Zrínyi IV. Countess Ilona is one of the heroines of Hungarian history, II. Mother of Ferenc Rákóczi. In 1699 she accompanied her husband Imre Thököly to Turkish exile. In Izmit, (Nicomedia), in 1703. His skull, together with the remains of his son, was laid to rest in its sarcophagus on October 29, 1906, in St. Elizabeth's Cathedral in Kassa.("Nagyapja, a már említett Frangepán Farkas Kristóf diáriuma nem hagy kétséget afelől, hogy Zrínyi Ilona 1649. március 20-án éjjel, 11 és 12 óra között a Muraközben született, vélhetően Podbreszten látta meg a napvilágot. A horvát nyelvű naplóbejegyzés eddig elkerülte a téma magyar és horvát kutatóinak figyelmét…" Hadtörténeti közlemények, 2020 -04 sz.)Zrínyi IV. Countess Ilona is one of the heroines of Hungarian history, II. Mother of Ferenc Rákóczi. In 1699 she accompanied her husband Imre Thököly to Turkish exile. In Izmit, (Nicomedia), in 1703. His skull, together with the remains of his son, was laid to rest in its sarcophagus in St. Elizabeth's Cathedral in Kassa on October 29, 1906. " The Croatian-language diary entry has so far escaped the attention of Hungarian and Croatian researchers on the subject… "Military History Bulletins, 2020 -04.)
Zrínyi IV. Countess Ilona is one of the heroines of Hungarian history, II. Mother of Ferenc Rákóczi. In 1699 she accompanied her husband Imre Thököly to Turkish exile. In Izmit, (Nicomedia), in 1703. His skull, together with the remains of his son, was laid to rest in its sarcophagus on October 29, 1906, in St. Elizabeth's Cathedral in Kassa.("Nagyapja, a már említett Frangepán Farkas Kristóf diáriuma nem hagy kétséget afelől, hogy Zrínyi Ilona 1649. március 20-án éjjel, 11 és 12 óra között a Muraközben született, vélhetően Podbreszten látta meg a napvilágot. A horvát nyelvű naplóbejegyzés eddig elkerülte a téma magyar és horvát kutatóinak figyelmét…" Hadtörténeti közlemények, 2020 -04 sz.)Zrínyi IV. Countess Ilona is one of the heroines of Hungarian history, II. Mother of Ferenc Rákóczi. In 1699 she accompanied her husband Imre Thököly to Turkish exile. In Izmit, (Nicomedia), in 1703. His skull, together with the remains of his son, was laid to rest in its sarcophagus in St. Elizabeth's Cathedral in Kassa on October 29, 1906. " The Croatian-language diary entry has so far escaped the attention of Hungarian and Croatian researchers on the subject… "Military History Bulletins, 2020 -04.)
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