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| | Encyclopedia: Ferdinand II of Portugal |
 | | Pedro V of Portugal (September 16, 1837 - November 11, 1861) was King of Portugal from 1853 to 1861. |  | | After the birth of the future Peter V of Portugal, he was proclaimed Ferdinand II of Portugal. |  | | Peter III of Portugal (Portuguese Pedro) (July 5, 1717 - May 25, 1786) became King Consort of Portugal on the succession of his wife and niece queen Maria I in 1777, and ruled with her until his death. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Ferdinand-II-of-Portugal
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| | Maria II on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Maria married (1836) Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (Ferdinand II of Portugal). |  | | (Maria da Glória), 1819-53, queen of Portugal (1834-53), daughter of Peter IV (Pedro I of Brazil). |  | | Pedro, having succeeded to the Portuguese throne on the death (1826) of his father, John VI, granted a constitutional charter to the Portuguese and then abdicated in favor of Maria. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/m/maria2.asp
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| | PORTUGAL - LoveToKnow Article on PORTUGAL |
 | | Climate.The climate of Portugal is equable and temperate. |  | | 1476, he was defeated by Ferdinand and Isabella, and in 1478 he was compelled to sign the treaty of Alcantara, by which Joanna was relegated to a convent. |  | | Banks and Money.In 1910 the Bank of Portugal, to which the treasury was deeply indebted, had a capital of 1,500,000, and a monopoly of note issue in continental Portugal, but the notes of the Ultramarine Bank circulated in the colonies. |
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http://88.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PO/PORTUGAL.htm
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| | Chapter 13: The Individuality of Portugal |
 | | 98, 135; Edgar Prestage, "The Chivalry of Portugal," Chivalry, pp. |  | | Portugal was given the opportunity of consolidating its territory under the leadership of the court at Lisbon, which became the center of political balance in the country. |  | | It was in 1295 that King Diniz of Portugal essentially established the present eastern boundaries of Portugal, with one exception. |
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http://libro.uca.edu/stanislawski/Chap13.htm
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| | Raul N. Longoria's Genealogy Database |
 | | She was married to Alfonso II of Portugal. |  | | She was married to Berenger II of Ivrea (KING OF ITALY). |  | | Children were: Pedro II the Catholic (KING OF ARAGON). |
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http://www.raullongoria.net/Genealogy/FamilyTree/d5.html
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| | End of Europe's Middle Ages - New Monarchies: Portugal |
 | | John II the Perfect (1455-1495) acted as regent between 1475 and 1477 when his father was at war with Castile and became king following Alfonso V's death in 1381. |  | | The continual disputation of succession was exacerbated by the policy of intermarriage between the royal houses of Portugal and Castile that was initiated by Diniz of Portugal (1261-1325) and Ferdinand IV of Castile and León (1286?-1312) to end the wars between their two kingdoms. |  | | John I of Portugal reinforced the Portuguese-English alliance by signing another treaty and marrying one of John of Gaunt's daughters. |
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http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/endmiddle/monarchies5.html
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| | Ferdinand V and Isabella I |
 | | She was the daughter of John II of Castile and León by his second wife, Isabella of Portugal. |  | | In 1469 Princess Isabella married Ferdinand of Aragón, known also as Ferdinand V, The Catholic, and on the death of her brother, Henry IV, Isabella and Ferdinand jointly succeeded (1474) to the throne of Castile and León. |  | | Because his daughter Joanna the Mad became insane after the death of Isabella, Ferdinand assumed the regency of Castile in 1506. |
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http://www.sonhex.dk/fandi.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Portugal |
 | | Ferdinand (1367-83) had his father's generosity without his strength, and, though he deserves the credit for wise laws encouraging navigation and agriculture, and for the fortification of Lisbon, he fell a victim to animal passion and foolish ambition. |  | | The bishops renewed their complains of the disorders in Portugal, and in 1245, by the Bull "grandi non immerito", Innocent IV committed the government to Sancho's brother Alfonso who was living in France. |  | | Partly by force and partly by bribery, he secured election as Philip I of Portugal (1580-98) at the Cortes of Thomar in 1581, and for sixty years the Crowns of Portugal and Spain were united. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12297a.htm
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| | 21ST GENERATION |
 | | Duke Ferdinand II of COBURG was born in 1816 in - House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. |  | | She was christened in Portugal - dtr of Dom Pedro I. She was married to Duke Ferdinand II of COBURG (son of Prince Ferdinand of COBURG and Antoinette DEKOHARY) about 1835. |  | | He died in 1855 in Portugal - King Consort of Portugal. |
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http://home.att.net/~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d5991.htm
