Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Frances de Châtillon (died 1481) was Countess of Périgord, Viscountess of Limoges, and Dame of Avesnes and Châlus. She was the eldest daughter of William, Viscount of Limoges and Isabelle de La Tour d'Auvergne. In 1470, she married Alain the Great, Count of Graves and Viscount of Tartas, son of Jean I of Albret and Catherine of Rohan.

  2. Count of Périgord (Fr.: comte de Périgord) is a noble title in the peerage of France. Originally known as "The sovereign house of the Counts of Périgord, princes by the grace of God". The first recorded sovereign Count was Emenon, who was also Count of Poitiers and Count of Angoulême.

  3. The County of Périgord was a historical region of France. The name Périgord derived from the Gaul tribe of the Petrocorii, who resisted the Roman conquest. It was preserved in the early Middle Ages as the Petragoric land (Latin: pagus Petragoricus). Périgord was a fief of the Duchy of Aquitaine, consisting of the three subregions of

  4. Descubre que ver en el Perigord y la Dordoña. ️ Una zona del sur de Francia, repleta de castillos, pueblos de cuento e importantes yacimientos prehistóricos

  5. Marie of France (1145 – 11 March 1198) was a Capetian princess who became Countess of Champagne by her marriage to Henry I of Champagne. She served as regent of the County of Champagne three times: during Henry I's absence from 1179-1181; during the minority of their son Henry II from 1181–1187; and during Henry II's absence from 1190-1197.

  6. El Périgord (Peiregòrd o Perigòrd en occitano) es una antigua provincia del suroeste de Francia, situada al noreste de Nueva Aquitania, entre Quercy y Charente. Su territorio se reparte entre los departamentos de Dordoña y Lot y Garona, y sus habitantes se llaman perigordinos (Périgourdins, en francés).

  7. Périgord, historical and cultural region encompassing the Dordogne and part of Lot-et-Garonne départements, Aquitaine région, southern France. It is roughly coextensive with the former county of Périgord.