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Halshany (Belarusian: Гальшаны, romanized: Haĺšany; Russian: Гольшаны, romanized: Golshany; Lithuanian: Alšėnai, Galšia; Polish: Holszany; Yiddish: אלשאן...
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Halshany or
Holszany Castle (Belarusian: Гальшанскі замак, Lithuanian: Alšėnų pilis, Polish:
Zamek holszański) is the
ruined residence of the
Sapieha magnate...
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Sophia of
Halshany (Lithuanian:
Sofija Alšėniškė; Belarusian: Софья Гальшанская, romanized: Sofja Halšanskaja; Polish:
Zofia Holszańska; c. 1405 – 21 September...
- Władysław II Jagiełło (Jogaila) and the
Lithuanian noblewoman Sophia of
Halshany. Władysław's
succeeded his
father shortly before turning ten in 1434 and...
- Władysław II Jagiełło (known as Jogaila) and his
fourth wife,
Sophia of
Halshany. Casimir's
mother was 40 to 50
years younger than his father,
which caused...
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Princess Uliana Olshanska (Lithuanian:
Julijona Alšėniškė or
Julijona Vytautienė, Polish:
Julianna Holszańska; d. 1448) was a
noblewoman from the Alšėniškiai...
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fourth wife of King Władysław Jagiełło in 1424. His
patrimony consisted of
Halshany, Iwye, Hlusk,
Porechye and others. Ivan
first appears as one of Jogaila's...
- 1420
without bearing him a child. Two
years later, he
married Sophia of
Halshany (niece of
Uliana Olshanska), who bore him two
surviving sons : Władysław...
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marrying Jadwiga and p****ed on the
kingdom to his
children with
Sophia of
Halshany).
Kings jure
uxoris in the
medieval era include:
Philip I of Navarre, who...
- in 1431
amidst rumors that she was
poisoned by her
stepmother Sophia of
Halshany. She was the only
daughter of King of
Poland and
Supreme Duke of Lithuania...