Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. After Brunswick was occupied by Napoleon's troops in 1806, he took in the sons of Duke Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Frederick Charles Ferdinand died childless in 1809. With his death, the Brunswick-Bevern line died out, and Brunswick-Bevern fell back to Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Ancestors

  2. Ernest of Brunswick-Lüneburg ( German: Ernst der Bekenner; 27 June 1497 – 11 January 1546), also frequently called Ernest the Confessor, was duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and a champion of the Protestant cause during the early years of the Protestant Reformation. He was the Prince of Lüneburg and ruled the Lüneburg-Celle subdivision of the ...

  3. Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick. Brunswick Manifesto. Brunswick Monument. Campaigns of 1792 in the French Revolutionary Wars. Hope Diamond. Battle of Jena–Auerstedt. Jena–Auerstedt campaign order of battle. Battle of Kaiserslautern. Battle of Kloster Kampen.

  4. Catherine of Anhalt-Bernburg. Henry of Brunswick-Lüneburg (Latin Henricus; died 14 October 1416), Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, called Henry the Mild, was prince of Lüneburg from 1388 to 1409 jointly with his brother Bernard I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, from 1400 to 1409 also of Wolfenbüttel, and from 1409 until his death sole prince of ...

  5. The Brunswick Manifesto was a proclamation issued by Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick, commander of the Allied army (principally Austrian and Prussian ), on 25 July 1792 to the population of Paris, France during the War of the First Coalition. [1] The manifesto threatened that if the French royal family were harmed, then French ...

  6. Magnus, King of Livonia. John II, Duke of Holstein-Sonderburg. Dorothea, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg. v. t. e. Princess Dorothea of Denmark (29 June 1546 – 6 January 1617) was the Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg from 1561 until 1592 as the consort of Duke William the Younger. [1] She was regent for her son George from 1592 to 1596.

  7. Albert II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg ( German: Albrecht II., Herzog zu Braunschweig-Lüneburg; 1 November 1419 – 15 August 1485), was a Prince of Grubenhagen; he reigned from 1440 until his death in 1485. Albert II was the third son of Duke Eric I and Elizabeth of Brunswick-Göttingen, a daughter of Otto the Bad, Duke of Brunswick-Göttingen.