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  1. Mary, also known as Maria of Anjou ( Hungarian: Anjou Mária, Croatian: Marija Anžuvinska, Polish: Maria Andegaweńska; 1371 – 17 May 1395), reigned as Queen of Hungary and Croatia between 1382 and 1385, and from 1386 until her death. She was the daughter of Louis the Great, King of Hungary and Poland, and his wife, Elizabeth of Bosnia.

  2. Mary of Austria (15 September 1505 – 18 October 1558), also known as Mary of Hungary, was queen of Hungary and Bohemia [note 1] as the wife of King Louis II, and was later governor of the Habsburg Netherlands . The daughter of Queen Joanna and King Philip I of Castile, Mary married King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia in 1515.

  3. Sep 17, 2022 · Mary, Queen of Hungary. Louis, whose health was quickly deteriorating, invited the representatives of the Polish prelates and lord for a meeting in Zólyom. Upon his demand, the Poles swore loyalty to his daughter, Mary, and her fiancé, Sigismund of Luxemburg, on 25 July 1382. Louis died in Nagyszombat in the night on 10 or 11 September 1382.

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  5. b. 1505, Brussels; d. 1558, Spain. Mary (Maria), the daughter of King Philip I of Spain, married Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia. She was the queen consort of Hungary-Bohemia for four years (1522–26), until her husband’s death. In 1531, her brother, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (ruled 1519–56), appointed her governor-general of the Low ...

  6. Mary of Hungary. 1553 - 1564. Bronze. Together with her brother Charles V, Mary of Hungary (1505–1558) was Leone Leoni’s most important patron at the imperial court. Leoni and Mary, governor of the Low Countries, met on three occasions: in Brussels in 1549, in Augsburg three years later, and again in Brussels in 1556.The present bronze ...

  7. Mary of Austria. The daughter of Queen Joanna and King Philip I of Castile, Mary married King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia in 1515. Their marriage was happy but short and childless. Upon her husband's death following the Battle of Mohács in 1526, Queen Mary governed Hungary as regent in the name of the new king, her brother, Ferdinand I.

  8. Mary of Hungary, Renaissance Patron and Collector. Gender, Art and Culture. By Noelia García Pérez, ed. Centre d’Études Supérieures de la Renaissance, Université de Tours, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique: Collection Études Renaissance. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2020. 231 pp, 51 illus in b&w and color. ISBN 978-2-503 ...

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