Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Bonne of Luxemburg or Jutta of Luxemburg (20 May 1315 – 11 September 1349), was born Jutta (Judith), the second daughter of King John of Bohemia, [1] and his first wife, Elisabeth of Bohemia. [2] She was the first wife of King John II of France ; however, as she died a year prior to his accession, she was never a French queen.
Bonne of Luxembourg with her husband Jean. The book was commissioned for Jutta of Luxembourg, the second daughter of John the Blind, king of Bohemia, and his first wife, Elisabeth of Bohemia, the intended first wife of King John II of France. Bonne died young, before she assumed position as Queen of France.
Jutta: Henry III († 1086) Count of Luxembourg: William († 1131) Count of Luxembourg: Albert II Count of Dagsburg: Ermesinde († 1143) Godfrey I Count of Namur: Henry Duke of Lower Lorraine Count of Limburg († abt. 1119) Conrad II († 1136) Count of Luxembourg no children: Counts of Dagsburg Counts of Loon: Henri IV² († 1196) Count of ...
The House of Luxembourg (Luxembourgish: D'Lëtzebuerger Haus; French: Maison de Luxembourg; German: Haus Luxemburg) or Luxembourg dynasty was a royal family of the Holy Roman Empire in the Late Middle Ages, whose members between 1308 and 1437 ruled as kings of Germany and Holy Roman emperors as well as kings of Bohemia, Hungary and Croatia.
Bonne of Bohemia (AKA Jutta of Luxemburg, 1315–1349), first wife of King John II of France Psalter of Bonne de Luxembourg , probably executed for Bonne of Bohemia Bonne of Bourbon (1341-1402), daughter of Peter I, Duke of Bourbon and of Isabella of Valois, who acted as regent of Savoy
Jean of Luxembourg (1921–2019), former Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg (born 1955), current Grand Duke Victor Bodson (1902–1984), justice minister, Righteous Among the Nations
The House of Limburg (in German: Haus Limbourg) was a dynasty which can be traced back in the male line as far as Henry, count of Limburg, whose mother Jutta was heiress of Frederick, Duke of Lower Lorraine in the House of Ardenne–Luxembourg. Henry was also related to the counts of Arlon.
Jean Le Noir, The Three Living and the Three Dead, folio 322r, Psalter of Bonne de Luxembourg (c. 1348–49, New York, The Cloisters, Inv. 69. 86.) Jean Le Noir was a French manuscript illuminator active in Paris between 1335 and 1380. He was a pupil of Jean Pucelle. [1]