-
Radegund (Latin: Radegundis; also
spelled Rhadegund, Ra****nde, or Radigund; c. 520 – 13
August 587) was a
Thuringian princess and
Frankish queen, who...
-
farmer Franz Jägerstätter, born and
brought up in the
small village of St.
Radegund, is
working his land when war
breaks out.
Married to Franziska, colloquially...
- St.
Radegund is a muni****lity in the
district of
Braunau in the
Austrian state of
Upper Austria,
named after Saint Radegund. It is
situated at the western...
- 126801°E / 52.207676; 0.126801 St
Radegund is a pub in King Street, Cambridge, England. It is
named after St
Radegund, a
Frankish saint ****ociated with...
-
Raicunda (? - 512), also
known as Radikunda,
Radegunda or
Ranikunda was a
Lombardic queen consort. She was the
daughter of the
Thurinigian king Bisinus...
- St
Radegund's Priory,
Cambridge was a
Benedictine nunnery in Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England. It was
founded before 1144 (probably in the late 1130s)...
- St.
Radegund's Abbey at
Bradsole was a
medieval monastic house in the
parish of
Hougham Without near
Dover in
southeast England. It was
dedicated to Radegund...
-
mother was an
unmarried chambermaid named Rosalia Huber who
lived in
Sankt Radegund,
Upper Austria, a
small village between Salzburg and
Braunau am Inn where...
- St
Radegund's Church, Maplebeck, is a
Grade I
listed Church of
England parish church in the
Diocese of
Southwell and
Nottingham in Maplebeck. The church...
- had no children. His
second marriage,
which occurred around 532, was to
Radegund,
daughter of Bertachar, King of Thuringia, whom he and his
brother Theuderic...