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  1. Apr 28, 2022 · circa 1120. Birthplace: Isenburg, Germany. Death: Sayn, Germany. Immediate Family: Daughter of Rembold II, Graf von Isenburg Limburg and Katharina von Arnstein, Gräfin von Isenburg-Braunsberg. Wife of Count Eberhard (I) of Saffenberg, Count of Sayn. Mother of Mechtild von Sayn and Heinrich II von Sayn, Graf von Saffenberg.

  2. Wenceslaus I Premyslid (Czech Václav) (c. 1205 September 23, 1253) was King of Bohemia from 1230 to 1253. Wenceslaus was the son of Ottokar I and Konstancia, daughter of Bela III, King of Hungary. He married Kunigunde of Hohenstaufen, daughter of Philip of Swabia, King of Germany. He encouraged large numbers of Germans to settle in the ...

  3. Oct 27, 2019 · According to the Annales Alamannici, Cunigunde married in 913 King Conrad I of Germany who was striving to strengthen the ties with the Bavarian stem duchy.[1] The marriage left no male heirs; two children are assumed, both born 913: Herman, who died young, and Cunigunda, who married Werner of Worms and was possibly the mother of Conrad the Red ...

  4. Dec 11, 2017 · The Kingdom of Bohemia was founded in 1198 from the Duchy of Bohemia by Ottokar I of Bohemia. It was officially recognised in 1212 by the Golden Bull of Sicily. Ottokar was married to Adelheid of Meissen. They had four daughters and divorced in 1199. Adelheid was thus the first Queen consort of Bohemia but did not enjoy it for very long.

  5. The Province of German Bohemia ( German: Provinz Deutschböhmen [ˈdɔʏtʃbøːmən] ⓘ; Czech: Německé Čechy) was a province in Bohemia, now the Czech Republic, established for a short period of time after the First World War, as part of the Republic of German-Austria . It included parts of northern and western Bohemia, at that time ...

  6. Kunigunde of Sternberg (Czech: Kunhuta ze Šternberka; 18 November 1425, Konopiště – 19 November 1449, Poděbrady) was the first wife of George of Poděbrady, who later became King of Bohemia. Life. Kunigunde's parents were the Bohemian nobles Smil of Sternberg (d. 1431) and Barbara of Pardubice (d. 1433).

  7. This article considers the Passional of Abbess Kunigunde of Bohemia (National Library of Prague / Národní knihovna České republiky, Praha, Ms.XIV.A.17), a manuscript dating from 1312-14. Users have intentionally damaged several of the images in the book, but seemingly for different reasons.

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