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Hedwig of Bavaria. Hedwig also Heilwig, [1] ( c. 778 – c. 835) was a Saxon noblewoman, abbess of Chelles, [1] the wife of Count Welf, and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter. [2] Life. Hedwig was possibly born at Altdorf in the Frankish lands of Alamannia (present-day Germany).
Jan 21, 2023 · Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria. Hedwig (c. 778 – after 833) was a Saxon noble woman, the wife of Count Welf I and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter. Tunnettu myös nimellä: Eigilwich of Bavaria HEDWIG or EDITH Ava Bava de Morvois. Life.
- Altdorf, Mittelfranken, Bayern
- Welf I, Count in Swabia
- Bayern
Hedwig Jagiellon (Polish: Jadwiga Jagiellonka, Lithuanian: Jadvyga Jogailaitė, German: Hedwig Jagiellonica; 21 September 1457 – 18 February 1502), baptized as "Hedwigis", was a Polish princess and member of the Jagiellonian dynasty, as well as Duchess of Bavaria by marriage.
May 28, 2015 · Duchess of Bavaria; Abbess of Chelles Hedwig (c. 778 – after 833) was a Saxon noble woman, the wife of Count Welf I and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter. She was possibly born at Altdorf in the Frankish lands of Alamannia (present-day Germany). According to Bishop...
Aug 21, 2022 · Hedwig von Babenberg (Hadwig, Hatui) 1. ( [850/55]-24 Dec 903). "Hathwiga" is named as wife of Otto in the Annalista Saxo, which in an earlier passage records that Heinrich I King of Germany was the son of the sister of Adalbert [Babenberg]. Her birth date is estimated from the birth of her third son in 876.
- Bamberg, Herzogtum Bayern
- Otto I The Illustrious, Duke of Saxony
- Herzogtum Bayern
LIFE, DEATH, COMMEMORATION AND MEMORY OF HEDWIG JAGIELLON, THE DUCHESS OF BAVARIA-LANDSHUT, BORN QUEEN OF POLAND (1457 – 1502) - Studia Historica Nitriensia - Volume 25, Issue 2 (2021) - CEJSH - Yadda.
Overview. Hedwig. (c. 1174—1243) Quick Reference. ( c. 1174–1243), duchess of Silesia. Born at Andechs (Bavaria), the daughter of count Berthold, she lived as a child in the monastery of Kitzingen. At the age of twelve she married Henry, future duke of Silesia, then eighteen years old, who succeeded his father in 1202.