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  1. 4 days ago · Quick Tips for using this 1790 Historical Pennsylvania Counties Map tool. There are four ways to get started using this Historical U.S. Counties map tool. Type any PRESENT-day place or address in the “Search places” box above the map and choose the one you want from the auto-complete list. Click the map to see the historical county name for ...

  2. Date:1790. Map. 20 tracts, Charleston. Covers lands of the William Bingham estate surveyed by John Adlum in Charleston Township, Tioga County (Pa.). Shows land ownership, lots, boundaries, numbers, and dimensions. Title from label affixed to verso. From the William Bingham estate maps. Pen-and-ink and watercolor.

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  4. Bogislaw V ( Polish: Bogusław, Latin: Bogislaus) (c. 1318 – 23 April 1374), sometimes known as the Great [1] ( Polish: Bogusław V Wielki ), was a Duke of Pomerania . Eldest son of Duke Wartislaw IV and Elisabeth of Lindow-Ruppin, [2] Bogislaw had two brothers, Barnim IV and Wartislaw V. The brothers were joint rulers from their father's ...

  5. When Herzog Bogislaw von Pommern V was born in 1316, in Słupsk, Poland, his father, Duke Wartislaw vel Warcislaw Boguslawic von Pommern IV, was 25 and his mother, Elisabeth von Lindau Ruppin, was 23. He married Princesse Elisabeth de Pologne on 28 February 1343, in Kraków County, Małopolska, Poland. They were the parents of at least 1 daughter.

  6. Added: Jan 28, 2022. Find a Grave Memorial ID: 236280019. Source citation. Bogislaw V (Polish: Bogusław, Latin: Bogislaus) (c. 1318 – 23 April 1374) was a Duke of Pomerania. Eldest son of Duke Wartislaw IV and Elisabeth of Lindow-Ruppin, Bogislaw had two brothers, Barnim IV and Wartislaw V. The brothers were joint rulers from their father's ...

  7. Over the past year Bogislaw V, Duke of Pomerania has had the most page views in the Polish wikipedia edition with 8,633 views, followed by English (7,906), and Russian (2,269). In terms of yearly growth of page views the top 3 wikpedia editions are Japanese (90.96%) , Estonian (30.43%) , and Egyptian Arabic (26.47%)

  8. Eastern Europe. The territory of Pomerania (Pommern in German) stretched along the southern coast of the Baltic Sea, from the island of Rügen (now within north-eastern Germany) to the mouth of the Vistula at Gdansk (now part of Poland ). In the Bronze Age, prior to expansion of the Central European Lusatian culture around 1300-1200 BC, the ...

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