When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Catherine of Navarre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_of_Navarre

    Seal of Catherine of Navarre. She and John III of Navarre were parents to thirteen children: [5] Anne of Navarre (19 May 1492 – 15 August 1532). Magdalena of Navarre (29 March 1494 – May 1504). Catherine of Navarre (1495 – November 1532). Abbess of the Trinity at Caen. Joan of Navarre (15 June 1496 – last mentioned in November, 1496).

  3. Kingdom of Navarre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Navarre

    In spite of the treaties, Ferdinand the Catholic did not relinquish his long-cherished designs on Navarre. In 1506, the 53-year-old widower remarried, to Germaine of Foix (aged 16), daughter of Catherine's uncle John of Foix, who had attempted to claim Navarre over his under-age nephew and niece. However, their infant son died shortly after ...

  4. Catherine of Bourbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_of_Bourbon

    Catherine of Bourbon (7 February 1559 – 13 February 1604) was a Navarrese princess regent. She was the daughter of Queen Jeanne III of Navarre and King Antoine de Bourbon . She ruled the principality of Béarn in the name of her brother, King Henry III of Navarre , from 1576 until 1596.

  5. List of Navarrese monarchs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Navarrese_monarchs

    son of John III of Navarre and Catherine of Navarre: Margaret of Angoulême 1526 2 children: 25 May 1555 Hagetmau aged 52 Jeanne III 1555–1572: 16 November 1528 Saint-Germain-en-Laye daughter of Henry II of Navarre and Margaret of Angoulême: Antoine of Navarre 20 October 1548 5 children: 9 June 1572 Paris aged 43

  6. Margaret of Valois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_of_Valois

    This journey was an opportunity for entering the cities crossed, a way of forging closer ties with the reigning family. At the end of their journey, they finally found the King of Navarre. Catherine and her son-in-law agreed on the modalities of the execution of the last edict of pacification – the object of the Nérac conference in 1579.

  7. Cesare Borgia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesare_Borgia

    Cesare's father, Pope Alexander VI, was the first pope who openly recognized his children born out of wedlock. The Italian historian Stefano Infessura writes that Cardinal Borgia falsely claimed Cesare to be the legitimate son of another man—Domenico d'Arignano, the nominal husband of Vannozza dei Cattanei.

  8. Berengaria of Navarre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berengaria_of_Navarre

    Berengaria of Navarre (Basque: Berengela, Spanish: Berenguela, French: Bérengère; c. 1165–1170 – 23 December 1230) was Queen of England as the wife of Richard I of England. She was the eldest daughter of Sancho VI of Navarre and Sancha of Castile. As is the case with many of the medieval English queens, little is known of her life.

  9. Antoine of Navarre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antoine_of_Navarre

    Navarre wanted to immediately push on OrlÄ—ans, but the plague in the town, the threat of the English, and the hopes of Catherine that he might yet prevail on his brother to abandon rebellion, persuaded the court against this policy. [28] Navarre's army invested the city of Rouen on 28 September and began trying to subdue the town.