Lista de Personas Famosas con el apellido Ii
Anastasio II
Anastasios II Artemios, en español Anastasio II Artemio o Anastasio II, fue un emperador bizantino que gobernó el imperio unos pocos años a principios del siglo VIII (713-715).
Susenyos II
Susenyos II was nəgusä nägäst of Ethiopia. His name at birth was Wolde Giyorgis; he was the son of a noble woman who had lost her fortune and made her living by carrying jars of water, while it was rumored that he was the illegitimate son of the deceased ruler Iyasu II. The Scottish traveller James Bruce, who was living in the capital city of Gondar at the time, described him as "a drunkard, a ruffian, and a profligate".
Aji Muhammad Salehuddin II
Hajji Aji Prabu Anum Prince Surya Adiningrat, entitled Sultan Haji Aji Muhammad Salehuddin II bin Sultan Adji Muhammad Parikesit or also called Prince Praboe was an Indonesian royal and politician who was Kutai Sultan of the Kutai Kartanegara Sultanate.
Abu Dabus
Abu Dabús, conocido también como Idrís II, fue el último califa de la dinastía almohade. Rigió el imperio desde Marrakech entre los años 1266 y 1269, fecha en que fue asesinado por un esclavo.
Takahashi Chikuzan II
Sōju Nosaka II
Sōju Nosaka II was a prominent Japanese koto player, specializing in contemporary music. Her real name was Keiko Nosaka .
Mahmud Badaruddin II
Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin II (1767–1852) was the 8th Sultan of the Palembang Sultanate and is now regarded as a National Hero of Indonesia. He is featured in pre-2016 Rp.10,000 banknotes.
Víctor II
Víctor II de nombre secular Gebhard de Dollnstein-Hirschberg fue el papa 153.er de la Iglesia católica, de 1055 a 1057.
Mangkunegara II
Mangkunegara II, also known as Prince Adipati Prangwedana I, Prince Surya Mataram, Prince Surya Mangkubumi, was the second ruler of Mangkunegaran in Java in the eighteenth century who succeeded to the throne of his grandfather, Mangkunegara I. His reign lasted from 1796 to 1835. Mangkunegara II was the son of Crown Prince Arya Prabumijaya I, who was the son of Mangkunegara I. Upon his death in 1835, he was the last male descendant Prince Sambernyawa to be named the Duke of Mangkunegaran.
Master of Jean Rolin II
The Master of Jean Rolin II, also known as Rolin Master and Missel de Jean Rolin, was an anonymous artist who worked in Paris as a book illuminator for wealthy people including members of the court of Charles VII. The name comes from the work he did for Jean Rolin II, who was the cardinal-bishop of Autun. His work is part of the increase in specialized book production seen in Paris as a response to the growing commissions from lay people and the University of Paris. From 1445 to 1465 he worked in Paris together with other anonymous artists on books that included the Book of Hours of Simon de Varie. Spencer published an account of his style in 1963.