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    • Barbara Zápolya

      • George Zápolya Barbara Zápolya, Queen of Poland
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Z%C3%A1polya_family
  1. Background. He was relegated to the political life besides his brother. He was to engaged Elisabeth Corvinus, the daughter of John Corvinus, in 1504, but the last surviving member of the Hunyadi family died in 1508.

  2. Map of the estates of the Zápolya family by Bálint Hóman. The first known member of the family was one Ladislaus Vajdafi Szapolyai, who was a Slavonian nobleman with estates in former Požega County. Most notably the today small eponymous village Zapolje in Rešetari municipality, Brod-Posavina county.

  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. 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 ...

  4. Spouses and children. Married (26 JAN 1539/40), Kraków, Lodzkie, Poland, to Isabella Of POLAND 1519-1559 with. John Sigismund ZAPOLYA 1540-1571. Notes. Individual Note. John Zápolya, also John Szapolyai; 1490 or 1491 - 22 July 1540) was King of Hungary (as John I) from 1526 to 1540.

  5. Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the first wife of the king of Poland Sigismund I. the Old. She was the daughter of a Hungarian noble, Stefan Zápolya, and Polish princess Hedwig of Cieszyn.Barbara was a younger sister of future King of Hungary János Zápolya (1487-1540).

  6. Hedwig of Cieszyn (Polish: Jadwiga cieszyńska, Hungarian: Hedvig tescheni hercegnő) (1469 – 6 April 1521) was a Polish princess. She was the only child of Przemysław II, Duke of Cieszyn by his wife Anna, daughter of Duke Bolesław IV of Warsaw. Life

  7. Sep 5, 2022 · When all of Louis’ Hungarian forces united in early August between the towns of Osijek, on the Drava, and Tolna, 100km further north, a dysfunctional war council selected Archbishop Pál Tomori and Hungarian nobleman Count George Zápolya de Szepes, brother of the future John I of Hungary, as joint army commanders.

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