Polyxena Of Lobkowicz

Polyxena of Lobkowicz (1566 – 24 May 1642) was a politically active Czech noble and styled Princess of the House of Lobkowicz.

She played an important role as the channel between the noble families of Bohemia and the imperial court in Vienna through her connection with the Spanish envoy during the counter-reformation in Bohemia after 1618.

Polyxena Of Lobkowicz
Princess Polyxena of Lobkowicz

Life

She was the daughter of the Imperial High Chancellor of Bohemia, Vratislav of Pernštejn (1530–1582), and a Spanish noblewoman, Maria Maximiliana Manrique de Lara y Mendoza. Maria brought with her from Spain a statue of the Child Jesus, which she had received as a wedding present. It became well-known for its purported miraculous healing powers.

Maria Pernštejn presented the statue to her daughter, upon Polyxena's marriage to the High Burgrave Wilhelm von Rosenberg in 1587. William died in 1592. In 1603, the widowed Polyxena married the Imperial High Chancellor Zdeněk Vojtěch Popel of Lobkowitz.

In 1618, the aging Emperor Matthias named his cousin Ferdinand of Styria his heir, and had him crowned King of Bohemia. Tensions increased between the Catholic Ferdinand and the Protestant nobles. The application of the Letter of Majesty was controversial in Bohemia. The Protestants argued that it allowed them to build churches on Crown and Catholic prelates' lands, but the Catholics did not accept their interpretation. In 1618 two of the Emperor's royal governors were thrown from the windows of Hradčany Castle by Protestant nobles. They survived the fall and took refuge from a mob in the Lobkowicz Palace below the castle, protected by Polyxena Lobkowicz. The Defenestration in Prague contributed to the subsequent Bohemian Revolt.

In 1628, Polyxena Pernštejn von Lobkowicz donated the statue to the Discalced Carmelites of the Carmelite Church of Our Lady Victorious. It became known as the Infant of Prague.

She is the ancestor of several royal families, including that of the Russian Emperors, the kings of Denmark and England, and others.

References

Bibliography

  • Petr Vorel: Páni z Pernštejna. Vzestup a pád rodu zubří hlavy v dějinách Čech a Moravy. Rybka, Prag 1999, ISBN 80-86182-24-X, S. 265, 267f., 271–274 und 276–280.

Tags:

House of Lobkowicz

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Leonardo da VinciSteve BuscemiWindows Server 2019Eve HarlowDavid KoreshThe Pirate BayCredit SuisseFirst Citizens BancSharesZachary LeviPornhubFall (2022 film)Diablo IVHundred Flowers CampaignAlexander the GreatJohn Wick (character)Mahatma GandhiSaudi ArabiaBBC World ServiceAmerican Customer Satisfaction IndexChernobyl disasterLouis XVTwitterUEFA European Championship qualifyingDalai LamaBarack ObamaRay KrocMalaysia Airlines Flight 370Yellowjackets (TV series)Grey's AnatomyHomi J. BhabhaArgentinaChiedozie OgbeneLiv TylerUnited States NavyLance ReddickAlbert EinsteinXXX (2002 film)ChatGPTRaghav ChadhaShou Zi ChewGoogle MapsShrinking (TV series)Clancy BrownList of American films of 2023MidjourneyMinecraftEurythmicsUFC 287Ashley Johnson (actress)Mel GibsonPrince Harry, Duke of SussexHong KongConor McGregorIOSFranklin D. RooseveltMalcolm XBob OdenkirkKate ForbesGeorge VIElizabeth IIShamier AndersonSydney SweeneyRRR (film)Internet Explorer 11Alexander SkarsgårdJeffrey DahmerRey MysterioCharles BarkleyYou (TV series)LeBron JamesUConn Huskies men's basketballLorem ipsumBoston Strangler (film)Windows Server 2016MississippiHelen HuntMusic🡆 More