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  1. Casimir IV, grand duke of Lithuania (1440–92) and king of Poland (1447–92), who, by patient but tenacious policy, sought to preserve the political union between Poland and Lithuania and to recover the lost lands of old Poland. The great triumph of his reign was the final subjugation of the Teutonic Knights (1466).

  2. Apr 5, 2019 · Casimir Pulaski, hero of the Revolutionary War and the pride of the Polish-American community, may need a new pronoun — he may have been a she, or even a they. Researchers who used DNA to ...

  3. Mar 4, 2013 · Paul Radzilowski. In early 1472, the thirteen-year-old Prince Casimir of Poland returned to his native land from a campaign in Hungary with a dispirited and malcontented army. Much of the remaining force was made up of unpaid mercenaries. Even before crossing the border they proved unruly and prone to loot the local population, but on the ...

  4. You can contact Wynona G Casimir at the following email addresses: wynonac1684@aol.com · wcasimir@hot.rr.com · wynonacasimir@gmail.com · cwynona@yahoo.com · wynonacasimir@yahoo.com. Where does Wynona G Casimir live? Wynona’s current address is Creasey Dr, Temple, TX, 76501-1417.

  5. Casimir passed away on month day 1886, at age 62 in death place . Casimir Joseph LEFEBVRE in France, Nord Civil Marriages, 1792-1937. Casimir Joseph LEFEBVRE was born on month day 1824, to Jean Baptiste LEFEBVRE and Marie LEFEBVRE . Casimir married Sophie PAYEN on month day 1853, at age 28.

  6. Jul 31, 2023 · As a wedding gift, Casimir released eight-hundred Rus captives whom his grandfather captured in 1018. Maria might have had some relatives among these captives. This marriage improved the relationship between Poland and Rus. Not too long after Maria and Casimir married, Casimir’s sister, Gertrude, married Yaroslav’s second son Iziaslav.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › EsterkaEsterka - Wikipedia

    The first account of Esterka can be found in scripts of the 15th-century Polish chronicler Jan Długosz and recorded again, a century later, by the famous Jewish chronicler David Gans, who even maintained that Esterka was married to the king. Gans wrote: "Casimir, the king of Poland, took for himself a concubine - a young Jewess named Esther.