Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Catherine of Bohemia (Czech: Kateřina Lucemburská, German: Katharina von Böhmen; 19 August 1342 – 26 April 1395) also known as Catherine of Luxembourg was Electress of Brandenburg, the second daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV and Blanche of Valois.

  2. Catherine of Bohemia (Czech: Kateřina Lucemburská, German: Katharina von Böhmen; 19 August 1342 – 26 April 1395) also known as Catherine of Luxembourg was Electress of Brandenburg, the second daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV and Blanche of Valois.

  3. Catherine of Austria (Polish: Katarzyna Habsburżanka; Lithuanian: Kotryna Habsburgaitė; 15 September 1533 – 28 February 1572) was one of the fifteen children of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor and Anna of Bohemia and Hungary.

  4. People also ask

  5. May 8, 2017 · Saint Catherine of Alexandria. Legendary Christian Saint. St Catherine, in 14th century painting by Master Theodoric, commissioned by King Charles IV of Bohemia for the Chapel of the Holy Cross at Karlstejn Castle.

    • Jone Johnson Lewis
  6. Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia (1361–1419); later elected King of Germany (formally King of the Romans) and on his father's death, became King of Bohemia (as Wenceslaus IV) and Emperor-elect of the Holy Roman Empire; married firstly to Joanna of Bavaria in 1370 and secondly to Sophia of Bavaria in 1389.

  7. This ambitious Habsburg sought to make Vienna a pre-eminent princely residence and capital city with St Stephen’s as the Capella regia Austriaca, the court church of the Austrian sovereign princes and thus the religious centre of the land.

  8. Catherine of Bohemia (Czech: Kateřina Lucemburská, German: Katharina von Böhmen; 19 August 1342 – 26 April 1395) was Electress of Brandenburg, the second daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV and Blanche of Valois.

  1. People also search for