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| | Ferdinand II |
 | | Ferdinand's future was assured when he came of age, in 1466, and when he was named king of Sicily, in 1468, in order to impress the court of Castile, where his father ultimately wished to place him. |  | | Ferdinand remained there as king consort, an uneasy, marginal figure, until Isabella's war of succession against Afonso V of Portugal gained his acceptance in 1479 as king in every sense of the word. |  | | Ferdinand II Ferdinand II Ferdinand II (Ferdinand the Catholic) (b. |
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http://gallery.euroweb.hu/tours/spain/ferdina2.html
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| | The Former Ruling House of Portugal, 1939-1945 |
 | | , Infante of Portugal, Duke of Braganca (1907-). |  | | Affonso, Infante of Portugal, Duke of Oporto (1865-1920). |  | | Succeeded as head of the house of Braganca and as claimant to the throne of Portugal in 1932 on the death of his cousin, King Manoel II of Portugal (see below). |
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http://gsteinbe.intrasun.tcnj.edu/royalty/houses/braganca.htm
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| | Courtly lives - The Wettin Dynasty |
 | | 1 Frederick August II of Poland (reigned 1697-1733) and Saxony (reigned 1709-1733) as Frederick Augustus I. Augustus married Eberhardine (died 1727) of Bradenburg-Bayreuth. |  | | a cousin of Prince Albert's Ferdinand, married Queen Maria II da Gloria (1826-1828, 1834-1853) of Portugal (in 1836) and became king consort as Ferdinand II of Portugal. |  | | 5 Carlotta (died 1830) married Joao VI of Portugal. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/mi4/polcrt/Wettin.html
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| | Ferdinand II of Aragon |
 | | Ferdinand and Isabella's children included Joanna of Castile and Catherine of Aragon. |  | | Ferdinand attempted to retain the regency permanently, but was rebuffed by the Castilian nobility and replaced with Joanna's husband, who became Philip I of Castile. |  | | He married Isabella in 1469 and became Ferdinand V of Castile when Isabella succeeded her brother as Queen of Castile in 1474. |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/F/Ferdinand-II-of-Aragon.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Blessed Ferdinand |
 | | One of the latter, João Alvarez, his secretary and biographer, carried his heart to Portugal in 1451, and in 1473 his body was brought to Portugal, and laid to rest in the royal vault at Batalha amid imposing ceremonies. |  | | He was one of five sons, his mother being Philippa, daughter of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, and his father King John I, known in history for his victories over the Moors and in particular for his conquest of Ceuta, a powerful Moorish stronghold, and his establishment of an episcopal see within its walls. |  | | Though living a life of great sanctity in the midst of the court, Ferdinand was not a mere recluse. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06039c.htm
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| | Spanish Civilization |
 | | Revolt of Portugal, 1640; Revolt of Catalonia, 1640-1659 |  | | Portugal, which began as a county of León, was the only kingdom to ultimately maintain its independence of the rest of Spain. |  | | Philip II of Spain / Philip I of Portugal |
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http://www.uncg.edu/rom/courses/klrauch/civ/kings.htm
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| | Late Middle Ages, Knox - Tiimeline Iberia |
 | | Timeline for Castile, Navarre, Aragon, Portugal, and Granada. |  | | Queen Leonor is deposed from regency of Portugal in favor of Afonso's brother, Pedro |  | | Joanna II, daughter of Louis X and Joanna I, and wife of Philip of Évreaux, is crowned Queen of Navarre (-1349), thus separating Navarre from France |
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http://history.boisestate.edu/hy309/iberia/timelineiberia.htm
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| | A History of the Royal House of Portugal |
 | | In 1853, Maria II died leaving the throne to her minor son Pedro V (reigned 1853-1861) with her husband, Ferdinand II as the Regent of the Realm until Pedro V reached his majority. |  | | Duke of Bragança was born in 1430 and married Leonor de Menezes in 1447. |  | | Dom Pedro (formerly Pedro IV of Portugal and Pedro I of Brazil) placed his daughter Maria II back on the throne and then died of tuberculosis in Mafra Palace only days after his victory in 1834 and having just been made Generalissimo of the Army by his grateful daughter. |
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http://www.dynastic-law.com/portuguese.html
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| | The Amazon Throne: The Orleans-Braganza of Brazil |
 | | Nonetheless, and regardless of his misapprehension concerning Theresa, Pedro II married his Neapolitan cousin and settled to the procreation of a new generation of Braganza infants. |  | | It was not long after the their arrival in Portugal, that Pedro II and his family suffered the loss of Empress Donna Theresa. |  | | Maria II and Ferdinand were married at Lisbon on April 8, 1836. |
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http://www.eurohistory.com/braganza.html
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| | King John II of Portugal |
