Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William V, Prince of Wied (German: Wilhelm Adolph Maximilian Karl Fürst von Wied; 22 August 1845 – 22 October 1907) was a German army officer and politician, elder son of Hermann, Prince of Wied. He was the father of William, Prince of Albania and brother of Queen Elisabeth of Romania .

  2. Born into the mediatised house of Wied-Neuwied, he was the third son of William, 5th Prince of Wied (brother of Queen Elisabeth of Romania ), and his wife Princess Marie of the Netherlands (sister of Queen Louise of Sweden ). He was second cousin of Wilhelm II, German Emperor .

  3. Prince Alexander Philipp Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied (23 September 1782 – 3 February 1867) was a German explorer, ethnologist and naturalist. He led a pioneering expedition to southeast Brazil between 1815 and 1817, from which the album Reise nach Brasilien, which first revealed to Europe real images of Brazilian Indians, was the ...

  4. William V, Prince of Wied was a German officer and politician, elder son of Hermann, Prince of Wied. He was the father of William, Prince of Albania and brother of Queen Elisabeth of Romania.

  5. Version 1.0. |. Last updated 08 October 2014. Wied, Wilhelm, Prinz zu. By Eva Anne Frantz. PDF EPUB KINDLE Print. Prinz zu Wied, Wilhelm Friedrich Heinrich. German aristocrat, officer, monarch of Albania. Born 26 March 1876 in Neuwied, Germany. Died 18 April 1945 in Predeal, Romania.

  6. prince of Wied William, 1876–1945, mpret [ruler] of Albania (1914), third son of William, prince of Wied, nephew of Elizabeth of Romania. A German army officer, he was selected by the great powers of Europe, with consent of the Albanians, to be ruler of the independent Albania that was created after the Balkan Wars.

  7. Prince Wilhelm I of Albania. Prince Wilhelm of Wied (German: Wilhelm Friedrich Heinrich Prinz zu Wied, 26 March 1876 – 18 April 1945), reigned briefly as sovereign of the Principality of Albania as Vilhelm I from 7 March to 3 September 1914, when he left for exile.