Anne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia

Anne of Bohemia and Austria (12 April 1432 – 13 November 1462) was a Duchess of Luxembourg in her own right and, as a consort, Landgravine of Thuringia and of Saxony.

Anne of Bohemia and Austria
Anne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia
Anne of Austria by Anton Boys
Born(1432-04-12)12 April 1432
Vienna
Died13 November 1462(1462-11-13) (aged 30)
Eckartsberga
Noble familyHouse of Habsburg
Spouse(s)William III, Duke of Luxemburg
IssueMargaret of Thuringia
FatherAlbert II of Germany
MotherElisabeth of Luxembourg

Life

Anne was the eldest daughter of Albert of Austria, the future Emperor-Elect and Elisabeth of Luxembourg, Queen of Bohemia, the sole descendant of Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor. Her underage brother Ladislaus, Duke of Austria (1440–57) succeeded, as king of Bohemia and later also as king of Hungary. Anne also had a younger sister, Elisabeth, who later became Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania.

On 2 June 1446, at the age of 14, Anne was married to William "the Brave" of Saxony (1425–82), Landgrave of Thuringia, a younger son of Frederick I "the Warlike" of Saxony. In right of Anne, William became Duke of Luxembourg from 1457 when Anne's brother Ladislaus died childless. Though, their rights to the land were disputed by Philip III, Duke of Burgundy, and in 1469, William concluded that the possession's keeping was untenable against Burgundian attacks, and retreated to his Thuringian lands – that however took place when Anne was already dead.

Wilhelm rejected Anna after the death of her brother, since she was no longer useful to him in the power struggles. He instead turned to his lover Katharina von Brandenstein. Anna was kept until her death in the castle Eckartsburg. She once tried to go back to her husband, bit he is said to have "welcomed" her by throwing a shoe in her face and to have immediately sent her back. Anna died at the age of 30 and was buried in the monastery Reinhardsbrunn. Wilhelm married Katharina shortly after.

Marriage and issue

Anna and Wilhelm had two surviving daughters:

Ancestry

References

Sources

  • Wilson, Peter H. (2016). Heart of Europe: A History of the Holy Roman Empire. The Belknap Press.

Tags:

Anne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia LifeAnne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia Marriage and issueAnne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia AncestryAnne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia SourcesAnne Of Austria, Landgravine Of Thuringia

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Humane (film)Rinku Singh (cricketer)Chris LoweGary GlitterBharatiya Janata PartyKilling EveDream11FC BarcelonaKingdom of the Planet of the ApesReggie BushList of American films of 2024Fallout 76Algebraic notation (chess)Edward VIIIHamasHyderabad Lok Sabha constituencyVladimir PutinDubaiMamitha BaijuRichard Williams (tennis coach)Tupac ShakurDeaths in 2024Jim Harbaugh2022 NFL draftKim KardashianLaiatu LatuWinston ChurchillTLC (group)ItalyArticle 370 of the Constitution of IndiaBill CosbyThe Amazing Race 36EFL ChampionshipEuropeElvis PresleyAlien (film)Bryce Young2024 Mutua Madrid Open – Men's singlesBlinding LightsTemperatureDakota FanningSaint GeorgeMarvin HarrisonChallengers (film)2024 United States presidential electionTravis KelceAl PacinoChanning TatumDevin HaneyOpinion polling for the 2024 Indian general electionUnited Arab EmiratesDarvin HamSine and cosineWe Were the Lucky OnesSam DarnoldElection Commission of IndiaBob Cole (sportscaster)Jordan Morgan (American football, born 2001)Queens Park Rangers F.C.FlipkartVietnam WarFallout (video game)Arsenal F.C.Kristen StewartFeyenoordD. John SauerXavier WorthyLadd McConkey2019 Indian general electionTwitch (service)Mia KhalifaIndiGoYandex.ZenJohn Wayne GacySean Foley (director)SingaporeDownload🡆 More