Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Gaston III, known as Gaston Phoebus or Fébus (30 April 1331 – 1 August 1391), was the eleventh Count of Foix (as Gaston III) and twenty-fourth Viscount of Béarn (as Gaston X) from 1343 until his death. Due to his ancestral inheritance, Gaston III was overlord of about ten territories located between the Pays de Gascogne and Languedoc.
Eddie August Schneider's (1911–1940) death certificate, issued in New York.. A death certificate is either a legal document issued by a medical practitioner which states when a person died, or a document issued by a government civil registration office, that declares the date, location and cause of a person's death, as entered in an official register of deaths.
Ervin Marton was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, in 1912 to István Preisz and his wife Janka Csillag, a Hungarian-Jewish couple.He had two sisters. Marton started drawing as a child; and as a teenager, he began to work in photography, although he never studied it formally.
The director added that the death certificate backlog has increased since Campbell has taken office. The insurance provider won’t complete a claim until a cause of death is determined on the ...
Gildo's original death certificate, issued after a 1995 law allowed families to request the document for the missing, left his cause of death blank. His remains, thought to be in a mass grave with ...
Gaston was the son of Centulle V of Béarn and Beatrix of Bigorre. [1] He fought in the Reconquista in Spain. Gaston succeeded his father Centulle V of Béarn in 1090. During his rule, the borders of Béarn were established more definitively; he defeated the viscount of Dax, and took control of Orthez, Pays de Mixe, and Ostabaret by 1105 and gained Montaner through his marriage to Talesa. [2]
His death certificate confirmed this date. Lear's career began in the 1950s after he and Ed Simmons paired up to write sketches for the variety show The Colgate Comedy Hour for the comedy duo ...
Funerary monument to Gaston de Foix, commander of the French army, killed at Ravenna. The battle went on for eight hours and left, by contemporary accounts, more than 10,000 dead between both sides, [62] while 17,000 civilians were massacred. [63] The death of Gaston de Foix was a huge blow to the French, and his men were very sad to hear of ...