Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Maria-Letizia Bonaparte (née Ramolino; 24 August 1750 or 1749 – 2 February 1836), known as Letizia Bonaparte, was a Corsican noblewoman and the mother of Napoleon I of France. She received the title " Madame Mère " (French for "Madame Mother") due to her status as the Emperor's mother.

  2. Letizia Bonaparte, née Maria-Letizia Ramolino le 24 août 1750 à Ajaccio et morte le 2 février 1836 à Rome, est la mère de Napoléon I er, connue sous son titre de « Madame Mère » [Note 1]. Elle fut au total la mère de sept souverains (un empereur, trois rois, un prince, une reine et une grande-duchesse) et la grand-mère d'un empereur, Napoléon III .

  3. Letizia Bonaparte spent her remaining years quietly in Rome, rarely going out, except to attend Mass. She always wore black, in mourning both for Napoleon and for Elisa, who died in August 1820. She experienced more sorrow with Pauline’s death in 1825. The death of Napoleon’s son in 1832 was a further blow. By this time Letizia was an invalid (she fell and fractured her thigh in 1830 ...

  4. Napoleon Bonaparte, als Kaiser Napoleon I. ( französisch Napoléon Bonaparte bzw. Napoléon Ier; * 15. August 1769 in Ajaccio auf Korsika als Napoleone Buonaparte; [1] † 5. Mai 1821 in Longwood House auf St. Helena im Südatlantik ), war General der Ersten Republik, Erster Konsul Frankreichs und schließlich Kaiser der Franzosen .

  5. Napoleon Bonaparte's mother was born in Ajaccio Ajaccio, Corsica, on August 24, 1750. Married to Carlo-Maria Buonaparte (Charles Bonaparte) on June 2, 1764, she gave him twelve children, eight of whom would live to adulthood. Widowed in 1785, she lived in discomfort for the years following the death of her husband.

  6. 17. März 2017 · Napoleons Mutter lebte ein beeindruckendes und faszinierendes Leben, das neben den Abenteuern (und vielen Missgeschicken) ihrer Kinder steht.

  7. Letizia Bonaparte as a Young Woman. This unattributed portrait of Letizia Bonaparte, which today hangs in the Imperial Mother’s bedroom in Musée National de la Maison Bonaparte in Ajaccio (Corsica), is remarkable for several reasons. Most notable is that fact that despite being painted in the early nineteenth century (that is, during the ...