Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. This article contains a translation of Eleonora Magdalena Gonzaga von Mantua-Nevers from de.wikipedia. Verification and page needed tags [ edit ] I have copy edited this page's sources after the large expansion by User:Aldebaran69 .

  2. Eleonora Gonzaga. Eleonora Magdalena Gonzaga (ur. 18 listopada 1630 w Mantui, zm. 6 grudnia 1686 w Wiedniu) – cesarzowa, królowa Czech i Węgier, córka księcia Mantui Karola II Gonzagi i Marii, córki księcia Franciszka IV z Mantui . 30 kwietnia 1651 w Wiedniu poślubiła cesarza Ferdynanda III Habsburga ( 13 lipca 1608 – 2 kwietnia ...

  3. The siege lasted until 18 July 1630, when the city, already struck by a plague, was brutally sacked for three days. Mantua never recovered from this disaster. The subsequent diplomatic maneuvers allowed Charles, who had fled to the Papal States, to return to the duchy in 1631, although not without concessions to the House of Savoy and to the Gonzaga of Guastalla .

  4. Eleonora de' Medici. Consorte. Ferdinando II d'Asburgo. Religione. Cattolicesimo. Eleonora (I) Gonzaga ( Mantova, 23 settembre 1598 – Vienna, 27 giugno 1655) è stata una principessa italiana per nascita, imperatrice del Sacro Romano Impero, arciduchessa d'Austria, regina d'Ungheria e Boemia, come moglie di Ferdinando II .

  5. This category is located at Category:Eleonora Gonzaga, Holy Roman Empress (1630–1686) Note: This category should be empty. Any content should be recategorised. This tag should be used on existing categories that are likely to be used by others, even though the "real" category is elsewhere.

  6. Eleonora Gonzaga (1630-1686) Usage on no.wikipedia.org Ordenen av dydens slavinner; Usage on pl.wikipedia.org Eleonora Gonzaga (1630–1686) Królowe Węgier; Wikipedysta:Swietowit/Królowe Czech; Usage on pt.wikipedia.org Lista de rainhas da Germânia e imperatrizes do Sacro Império Romano-Germânico; Usage on ro.wikipedia.org Eleonora ...

  7. Chinhoyi Caves. /  17.35000°S 30.12500°E  / -17.35000; 30.12500. The Chinhoyi Caves (previously the Sinoia Caves) are a group of limestone and dolomite caves in north central Zimbabwe. [2] Designated a National Park in 1955, and managed by the Zimbabwe Parks & Wildlife Management Authority.