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・ Helene Hayman, Baroness Hayman
・ Helene Hegarty
・ Helene Hegemann
・ Helene Hellmark Knutsson
・ Helene Hibben
・ Helene Holzman
・ Helene Hovanec
・ Helene J. Kantor
・ Helene J. Sinnreich
・ Helene Jacobs
・ Helene Jarmer
・ Helene Johnson
・ Helene Karastoyanova
・ Helene Keeley
・ Helene Kirkegaard
Helene Kottanner
・ Helene Kröller-Müller
・ Helene Kvint
・ Helene Lange
・ Helene Langevin
・ Helene Liebmann
・ Helene Macaulay
・ Helene Machado
・ Helene Madison
・ Helene Maimann
・ Helene Mambu
・ Helene Mayer
・ Helene Migerka
・ Helene Millard
・ Helene Mitterstieler


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Helene Kottanner : ウィキペディア英語版
Helene Kottanner
Helene Kottanner was a late-medieval woman born in Ödenburg (Sopron), in Hungary. Her last name is spelled variously as Kottanner, Kottanerin, or Kottannerin. She is primarily known to history as the author of memoirs about the years 1439 and 1440, when king Albrecht II of Germany died and his son Ladislaus the Posthumous was born. Helene Kottanner, who dictated her life story in German, was a handmaiden to Queen Elisabeth of Hungary (1409–1442). She also assisted Queen Elisabeth in a royal succession plot.
== Early life ==

Helene was born in a minor aristocratic family from the region of Ödenburg.
Helene married twice and bore two children. Her first husband was Peter Szekeles, who died in 1431. She then married Johann Kottanner, an aristocrat from Vienna. By 1436, both Helene and her second husband were servants of Albert the second, the then duke of Austria and his wife Elisabeth. Helene's role in this royal Habsburg household was nanny to the children of Albert and Elisabeth. Note that, according to the contemporary German custom of calling a wife or sometimes daughter, the alternative names ending in "-in" amount to adding a feminine suffix to her husband's name.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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