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  2. Margaret of Bohemia (24 May 1335 – 1349, before October), also known as Margaret of Luxembourg, was a Queen consort of Hungary by her marriage to Louis I of Hungary. She was the second child of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor by his first wife Blanche of Valois. She was a member of the House of Luxembourg. Life

  3. Margaret of Bohemia (24 May 1335–1349, before October), also known as Margaret of Luxembourg, was the second child of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor by his first wife Blanche of Valois. She was a member of the House of Luxembourg and was Queen consort of Hungary by her marriage.

    • Prague (Praha), Kingdom of Bohemia
    • I. Nagy Lajos
    • Kingdom of Bohemia
  4. Sep 24, 2020 · Royal Women and the Black Death. Thursday, 24 September 2020, 6:00 CaraBeth Blanche of Burgundy, Bonne of Bohemia, Catherine of Austria, Eleanor of Portugal (1328 -1348), Elizabeth of Sicily, Joan II of Navarre, Joan of Burgundy, Joan of England, Margaret of Bohemia, The Royal Women 1. (public domain)

    • Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary1
    • Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary2
    • Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary3
    • Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary4
    • Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary5
    • Blanche de Valois
    • Anne of Palatinate
    • Anne of Świdnica
    • Elizabeth of Pomerania

    Charles’s first marriage was arranged by his father, King John (the Blind) of Bohemia in 1323. The details were discussed and a deal was struck during a meeting with Philip IV of France at Toulouse. Charles was to marry Philip’s niece, Margaret called Blanche, the daughter of Count Charles of Valois and his third wife Mahaut de Chatillon. At the ti...

    Charles married his second wife on 11 March 1349. Her name was Anne and she was the daughter of Rudolph II of Bavaria. This marriage was a result of Charles’s policy to break up the forming Wittelsbach coalition and consolidate his position in Germany, which he did. He was crowned King of the Romans on 25 July 1349 at Aachen. Anne was crowned the f...

    Thirty-seven years old, widowed, and without a male heir, Charles decided to marry his late son’s fiancee and thus secure the Świdnica inheritance. The union received a papal sanction obtained by Archbishop Arnost of Pardubice. Anne was the only child of Henry II of Świdnica, the grandson of King Władysław I of Poland (Ladislaus the Elbowhigh). On ...

    Stricken with grief after Anne’s death, Charles did not remarry until a political situation forced him to. There was a coalition forming against him. The kings of Poland and Hungary and the dukes of Austria and Bavaria had united against him. In July 1362 Casimir the Great of Poland and his nephew Louis the Great of Hungary were gathering with thei...

  5. Mary of Austria (15 September 1505 – 18 October 1558), also known as Mary of Hungary, was queen of Hungary and Bohemia 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. Their marriage was happy ...

  6. May 10, 2016 · Matthias Hauser/imageBROKER/Corbis. Margaret Island is a 225-acre spit of silt that bubbled up eons ago on the Danube River in the middle of what is now Budapest, the Hungarian capital....

  7. Margaret of Bohemia, Duchess of Bavaria (1313-1341), daughter of John the Blind and Elisabeth I of Bohemia, married Henrich XIV of Bavaria. Margaret of Bohemia, Queen of Hungary (1335-1349), daughter of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, and Blanche of Valois, married Louis I of Hungary.

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