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Nádasdy Mausoleum. The Nádasdy Mausoleum is a series of full-length portraits of Hun and Hungarian leaders and kings published in Nuremberg in 1664 at the expense of Count Ferenc Nádasdy under the title: Mausoleum potentissimorum ac gloriosissimorum Regni Apostolici Regum et primorum militantis Ungariae Ducum (The Mausoleum of the Most ...
Vladislaus II, also known as Vladislav, , was King of Bohemia from 1471 to 1516 and King of Hungary and of Croatia from 1490 to 1516. As the eldest son of Casimir IV Jagiellon, he was expected to inherit Poland and Lithuania. George of Poděbrady, the Hussite ruler of Bohemia, offered to make Vladislaus his heir in 1468. George needed Casimir's support against the rebellious Catholic noblemen ...
Ladislaus III (also spelled as Vladislav III or Władysław III) may refer to: Ladislaus III of Hungary (1201–1205), Arpad king. Władysław III Spindleshanks (1165–1231), Duke of Poland. Władysław III of Poland (1424–1444), also king of Hungary, known posthumously as Ladislaus of Varna. Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary (1456–1516 ...
He would eventually win the war and become known as king Vladislaus II of Hungary and Croatia. John Albert (Polish: Jan Olbracht), Vladislaus' brother and also from the Jagiellonian dynasty, who would become the king of Poland in 1492 as John I. Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor and archduke of Austria, from the House of Habsburg. He raised ...
The Kingdom of Hungary in 1942, during World War II. After being granted part of southern Czechoslovakia and Subcarpathia by the Germans and Italians in the First Vienna Award of 1938, and then northern Transylvania in the Second Vienna Award of 1940, Hungary participated in their first military maneuvers on the side of the Axis powers in 1941.
Roman Catholic. Władysław III (31 October 1424 – 10 November 1444), also known as Ladislaus of Varna, was King of Poland and Supreme Duke ( Supremus Dux) of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania [1] [2] from 1434 as well as King of Hungary and Croatia from 1440 until his death at the Battle of Varna. [3] He was the eldest son of Władysław II ...
Vladislaus II (Czech: Vladislav II.; 1207 – 18 February 1227 or 1228) was the margrave of Moravia from 1222 to his death. He was member of the Přemyslid dynasty, son of King Ottokar I of Bohemia and his second wife, Constance of Hungary. Literature. Novotný, Václav. České dějiny I./III. Čechy královské za Přemysla I. a Václava I ...