Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Barbara Zápolya ( Hungarian: Szapolyai Borbála, 1495–1515) was Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the first wife of King Sigismund I the Old from 1512 to 1515. Marriage to Barbara represented an alliance between Sigismund and the House of Zápolya against the Habsburgs in succession disputes over the throne to the Kingdom of ...

  2. Barbara Zápolya was Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the first wife of King Sigismund I the Old from 1512 to 1515. Marriage to Barbara represented an alliance between Sigismund and the House of Zápolya against the Habsburgs in succession disputes over the throne to the Kingdom of Hungary. The alliance was short-lived as the renewed Muscovite–Lithuanian War forced Sigismund ...

  3. Barbara Zápolya (Hungarian: Szapolyai Borbála, 1495–1515) was Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the first wife of King Sigismund I the Old from 1512 to 1515.

  4. Barbara Zápolya. Barbara Zápolya (ur. 11 lutego [3] 1490 lub 1494 – 6, zm. 2 października 1515 w Krakowie) – córka węgierskiego magnata i cieszyńskiej Piastówny, polska królowa i wielka księżna litewska w latach 1512–1515 jako pierwsza żona Zygmunta Starego . Była pierwszą monarchinią koronowaną po 58-letniej przerwie od ...

  5. views 2,601,024 updated. Barbara Zapolya (fl. 1500) Queen of Poland. Name variations: Barbara Zápolya of Hungary; Szapolyai.

  6. Apr 16, 2018 · Lost Kingdoms – Kingdom of Poland. Monday, 16 April 2018, 7:00 Moniek Bloks Adelaide of Hesse, Aldona of Lithuania, Anna Jagiellon, Anne of Austria (1573 - 1598), Anne of Cilli, Barbara Radziwiłł, Barbara Zápolya, Catherine of Austria (1533-1572), Cecilia Renata of Austria, Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Christina ...

  7. The Szapolyai or Zápolya family was a noble family in the Kingdom of Hungary in the second half of the 15th century and in the early 16th century. A member of the family, John Szapolyai, was King of Hungary between 1526 and 1540, but he only ruled the central and eastern parts of the kingdom, because many Hungarian lords and prelates supported his opponent, Ferdinand of Habsburg.

  1. People also search for