Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (Polish: Anna Katarzyna Konstancja Waza; 7 August 1619 in Warsaw – 8 October 1651 in Cologne) was a Polish princess, daughter of Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland and Sweden and his second wife Constance of Austria.

  2. Anna Catherine Constance Vasa ( Polish: Anna Katarzyna Konstancja Waza; 7 August 1619 in Warsaw – 8 October 1651 in Cologne) was a Polish princess, daughter of Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland and Sweden and his second wife Constance of Austria. Portrait by Johannes Spilberg, ca. 1648.

  3. Apr 27, 2022 · Birthplace: Warszawa, Mazowieckie, Poland. Death: October 08, 1651 (32) Köln, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. Place of Burial: Düsseldorf, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. Immediate Family: Daughter of Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland and Sweden and Archduchess Constance of Austria.

  4. German nobility. Princess of Poland, Lithuania and Sweden. She was the youngest child of Sigismund III Wasa, King of Poland and Constance of Habsburg. She married Philipp Wilhelm von Pfalz-Neuburg in 1642. During their marriage she gave birth to a stillborn son.

  5. Aug 19, 2020 · Princess Anna Catherine Constance Vasa was born in Warsaw on August 7th, 1619. She was the only daughter of Sigismund III Vasa and his second wife Constance of Austria that survied the childhood and the youngest of royal pair's children.

  6. Anna Maria (May 23, 1593–1600) Catherine (May 9, 1594–1594) Vladislaus (1595–1648), (reigned 1632–1648 as Władysław IV Waza of Poland) Catherine (Sept 27, 1596–1597) Christopher (Feb 10, 1598–1598) And secondly, on December 11, 1605, to his first wife's sister, Constance of Austria (1588–1631). They had seven children:

  7. Feb 21, 2022 · Around 1635-1640, he produced several versions of the equestrian portrait of Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand. The portrait of King Philip IV on horseback from Neuburg Castle, painted around 1628, could come from the dowry of Ladislaus' sister, Anna Catherine Constance Vasa (Alte Pinakothek in Munich, 2529).