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Agnes of Denmark

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Reign
  
1264-1266

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Died
  
after 1290

Name
  
Agnes Denmark

Father
  
Eric IV of Denmark

House
  
House of Knytlinga

Mother
  
Jutta of Saxony


Role
  
Eric IV of Denmark's daughter

Parents
  
Jutta of Saxony, Eric IV of Denmark

Grandparents
  
Valdemar II of Denmark, Berengaria of Portugal, Agnes of Austria, Albert I, Duke of Saxony

Great-grandparents
  
Valdemar I of Denmark, Sancho I of Portugal

Similar People
  
Eric IV of Denmark, Sweyn II of Denmark, Berengaria of Portugal

Agnes of Denmark (1249-after 1290) was the youngest daughter of Eric IV of Denmark and his wife Jutta of Saxony. She founded the Convent of St. Agneta in Roskilde, becoming Abbess there.

Life

Agnes lost her father at the age of one, and after her mother left for remarriage in Germany, she and her sister Jutta remained to be raised at the court of her paternal uncle, the king of Denmark. The sisters had the right to large estates after their father, but were not able to enforce them against their uncle, who deposed their father.

In 1264, a convent for women of the Dominican order was founded in Roskilde and named after her. The convent was founded by initiative of Countess Ingerd of Hvide, but the application was sent to the Pope in the name of Agnes, who was officially named as founder. Agnes was placed there as its first abbess, and the regent of Denmark was forced to swear that she had been placed there by her own free will. In 1266, also her sister Jutta was placed in the convent, and replaced her as abbess.

Both sister greatly disliked the life as nuns, and the both left the convent in 1270. Agnes seem to have managed to gain control over at least parts of her father's estates. She lived the rest of her life managing her estates at Själland, and there are several documents mentioning her acts as a landowner. She is last mentioned alive in 1290. The year of her death is unknown. The Danish Royal House and the Saint Agnes Abbey battled over her inheritance until the Protestant reformation.

References

Agnes of Denmark Wikipedia