Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Yolande of Aragon or Violante of Sicily ( Kingdom of Sicily – 1428, Italian: Jolanda d'Aragona, Catalan: Violant d'Aragó, Spanish: Violante de Aragón) was the legitimized daughter of King Martin I of Sicily and countess of Niebla. She was a member of the House of Barcelona.

  2. Yolande of Aragon (11 August 1381 – 14 November 1442) was Duchess of Anjou and Countess of Provence by marriage, who acted as regent of Provence during the minority of her son.

  3. Yolande of Aragon was an important political figure in France during the final years of the Hundred Years' War. A princess of the small Iberian kingdom of Aragon, Yolande was the daughter of King John I the Hunter.

  4. 1 mar 2017 · The queen in question, Yolande of Aragon (1381–1442), was at the forefront of European politics who ‘employed diplomacy, political brinksmanship, military force, and celestial intervention’ to secure a stable future for her family and their subjects.

    • Theresa Earenfight
    • 2017
  5. 11 ago 2019 · By dint of her aptitude for politics, Yolande of Aragon played an influential role in France during the Hundred Years War. Yolande of Aragon made the crucial decision to support the French against the allied English and Burgundians.

  6. Yolande was the regent of Provence during her son’s minority and claimant to the throne of Aragon, meaning she had ties to the present-day countries of France, Spain, and Italy. Her husband was tied to even more countries. Even though Yolande’s cousin Ferdinand becoming King of Aragon she started calling herself the Queen of Aragon in protest.

  7. Violant or Violante of Aragon, also known as Yolanda of Aragon (8 June 1236 [citation needed] – 1301), was Queen consort of Castile and León from 1252 to 1284 as the wife of King Alfonso X of Castile.