Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Judith of Bavaria (925 – 29 June after 985), a member of the Luitpolding dynasty, was Duchess consort of Bavaria from 947 to 955, by her marriage with Duke Henry I. After her husband's death, she acted as regent of Bavaria during the minority of her son Henry the Wrangler in 955-972.

  2. Judith took her books with her when she moved to Germany. She is thus credited with bringing the first examples of the magnificent Anglo-Saxon illuminated manuscripts to the Continent, where their artistic and calligraphic techniques were studied and emulated by numerous scribes and painters.

  3. Judith of Bavaria, Duchess of Swabia (19 May 1100 – 27 August 1130) was a duchess of Swabia by marriage to Frederick II, Duke of Swabia. She was the mother of Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor, known to history as "Barbarossa".

  4. People also ask

  5. Judith, Duchess of Bavaria, also Judith im Sülichgau and Judith von Friaul, from the Unrochinger family (born after 888) was a Duchess of Bavaria by marriage to Arnulf of Bavaria. She married Duke Arnulf in 910. Historians believed she was the daughter of Eberhard of Friuli (d. 866).

  6. Mar 15, 2021 · Judith of Flanders was the daughter of Baldwin IV, Count of Flanders and his second wife, a daughter of the Duke of Normandy. Baldwin was thirty years older than his wife. Judith was born around 1031.

  7. Dec 10, 2022 · In 1063–1070, Judith of Flanders commissioned four Gospel books. Two are now in New York (New York, Pierpont Morgan Library MS M.708 and MS M.709); the others are in Italy and Germany (Monte Cassino, Archivio della Badia, Cod. 437; Fulda, Hessische Landesbibliothek, Cod. Aa.21).

  8. Browse this gospel book made in England, between 1051 and 1064, for Judith of Flanders.

  1. People also search for