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      • Agnes, daughter of Ottokar II Agnes (before 1260 – after 1279) was a natural daughter of Bohemian king Ottokar II with his mistress Agnes of Kuenring. She married Bohemian nobleman Bavor II of Strakonice. They had three children, Bavor III, Mikuláš and Vilém. After his death she married Borsa Kàrolyi.
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  2. Agnes (before 1260 – after 1279) was a natural daughter of Bohemian king Ottokar II with his mistress Agnes of Kuenring. She married Bohemian nobleman Bavor II of Strakonice. They had three children, Bavor III, Mikuláš and Vilém. After his death she married Borsa Kàrolyi. Bibliography. SVOBODA, Miroslav.

  3. Hungarian princess who popularized the Franciscan order in Bohemia. Born in Prague in 1205; died in 1282; daughter of Otakar or Ottokar I, king of Bohemia and Hungary (r. 1198–1230), and Constance of Hungary (d. 1240); sister of Wenceslas I (1205–1253), king of Bohemia (r. 1230–1253); joined the Order of the Poor Clares.

  4. Agnes of Kuenring (ca. 1236 - fl. 1261), was an Austrian noble, courtier of Queen Margaret of Austria and mistress of her spouse, King Ottokar II of Bohemia. She was the first historically documented mistress of a Bohemian sovereign.

    • Rise to Power
    • Building An Empire
    • The Path to The Final Battle
    • Marriage and Children
    • Legacy
    • Sources
    • Further Reading

    When his brother Vladislaus died in 1247, Ottokar suddenly became the heir to the Bohemian throne. According to popular oral tradition, he was profoundly shocked by his brother's death and did not involve himself in politics, becoming focused on hunting and drinking. His father appointed the new heir as Margrave of Moravia, and Ottokar took up resi...

    Feeling threatened by Ottokar's growing regional power beyond the Leitha River, his cousin King Béla IV of Hungary challenged the young king. Béla formed a loose alliance with the Wittelsbach duke Otto II of Bavaria and tried to install his own son Stephen as Duke of Styria, which since 1192 had been ruled in personal union with Austria under the t...

    After Richard of Cornwall died in April 1272 and Pope Gregory X rejected the claims raised by Alfonso of Castile, a new election for the Imperial German throne took place in 1273. However, the Bohemian king again failed to win the Imperial crown, as the electors voted for the "little count" Rudolf of Habsburg, Ottokar's last and finally victorious ...

    On 11 February 1252, Přemysl Ottokar II married Margaret of Austria. Margaret was 26 years older than he, and the couple's childless marriage ended with an annulment. On 25 October 1261, Ottokar married Kunigunda of Slavonia.They probably had four children: 1. Henry (1262–1263) 2. Kunigunde (January 1265 – 27 November 1321), married Boleslaus II of...

    Přemysl Ottokar is considered one of the greatest kings of Bohemia, along with Charles IV. He was a founder of many new towns (about 30 — not only in Bohemia, Moravia and Silesia, but also in Austria and Styria) and incorporated many existing settlements through civic charters, giving them new privileges. He was a strong proponent of trade, law and...

    Engel, Pál (2005). Realm of St. Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary. I.B. Tauris.
    Gladysz, Mikolaj (2012). The Forgotten Crusaders: Poland and the Crusader Movement in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century. Brill.
    Kuthan, Jiří (1996). Přemysl Ottokar II(in German). Translated by Cemus, Petronilla; Reinerova, Lenka; Sedmidubska, Ursel. Bohlau Verlag Wien.
    Ochab, Jeremi K.; Škvrňák, Jan; Škvrňák, Michael (2022). "Detecting Ottokar II's 1248–1249 uprising and its instigators in co-witnessing networks". Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and...
  5. Jan 29, 2019 · By then, Agnes was a respected figure. In 1277, she took in her great-niece, Cunigunde of Bohemia, the daughter of her brother’s son King Ottokar II. The following year, Agnes had a vision of Ottokars death and he indeed died in battle soon after. During the occupation that following, Agnes supported his widow Kunigunda (born of Halych).

  6. His mother Agnes was a daughter of Ottokar II Přemysl, the powerful adversary of the Habsburgs in the struggle for the Babenberg inheritance. After Ottokars death in the Battle on the Marchfeld in 1278 Rudolf II was married to his daughter.

  7. Prague, Bohemia, c. 1200 – 1205?; d. Prague, Bohemia, March 2, 1281 or 1282; canonized by Pope John Paul II, Nov. 12, 1989. Agnes, daughter of Ottokar I, King of Bohemia, and Constance of Hungary, the sister of King Andreas II of Hungary, received her early education from the Cistercian nuns of Trebnitz.

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