 | | John Avis (also spelt João), was born in 1455, son and successor of King Alfonso V of Portugal. |  | | In August 1481, he succeeded his father and became King of Portugal in 1481He was an astute politician and statesman and a patron of Renaissance art and learning. |
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http://goofy313g.free.fr/calisota_online/exist/johnII.html
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| | Saints of June 5 |
 | | Ferdinand, son of King John I of Portugal and his queen, Philippa, daughter of John of Gaunt, was unusually pious for a prince in that age. |  | | Born at Santarem, Portugal, in September 29, 1402; died in Fez, on June 5, 1443; cultus approved in 1470. |  | | In this capacity he led an expedition with his brother, Henry the Navigator, against the Moors in northern Africa. |
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http://www.saintpatrickdc.org/ss/0605.htm
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| | Aviz . Manuel I of Portugal . Peter I of Portugal . Edward of Portugal . John II of Portugal . John III of Portugal |
 | | By his wife, princess Eleanor of Aragon 1402-1455, a daughter of Ferdinand I of Aragon and Leonor Urraca de Castilla John 1429 Philippa 1430-1439 Afonso V of Portugal Afonso V, king of Portugal... |  | | In 1385, the Interregnum ended with the acclamation of the Master of the Order of Aviz, John I of Portugal John, natural son of king Peter I of Portugal Pedro I and Dona Teresa Lourenço as king. |  | | His domain would last until 1640, with the acclamation of the duke of Bragança as John IV of Portugal. |
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http://www.uk.fraquisanto.net/Aviz
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| | LLMC - Civil law II - Italy, Spain & Portugal |
 | | In 1578 the Aviz dynasty became extinguished and the throne of Portugal passed to Philip II of Spain (Philip I of Portugal). |  | | These customs, particularly in Spain and Portugal, played a major role in the development of the law that was in place at the end of the 18th century. |  | | The drafting of new legislation, particularly civil and commercial law, was carried on contemporaneously with the spread of 18th century enlightenment to Portugal. |
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http://www.llmc.com/civil_law_2.htm
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| | Black Britain |
 | | A cousin of Prince Albert married Queen Maria II of Portugal and became king consort as Ferdinand II of Portugal. |  | | In 1423, Frederick the Warlike of Meissen was granted Saxony and became (1425) elector of Saxony as Frederick I. |  | | Their descendants also sat on the thrones of Portugal, Belgium and numerous other smaller states. |
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http://www.essaysbyekowa.com/black_Britian.htm
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| | The Defenestration of Prague |
 | | 1815 Ferdinand Pz v Sachsen-Coburg u Gotha (1785-1851) |
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http://members.aol.com/eurostamm/prague.html
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| | Ferdinand II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Ferdinand II of Aragon, the Catholic (1452-1516, king of Aragon from 1479, of Sicily from 1468) (=Ferdinand V of Castille 1474-1504) (=Ferdinand III of Naples 1504-1516) |  | | Ferdinand II de Medici (1610-1670), grand-duke of Tuscany from 1620 |  | | This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_II
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| | José Vianna da Motta - Classical Composers Database |
 | | In 1917 he returned to Portugal where he was resident for the rest of his life. |  | | Upon his return to Lisbon he became Chief Conductor of the Lisbon Symphony Orchestra. |  | | This church was destroyed at the end of World War II during allied attacks. |
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http://www.classical-composers.org/cgi-bin/ccd.cgi?comp=vianna_da_motta
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| | for nyc 2 |
 | | of the Count-Duke of Olivares provoked wars in Portugal and Catalonia Graduate Felipe IV coats@serc.si.edu the Count-Duke of Olivares provoked wars in Portugal and Catalonia, Policy of the Count-Duke of Olivares provoked wars in Portugal and Catalonia. |  | | Policy of the Count-Duke of Olivares provoked wars in Portugal and Catalonia. |  | | Became an independent kingdom again and Catalonia enjoyed some years of French-supported independence but was quickly returned to the Spanish Crown. |
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http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/~luoma/peace/dist/hdir/BaCaAWAAc1aaQP.html
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| | Ferdinand II, king of Aragon. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05 |
 | | For the rest of his life Ferdinand continued his regency over Castile, first in the name of Joanna, who became insane, and then for his grandson, later Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. When Ferdinand died, he left his grandson a united Spain, as well as Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, and an overseas empire. |  | | His father, John II of Aragón, gave him Sicily during his lifetime and left him Aragón when he died. |  | | or Ferdinand the Catholic, 14521516, king of Aragón (14791516), king of Castile and León (as Ferdinand V, 14741504), king of Sicily (14681516), and king of Naples (150416). |
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http://www.bartleby.com/65/fe/Ferdi2Ara.html
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| | FERDINAND II / Urraca of PORTUGAL |
