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  1. The Counts of Celje (Slovene: Celjski grofje) or the Counts of Cilli (German: Grafen von Cilli; Hungarian: cillei grófok) were the most influential late medieval noble dynasty on the territory of present-day Slovenia.

  2. Princess Anna of Poland (1366–1425) was a Polish princess born into the House of Piast, and by marriage was Countess of Celje, also called Cilli, a medieval feudal dynasty within the Holy Roman Empire.

  3. The Counts of Cilli or Celje represent the most important medieval aristocratic and ruling house with roots and territory in present-day Slovenia. When the house died out its head held the rank of prince of the Holy Roman Empire and many other titles in territories of present-day Central Europe.

  4. Anna of Cilli or Anne of Celje (Polish: Anna Cylejska; 1386 – 21 May 1416) was Queen consort of Poland from 1402 to 1416. She was the second wife of Jogaila (Władysław II Jagiełło), King of Poland and Supreme Duke of Lithuania (reigned 1387–1434).

  5. When Barbara De Cilly was born in 1392, in Celje, Slovenia, her father, Hermann II Count of Celje, was 31 and her mother, Anna Schaunberg, was 34. She married Sigismund de Luxembourg, Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire on 6 December 1405, in Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany.

  6. Aug 22, 2023 · Daughter of Hermann II, Count of Celje, of Zagorje, and of Ortenburg & Prince of the Holy Roman Empire and Anna von Schaunberg. Wife of Sigismund I, Holy Roman Emperor. Mother of Elizabeth, queen of Germany, Hungary and Bohemia.

  7. Barbara of Cilli (1392 – 11 July 1451), Hungarian: Cillei Borbála (also sometimes known as "Barbara of Celje") was the spouse of Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund and as such Holy Roman Empress. She was by marriage also Queen of Hungary and Bohemia.

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