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The title "Princess of Poland" was never used. King’s daughter or royal daughter was called królewna. Princesses, in Polish księżniczka, ksiėżna were mainly used in Princely and ducal families of Poland. However, legitimate daughters of the kings and royals of Poland are also referred to and translates as Polish princesses in English ...
Świętosława was a Polish princess, the daughter of Mieszko I of Poland and sister of Bolesław I of Poland, who married two Scandinavian kings.. Some chroniclers recount that a princess, whose name is not given, was married first to Eric the Victorious of Sweden and then to Sweyn Forkbeard of Denmark, giving the former a son, Olof, and the latter two sons, Harald and Cnut.
Founded in the 1920s for Polish immigrants, current church dedicated in 1925 [75] St. Mary 32 Pearl St, Claremont Church constructed in 1873 [76] Old St. Mary Mission Church, Old Church Rd, West Claremont Founded in the 1820s, current church dedicated in 1823. It is the oldest Catholic church in New Hampshire. [76] St. Patrick 32 Beech St, Newport
Świętosława was the daughter of Duke Casimir I of Poland and his wife Maria Dobroniega of Kiev. [1] She was related to the House of Přemysl, the family of her future husband, through her great-grandmother Doubravka of Bohemia.
Picture Name Father Birth Marriage Became duchess Coronation as queen Ceased to be consort Death Spouse; Judith of Habsburg: Rudolph I of Germany (1271 24 January 1285
Theresa Kunegunda (Polish: Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska, German: Kurfürstin Therese Kunigunde), (French: Thérèse-Cunégonde Sobieska) (4 March 1676 – 27 March 1730) was a Polish princess, Electress of Bavaria and of the Electorate of the Palatinate. By birth she was member of the House of Sobieski and by marriage member of the House of ...
Coat-of-arms of the House of Piast. Elisabeth of Greater Poland (Polish: Elżbieta Mieszkówna; Czech: Eliška Polská) (c. 1152 – 2 April 1209) was a Polish princess of the House of Piast and, by her two marriages, Duchess of Bohemia and Margravine of Lusatia.
Gunhilda of Wenden was a Polish princess, daughter of Mieszko I of Poland according to Chronicles of Thietmar of Merserburg, Adam von Bremen and Acta Cnutonis regis princess and Danish Viking Age queen consort, the supposed spouse of 10th-century King Sweyn I of Denmark (c. 960–1014).