Top 10 similar words or synonyms for listenois

montboissier    0.744826

guisla    0.739707

fulcois    0.735110

orchimont    0.732035

witthem    0.727463

vignory    0.725948

haspengau    0.725618

puygaillard    0.724991

wargnies    0.724834

bauffremont    0.722026

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for listenois

Article Example
Bauffremont Two members of the family have been members of the Order of the Golden Fleece: Louis Bénigne, Marquis of Bauffremont and Prince de Listenois (1684–1755) in 1711 and Charles Roger, Prince of Bauffremont-Listenois (1713–1795) in 1789.
Joseph de Bauffremont Joseph de Bauffremont, Prince of Listenois (1714–1781), was a member of the Bauffremont family, and a French Navy officer under Louis XIV. He was a commander in the Seven Years' War. On 16 March 1757 his squadron captured the 50-gun , commanded by Captain Robert Roddam, off Saint-Domingue.
Bauffremont In consequence of an alliance with the house of Vergy, the Bauffremonts established themselves in Burgundy and Franche-Comté. In 1448 Pierre de Bauffremont, lord of Charny, married Marie, a legitimized daughter of Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy. In 1527 the family acquired by marriage the properties of the Vienne-Listenois family.
Bauffremont The head of the house uses the following titles: "prince-duc de Bauffremont, prince de Courtenay et de Carency, prince et marquis de Listenois et de Marnay, comte et duc de Pont de Vaux, vicomte de Marigny et de Salins, cousin du roi". The cadet members of the house use the titles, "prince de Bauffremont, prince de Marnay".
Fisher King King Pelles is the name of the Maimed King in some versions of the Arthurian legend. Pelles is one of a line of Grail keepers established by Joseph of Arimathea, the father of Eliazer and Elaine (the mother of Galahad), and he resides in the castle of Corbinec in Listenois. Pelles and his relative Pellehan appear in both the Vulgate (Lancelot-Grail) and Post-Vulgate Cycles, as well as in later works, such as Malory's "Le Morte d'Arthur" (in which Pellehan is called Pellam). In the Vulgate, Pelles is the son of Pellehan, but the Post-Vulgate is less clear about their relationship. It is even murkier in Malory's work: one passage explicitly identifies them (book XVIII, chapter 5), though this is contradicted elsewhere.