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Maria of Bytom (Polish: Maria bytomska; before 1295 – 15 December 1317) was a Queen of Hungary by marriage to Charles I of Hungary. She was the third child and only daughter of Duke Casimir of Bytom by his wife Helena, whose origins are unknown, although the later historiography tends to recognize her as a daughter of Lev I of Galicia , from ...
Jan 22, 2021 · One such queen was Maria of Bytom, the wife of King Charles I of Hungary. Facts about Maria of Bytom are so obscure; we even don’t know if she was the first or second wife of Charles. Maria was the only recorded daughter of Casimir, Duke of Bytom, and his wife, Helena.
Apr 22, 2021 · As such, this chapter focuses on Agnes of Habsburg (d. 1364), widow of Andrew III, Maria of Bytom (d. 1317), and Elizabeth of Poland (d. 1380), first and third wives of Charles I Robert respectively. There are significant changes in this period regarding the relationship between queens and their material culture.
- Christopher Mielke
- 2021
Feb 14, 2024 · Maria of BYTOM was born about 1294 in Temešvár, South Bohemia, Czech Republic. She was married about 1306 to Charles I of HUNGARY. She died on December 15, 1317 in Temešvár, South Bohemia, Czech Republic. This information is part of Ancestral Trails 2016 by Patti Lee Salter on Genealogy Online.
Maria of Bytom. Hungary. Maria of Bytom – A Queen in the footnotes. Friday, 22 January 2021, 6:00 CaraBeth 0. Throughout the late middle ages, there are records of queens whose marriages were beneficial to their husbands’ families.
Nov 14, 2018 · The Curious Afterlives of Ambroise Paré. Posted on Wed., Nov. 14, 2018 by Seth LeJacq. Bone fractures were a difficult and important surgical problem, one Paré treated in his writings. This detail from the 1634 English edition of Paré’s collected writings illustrates a passage on fractures in the bones of the forearm accompanied with wounds.
Maria von Beuthen (auch Maria von Beuthen und Cosel, polnisch Maria Bytomska, tschechisch Marie Bytomská; * zwischen 1282 und 1284; † 15. Dezember 1317 in Timișoara) war Königin von Ungarn, Kroatien und Dalmatien. Gemäß einer anderen Quelle wurde sie auch Maria Ecaterina respektive Maria Katharina genannt. (de)