 | | Ferdinand was noted both for his intermittent wars with Castile and Portugal and for his reorganization, about 1170, of the military Order of Saint James of the Sword (Santiago de la Espada) to participate in the campaign to drive the Moors from Spain. |  | | /--Eudes I BURGUNDY /-- HUGH II Maud BURGUNDY /--Eudes II BURGUNDY |  | | Alfonso founded the University of Salamanca and captured Caceres, Badajoz, and Merida from the Muslim Almohads. |
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http://www.genpc.com/gen/files/d0041/f0000029.html
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| | Pedigree of Ferdinand II of Aragon-[2088] from the Raff Family History Site |
 | | Ferdinand married Isabella I of Castile-[421] [MRIN:278], daughter of John II of Castile-[2772] and Isabella of Portugal-[2773], on 19 Oct 1469. |  | | Ferdinand next married Germaine De Foix-[3235] [MRIN:1098] in 1506. |  | | Pedigree of Ferdinand II of Aragon-[2088] from the Raff Family History Site |
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http://www.raff.info/tree/pages/2088.htm
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| | Ancetors of Winslow Farr Sr. and Olive Hovey Freeman |
 | | Ferdinand II King of LEON and Urraca of PORTUGAL were married in 1165. |  | | WILLIAM L0NGESPEE, natural son of Henry II Plantagenet, King of England, was born at Woodstock Manor, probably in 1176, died at Salisbury Castle, 7 March 1225/6, and was buried in Salisbury Cathedral. |  | | A granddaughter of William Longespee, Earl of Salisbury (a natural son of King Henry II of England), by his wife Ela Devereux (1188-1261), a descendant of the Capetian kings of France, Dukes of Burgundy, and Dukes of Brittany. |
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http://www.geocities.com/dustyhills/b32.htm
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| | October Military History |
 | | Dom Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil (1822-31), King of Portugal (1826), d. |  | | John Tommy, MW at Gettysburg; the first Chinese-American to die for the US Antonio Granjo, Premier of Portugal, murdered |  | | Prince-Bishop Peter II Petrovic Njegos of Montenegro (1830-51), at 37 |
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http://www.strategypage.com/military_history_oct.asp
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| | PORTUGAL |
 | | Duke of Burgundy (died 1071), a member of the Royal House of France, established himself as ruler of a substantial portion of modern Portugal, with the title Count, circa 1093, and was father of Alfonso I (died 1185), who assumed the title King of Portugal ca 1139. |  | | Both exile laws were repealed 17 May 1950. |  | | Miguel continued to claim the throne in exile in Austria, and following his death his claims were maintained by his son Miguel (II), Duke of Braganza (see below). |
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http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/porthist.htm
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| | Any-Day-in-History PAGE of SCOPE SYSTEMS. |
 | | 1889 Ferdinand II king of Portugal, dies at 73 |  | | 1640 Duke of Bragança crowned King Johan IV of Portugal |  | | 1488 Bartholomeus Diaz returns to Portugal after sailing round Cape of Good Hope |
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http://www.scopesys.com/cgi-bin/today2.cgi?askmonth=12&askday=15
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| | Echo9er |
 | | 1861 — King Pedro V d’Alcantara of Portugal (1853-61), at 24 |  | | But The Great War was not, as President Woodrow Wilson hoped, “the war to end all wars.” World War II rose from its ashes, and millions more died to stop the mad dreams of dictators from 1939 to 1945. |  | | World War II veteran Bob Bush, a Navy Corpsman serving with the Marines, was laid to rest in the small town of Menlo, Washington with Full Military Honors. |
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http://www.echo9er.net/blog
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| | Ferdinand II Koenig VON LEON/Urraca Affonsez Princess VON PORTUGAL |
 | | Born: 1151 at: Of, Coimbra, Coimbra, PORTUGAL Died: 16 Oct 1188 at: Bamba, Valladolid, Spain Father:Alfonso I von Portugal HENRIQUES Mother:Matilde (Maud) Countess VON SAVOY Other Spouses: |  | | Name: Alfonso IX Koenig VON LEON Born: 15 Aug 1171 at: Zamora, Spain Married: 15 Feb 1190/91 at: Annuled Died: 24 Sep 1230 at: Villaneuva De So, Castilla, Spain Spouses: Tereza Sanchez Prinzessin VON PORTUGAL Berengaria Alfonsez VON CASTILE |  | | Ferdinand II Koenig VON LEON/Urraca Affonsez Princess VON PORTUGAL |
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http://www.usgennet.org/family/baicon/data/fam08453.htm
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| | NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: FE: FER |
 | | Ferdinand Marcos, Jr Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria |  | | Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany |
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http://pedia.nodeworks.com/F/FE/FER
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| | Leon), Ferdinand II of Leon (King of/Portugal, Urraca of |
 | | Leon), Ferdinand II of Leon (King of/Portugal, Urraca of |  | | Husband: Ferdinand II of Leon (King of Leon) |  | | Web page created by Genealogy Site Builder on 8/25/01 |
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http://home.twcny.rr.com/travelerdarby/genealogy/family_tree_files/f203.html
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