodemɔ̃]; 17 April 1649 – 14 January 1723) was the legitimated son of Charles IV, Duke of Lorraine, and Béatrix de Cusance. He was given the Principality of Commercy in 1708 by his cousin Leopold, Duke of Lorraine. He was also the Count of Falkenstein. [1] Contents.