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Guigues may
refer to:
Guigues I of Albon,
count of Oisans, Grésivaudan, and Briançonnais
Guigues III of Albon, also
Guigues the Old,
count of
Albon Guigues...
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Andrew Guigues VI (1184 – 14
March 1237),
known as André de Bourgogne,
Dauphin of Viennois, was the
Count of Albon, Briançon, Grenoble, and
Oisans from...
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Guigue (pronounced Gwigwe) is a city in the
south of the
Valencia Lake, in Carabobo, Venezuela. It is the
capital of the
Carlos Arvelo Muni****lity and...
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Guigues IV (died 28 June 1142),
called le
Dauphin (Latin:
Guigo Dalphinus), was the
count of
Albon from 1133. He was the
first to take the name Dauphin...
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Guigues the Old,
called Guigues III (born 1050/1060; died 21
December 1133), was a
Count of
Albon from 1079, when the
County of Vienne, then in the possession...
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Guigues I (born c. 1000, died in 1070 at Cluny), was
Count of Oisans, Grésivaudan, and Briançonnais. He was the son of
Guigues d'Albon and
Gotelana de...
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Guigues IV or Guy IV (died 10
August or 29
October 1241) was the
count of Forez,
Auxerre and
Tonnerre from 1203 and the
count of
Nevers from 1226. He...
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Guigues IV may
refer to:
Guigues IV of
Albon Guigues IV of
Forez This
disambiguation page
lists articles about people with the same name. If an internal...
- San José Abbey,
Güigüe, Venezuela, is a
Benedictine abbey of the
Congregation of
Missionary Benedictines of
Saint Ottilien.
Currently located to the south...
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Guigues V (c. 1125 – 29 July 1162) was the
Count of
Albon and
Grenoble from 1142
until his death. He was the
first to take the
title Dauphin du Viennois...