- Ulf the
Quarrelsome, or Ulf Hreda, is
described in
Njals Saga as a
brother to
Brian Boru, High King of
Ireland from 1002 to 1014. He is
primarily mentioned...
-
Christian I,
known as "the
Quarrelsome" (died 1167), was
Count of
Oldenburg from 1143 to 1167. He was son of
Elimar II,
Count of
Oldenburg and wife Eilika...
-
Louis X (4
October 1289 – 5 June 1316),
known as the
Quarrelsome (French: le Hutin), was King of
France from 1314 and King of
Navarre (as
Louis I) from...
-
Henry II (951 – 28
August 995),
called the
Wrangler or the
Quarrelsome (German:
Heinrich der Zänker), a
member of the
German royal Ottonian dynasty, was...
- his
vocal layering to "standing in the middle, unnoticed, of a
large quarrelsome crowd."
Praised for his
willingness to use his
voice as an instrument...
-
Friedrich II.; 25
April 1211 – 15 June 1246),
known as
Frederick the
Quarrelsome (Friedrich der Streitbare), was Duke of
Austria and
Styria from 1230...
-
career women,
include referring to some as "medicated,
meddlesome and
quarrelsome", led to a
Title IX
investigation and his
being charged with
civil rights...
-
Eberhard II (1315 – 15
March 1392),
nicknamed the
Quarrelsome (German: der Greiner), was
Count of Württemberg from 1344
until his
death in 1392. He ruled...
-
modern English to mean a violent, overbearing, turbulent, brawling,
quarrelsome woman; a virago, shrew, or vixen. In the past, the word
could be applied...
-
While the Yuga
Purana section of the
Gargi Samhita mentions him as a
quarrelsome,
unrighteous ruler, he is also
noted as
being of "righteous words" In...