King of Spain, the son of Emperor Charles V, Isabella of Portugal, b. May 21, 1527, in Valladolid; d. On September 13, 1598, at El Escorial. He has received science education, learned French and Latin, never told anything other than Castile, but he shows great interest in architecture and music. In 1543, he married his cousin Mary: The Portuguese died at the birth of Don Carlos (1535). He was appointed by the Charles V Committee as a Spanish regent. In 1554, he married 41-year-old Queen Mary of England.
The King of Bohindi in Bohemia is a supporter of the Catholics. Things were starting to runaway and asked his cousin, Philippe IV of Spain, to seek help. At this point in the war, the two kings (Ferdinand and Philip) backed the Catholics, the Lutheran people had Sweden and Denmark, and the Calvinist still had a group of people with torch and rake was. Subsequent participation in the war in France was a supporter of the Lutheran school. France has stronger Catholic consciousness throughout the country, but the French king seems to have problems with the Holy Roman Empire and Spain, and decided to help them oppose it. France, Sweden, Denmark won the victory in partnership with German Lutheran.
In 1303, at the University of Paris, John Dunn Scotts was exiled from Paris by the King of Philip IV of France. King Philip IV discusses taxation of church property with Pope Boniface VII, and John Dunn Scotts often oppose Philip's claim of Brant II. He was quickly returned and he returned to Paris University to lecture until 1307 when sent to Cologne in Germany. It was here that he spent his last year of lecture and then died on November 8, 1308. His most important work is two pairs of comments on texts and papers on Quodlibetic, metaphysical problems and first principles.