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  1. Kunigunde was first betrothed to Hartmann of Germany in 1277, a son of Rudolf I of Germany and his first wife Gertrude of Hohenberg. The marriage was intended to create peace between Germany and Bohemia. However, the engagement ended within a year. Despite this, Kunigunde's brother, Wenceslaus married Hertmann's sister, Judith of Habsburg in

  2. kunigunde, german empress, st. German empress also known as Cunegunda; b. c. 980; d. convent of Kaufungen, Hesse, Germany, March 3, 1033 or 1039. The daughter of Count Siegfried of Luxembourg, Kunigunde married Duke Henry IV of Bavaria, the future Emperor henry ii, c. 998.

  3. This Nazi Germany timeline includes critical dates that led to the rise and fall of the Third Reich, the Holocaust, and the beginning of World War 2

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  5. Life. Kunigunde was first betrothed to Hartmann of Germany in 1277, a son of Rudolf I of Germany and his first wife Gertrude of Hohenberg. The marriage was intended to create peace between Germany and Bohemia. However, the engagement ended within a year.

  6. Kunigunde soon moved to Prague, where her fiancé Wenceslaus lived. He was the eldest surviving son of Ottokar I of Bohemia and his second wife Constance of Hungary. In 1224, Kunigunde married Wenceslaus. They were crowned in 1228. In 1230, Wenceslaus succeeded his father as King of Bohemia, with Kunigunde as his queen consort. However, Queen ...

  7. Cunegunde (1465–1520) Duchess of Bavaria. Name variations: Cunigunde, Kunigunde. Born on March 16, 1465, in Wiener Neustadt; died on August 8, 1520, in Munich; daughter of Eleanor of Portugal (1434–1467) and Frederick III, king of Germany and Holy Roman emperor (r. 1440–1493); sister of Maximilian I, Holy Roman emperor (r. 1493–1519 ...

  8. Wenceslaus II of Bohemia (17 September 1271 – 21 June 1305). Queen and regent of Bohemia. However, the peace between Bohemia and Hungary ended after 10 years, when Kunigunda's uncle Stephen came to power as the King of Hungary. In 1278, King Ottokar tried to recover his lands lost to Rudolph I of Germany in 1276.

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