- The
Spanish ****ociation for
Standardization and
Certification (
AENOR, Spanish: Asociación Española de Normalización y Certificación) is an
entity dedicated...
-
Aénor (also Aenora, Ainora; the
spelling Aénor suggests an
original trisyllabic pronunciation) was a
feminine given name in
medieval France. It is likely...
-
Aénor of Châtellerault (also
known as
Aénor de Rochefoucauld; c. 1103 –
March 1130) was
Duchess of
Aquitaine as the wife of Duke
William X and the mother...
-
caused strain between father and son
until 1121 when
William X
married Aénor de Châtellerault, a
daughter of his father's
mistress Dangerose by her first...
-
Aénor de Châtellerault, and it has been
suggested that
having been
baptized Aenor after her mother, she was
called alia
Aenor, i.e. "the
other Aenor"...
-
variant of the
Latin Aenor,
which is an old
Germanic name of
unknown meaning.
There is an
Occitan phrase "alia
Aenor"
meaning the
other Aenor and used to distinguish...
-
French noble. She was the
second daughter of
William X of
Aquitaine and
Aénor of Châtellerault. She was the
elder sister of
William Aigret and the younger...
-
vicomtes (viscounts)
until the mid-11th century. The
daughter of
Aymeric I,
Ænor of Châtellerault (c. 1103 – c. 1130),
whose mother had been the "mistress"...
- High
Middle Ages. The
eldest child of
William X, Duke of Aquitaine, and
Aénor de Châtellerault,
Eleanor became duchess upon her father's
death in 1137...
- Faye-la-Vineuse and had issue; he
became grand seneschal of Aquitaine.
Aénor de Châtellerault (c. 1103 –
March 1130)
married William X, Duke of Aquitaine...