1. Catherine of Aragon: Mary I, also known as "Bloody Mary"
2. Anne Boleyn: Elizabeth I
3. Jane Seymour: Edward VI
4. Catherine Parr: None
1. Catherine of Aragon: Mary I, also known as "Bloody Mary"
2. Anne Boleyn: Elizabeth I
3. Jane Seymour: Edward VI
4. Catherine Parr: None
Robert the Strong (820-866), Count of Anjou and Blois and Marquis of Neustria, is considered the ancestor of the Capetians. Established in the Pays de la Loire and Vieille France, he distinguished himself by defending these regions against Norman incursions and carved out a reputation that would be
The Hellenic Infantry has a long tradition of martial virtue. In 1940 he even wrote some of the most glorious pages of his history in the northern continental mountains. The Infantry is charged with the main mission during the battle. It is the only complete and able to fight by movement and fir
Concentration camps. Siberian wastelands. Guarded fortresses. For centuries, Poles managed to escape from places where others wrung their hands. Are there any prisons they cannot escape from? Trapped and undefeated. They escaped from camps or prisons, from where often no one even tried to escape
According to William Thorne, chronicler of the abbey of Saint Augustine in Canterbury, after the English prince Richard of Bordeaux came to the world in that city on January 6, 1367, A few days later the baptism of the newborn was celebrated, attended by three characters representing the Magi (the c