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  1. Margaret of Bohemia (German: Margarete von Böhmen; 1313–11 July 1341), also Margaret of Luxembourg (Czech: Markéta Lucemburská), was the daughter of John of Luxembourg, King of Bohemia by his first wife, Elizabeth of Bohemia.

  2. Margaret was the second child of her father's first marriage. Her older brother, whose name is unknown, died in childhood. Her younger sister was Catherine of Bohemia, who was Duchess consort in both Austria and Bavaria. Margaret's father remarried several times after the death of Blanche in 1348.

    • Prague (Praha), Kingdom of Bohemia
    • I. Nagy Lajos
    • Kingdom of Bohemia
    • May 25, 1335
  3. Margaret (13951447) Duchess of Bavaria . Name variations: Margarethe. Born on June 26, 1395, in Vienna; died on December 24, 1447, in Burghausen; daughter of Johanna of Bavaria (c. 1373–1410) and Albrecht also known as Albert IV (1377–1404), duke of Austria (r. 1395–1404); sister of Albert V (1397–1439), duke of Austria (r. 1404 ...

  4. Margaret, nicknamed Maultasch (1318 – 3 October 1369), was the last Countess of Tyrol from the House of Gorizia (Meinhardiner), and an unsuccessful claimant to the Duchy of Carinthia. Upon her death, Tyrol became united with the Austrian hereditary lands of the Habsburg dynasty.

  5. Margaret of Brieg. Margaret of Bavaria (1363 – 23 January 1424, Dijon) was Duchess of Burgundy by marriage to John the Fearless. She was the regent of the Burgundian Low Countries during the absence of her spouse in 1404–1419 [1] and the regent in French Burgundy during the absence of her son in 1419–1423. [1]

  6. Margaret of Bohemia, Duchess of Bavaria explained. Margaret of Bohemia (1313–1341) was the daughter of King John of Bohemia by his first wife Elizabeth of Bohemia. Family. Margaret was an elder sister of the future Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV, who was crowned in 1349.

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  8. Prague, The Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437, the companion to a landmark exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, celebrates the remarkable flowering of art that took place in Prague as the city emerged as a European cultural capital.

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