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  1. Représentation d'Élisabeth la Coumane sur son sceau. seal image. Upload media. Wikipedia. Date of birth. 1240 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Cumania. Date of death. 1290 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584, before 1295, after 1290)

  2. Brief Life History of Elizabeth the Cuman. When Elizabeth the Cuman Queen consort of Hungary was born in 1240, in Esztergom, Komárom-Esztergom, Hungary, her father, Khan Köten, was 35 and her mother, Agnez Riurikova de Halich, was 21. She married Stephen V of Hungary in 1253, in Hungary.

  3. 05 Thursday Aug 2021. Ladislaus IV (August 5, 1262 – July 10, 1290) also known as Ladislas the Cuman, was king of Hungary and Croatia from 1272 to 1290. Ladislaus was the elder son of Stephen V, son of Béla IV of Hungary, and Stephen’s wife Elizabeth the Cuman, (1244-1290) was the daughter of a chieftain of the Cumans who had settled in ...

  4. Elizabeth was the daughter of King Stephen V of Hungary and his Cuman wife, baptized as Elizabeth and probably in turn a daughter of Köten, a Cuman–Kipchak chieftain (khan) and military commander active in the mid-13th century.

  5. Elizabeth McCune ( née Ford), [2] [3] known professionally as Elizabeth Zharoff, is an American YouTuber, video game sound designer, and opera singer. After largely putting her operatic career on hold, she devoted herself to the topics of voice and singing on her YouTube channel, " The Charismatic Voice ". She works primarily as a voice coach ...

  6. Sep 1, 2023 · Anna of Hungary (c. 1260 - 1281) was a daughter of Stephen V of Hungary and Elizabeth the Cuman, who was daughter of Kuthen, a chief of the Cuman tribe. Her mother had been a pagan before her marriage. On 8 November 1273, Anna of Hungary married Andronikos II Palaiologos.

  7. Relatives. Elizabeth Portnell (mothere); Walter Singer (father); Anne Finch (aunt) Elizabeth Singer Rowe ( née Singer, 1674–1737) was an English poet, essayist and fiction writer called "the ornament of her sex and age" [1] and the "Heavenly Singer". [2] She was among 18th-century England's most widely read authors. [3]