Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. John VIII de Bourbon (1425 – 6 January 1478) was Count of Vendôme from 1446 until his death. A member of the House of Bourbon, he was the son and successor of Louis, Count of Vendôme. [1] As a courtier of King Charles VII of France, he fought the English in Normandy and Guyenne. He attached himself to King Louis XI, but was not in royal favor.

  2. Catherine was the daughter of John VI of Vendôme [1] and Jeanne of Ponthieu. [2] She married John I, Count of La Marche, in 1364. [1] In 1372 inherited Vendôme on the death of her niece Jeanne and administered it jointly with her husband, then (after his death) with her second son Louis until 1403.

  3. Columna Vendôme. La columna Vendôme es un monumento parisino situado en la Plaza Vendôme, en el distrito primero de la ciudad. A lo largo de los años ha sido nombrada también Columna de Austerlitz. Fue erigida por orden de Napoleón Bonaparte, para celebrar su victoria en la batalla de Austerlitz. Se puede llegar a ella desde las ...

  4. John VI de Vendôme (died 1365), Count of Vendôme and Castres (1354–1365) was a member of the House of Montoire and was the son of Bouchard VI (1290–1354) and Alix de Bretagne (1297–1377). He lived mostly in Castres and fought at Poitiers (1356) where he was captured. [1] In 1362, a troop of Gascon and English took the city and ...

  5. Louis Joseph de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme, often simply called Vendôme (1 July 1654 – 11 June 1712) was a French general and Marshal of France. One of the great generals of his era, he was one of Louis XIV 's most successful commanders in the War of the Grand Alliance and War of the Spanish Succession .

  6. Emmanuel was born in Obermais, Meran on 18 January 1872. He was the second child and only son of Ferdinand Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Alençon and his wife Duchess Sophie Charlotte in Bavaria. [2] His mother was the famed duchesse d'Alençon who died in a fire at a charity bazaar in Paris on 4 May 1897.

  7. The Westin Paris – Vendôme is a historic hotel in Paris, France at 3 rue de Castiglione on the corner of the rue de Rivoli, facing the Tuileries Garden. History [ edit ] The hotel opened on June 6, 1878, as the Hôtel Continental , [1] It was designed by Charles Garnier 's son-in-law Henri Blondel [2] and was intended to be the most luxurious hotel in Paris at the time.