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  1. the current interest in the role of women at the Burgundian court, particularly in Mary’s stepmother, Margaret of York, and her own daughter, Margaret of Austria. On closer inspection, however, it is clear that Mary of Burgundy was a key player in the most important spheres of her day, notably politics, diplomacy, and the arts.

  2. key makeup artist. Noureddin Meqbel. ... hair stylist: Jordan (as Nour Muqbel) / makeup artist: Jordan (as Nour Muqbel) Donald Mowat. ... hair designer / makeup department head / makeup designer. Colin Penman.

  3. The first of these was Maximilian’s own nuptial union: the Burgundian Marriage to the richest heiress in Europe at the time, Mary of Burgundy, enabled the dynasty to gain a foothold in western Europe, in particular in territories such as Flanders and Brabant, whose flourishing urban centres had made them among the most highly developed cultural and economic regions in Europe.

  4. He probably made this medal while serving as secretary to Mary of Burgundy and her husband, Archduke Maximilian of Austria, later Holy Roman Emperor, whose portrait is on the obverse. View more Due to rights restrictions, this image cannot be enlarged, viewed at full screen, or downloaded.

  5. aubie84 10 September 2018. Sets are dark, lavish, and lit just right. It's a good story involving historic characters in turmoil, fighting and scheming for control of the throne in an unusual period of formation in Europe. They involve multiple countries, AUS, GER, but the focus is in 1400ad France.

  6. On 6 March 1482, Mary — the only child of Duke Charles the Bold of Burgundy and legitimate heiress to the duchy following her father's death at the Battle of Nancy on 5 January 1477, who married Archduke Maximilian of Austria, the future Roman-German king and Holy Roman emperor — fell under her horse during falconry. Twenty-five-year-old ...

  7. Mary was born on February 13, 1457 in Brussels at the ducal castle of Coudenberg. Her father Charles was the son of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy and Isabel of Portugal. His title at the time was Count of Charolais. Her mother was Isabella, daughter of the Duke of Bourbon. On the day Mary was born, her father had left to go hunting.