Anne of Austria, Margravine of Brandenburg
Anna of Austria (1275–1327) was a daughter of Albert I of Germany and his wife Elisabeth of Tirol. She was a member of the House of Habsburg.
Anna of Austria | |
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Image of Anna from the 15th century | |
Margravine of Brandenburg | |
Tenure | 1295–1327 |
Born | 1275 Vienna Austria |
Died | 1327 Legnica |
Spouse | Herman, Margrave of Brandenburg-Salzwedel Henry VI the Good |
Issue | Judith, Count of Henneberg John V, Margrave of Brandenburg Matilde, Duchess of Greater Poland Agnes, Margravine of Brandenburg Elisabeth, Duchess of Oleśnica Euphemia Margaret |
House | House of Habsburg |
Father | Albert I of Germany |
Mother | Elisabeth of Tirol |
First marriage
Anna first married in 1295 in Graz. Her husband was Herman, Margrave of Brandenburg-Salzwedel. They had four children:
- Jutta of Brandenburg (1301–1353), heiress of Coburg, married to Count Henry VIII of Henneberg
- John (1302–1317), succeeded his father, but died young
- Matilde of Brandenburg (died 1323) married Henry IV the Faithful
- Agnes of Brandenburg (1297–1334), heiress of the Altmark, married with margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg (1281–1381) and in 1319 to Duke Otto of Brunswick-Göttingen (1290–1344).
In 1308, Herman died, and their son John succeeded him.
Second marriage
In 1310 Anna married Henry VI the Good, Duke of Wrocław,[1] son of Henry V the Fat and his wife Elisabeth of Greater Poland. They had three daughters:
- Elisabeth of Brieg (ca. 1311 – 20 February? 1328), married before 10 January 1322 to Duke Konrad I of Oleśnica.
- Euphemia of Brieg (Ofka) (ca. 1312 – 21 March after 1384), married before 29 November 1325 to Duke Bolesław the Elder of Niemodlin (Falkenberg).
- Margaret of Brieg (ca. 1313 – 8 March 1379), Abbess of St. Clara in Wrocław (1359).
Anna died in 1327 in Legnica. She left her husband a widower, and she had failed to produce a son. When her husband died ten years later, Wrocław was merged with the Bohemian crown.
References
- Marek, Miroslav. "Complete Genealogy of the House of Piast: Silesia". Genealogy.EU.
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