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Kunigunda of Halych

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Tenure
  
1261–1278

Name
  
Kunigunda Halych

Father
  
Rostislav Mikhailovich

Burial
  
Prague

Coronation
  
1261


Issue
  
Wenceslaus II of Bohemia Kunigunde of Bohemia Agnes, Duchess of Austria

House
  
Rurik Dynasty (by birth) House of Premyslid (by first marriage)

Died
  
September 9, 1285, Cesky Krumlov, Czech Republic

Spouse
  
Zavish, Lord of Falkenstejn (m. 1285), Ottokar II of Bohemia (m. 1261)

Children
  
Wenceslaus II of Bohemia, Kunigunde of Bohemia

Parents
  
Anna of Hungary, Duchess of Macso, Rostislav Mikhailovich

Grandchildren
  
Wenceslaus III of Bohemia, Elizabeth of Bohemia

Similar People
  
Ottokar II of Bohemia, Wenceslaus II of Bohemia, Margaret of Austria - Queen of, Elizabeth Richeza of Poland, Wenceslaus III of Bohemia

Kunigunda Rostislavna (1245 – 9 September 1285; Czech: Kunhuta Uherská or Kunhuta Haličská) was Queen consort of Bohemia and its Regent from 1278 until her death. She was a member of the House of Chernigov, and a daughter of Rostislav Mikhailovich.

Contents

Family

She was presumably born in Ruthenia, in the domains of her paternal grandfather Michael of Chernigov. Her grandfather was the last Grand Prince of Kiev, who was deposed not by a more powerful prince but by the Mongol Empire. Her parents were Rostislav Mikhailovich, future ruler of Belgrade and Slavonia, and his wife Anna of Hungary. After the death of her father's father, Kunigunda's family relocated to Hungary, where her mother's father, Béla IV of Hungary, made her father governor of certain Serbian-speaking regions in the Danube Valley. Her father proclaimed himself Emperor of Bulgaria in 1256 but did not stay there to defend his title.

Marriage

Kunigunda was married – as a token of alliance from her maternal grandfather Béla – to King Ottokar II of Bohemia (ca. 1233 – 1278) in Pressburg (now Bratislava) on 25 October 1261. Ottokar was a member of the Přemyslid dynasty who had been recently divorced from Margaret, Duchess of Austria (ca. 1204 – 1266) because she had been unable to provide heirs for the King.

Kunigunda, 41 years Margaret's junior, bore Ottokar several children including:

  • Kunigunde of Bohemia (January, 1265 – 27 November 1321). Married Boleslaus II of Masovia.
  • Agnes of Bohemia (5 September 1269 – 17 May 1296). Married Rudolf II, Duke of Austria.
  • Wenceslaus II of Bohemia (17 September 1271 – 21 June 1305).
  • Queen and regent of Bohemia

    However, the peace between Bohemia and Hungary ended after 10 years, when Kunigunda's uncle Stephen came to power as the King of Hungary.

    In 1278, King Ottokar tried to recover his lands lost to Rudolph I of Germany in 1276. He made allies and collected a large army, but he was defeated by Rudolph and killed at the Battle of Dürnkrut and Jedenspeigen on the March on 26 August 1278.

    Moravia was subdued and its government entrusted to Rudolph's representatives, leaving Kunigunda, now Queen Regent of Bohemia in control of only the province surrounding Prague, while the young Wenceslaus was betrothed and married to one of Rudolph's daughters, Judith.

    Kunigunda married secondly a Bohemian magnate Záviš, Lord of Falkenštejn, in Prague in 1285. However, she died only a few months later. Záviš survived her and married again to the Hungarian Princess Elisabeth. He was executed on behalf of the King on 24 August 1290.

    Kunigunda's son Wenceslaus II kept the Kingdom of Bohemia, and also succeeded in obtaining Poland and Hungary although not very sustainably. Ultimately, she is one of the pivotal ancestresses of both the House of Luxembourg and the Habsburgs.

    Literature

  • Kateřina Charvátová (2007). Václav II.: král český a polský. ISBN 978-80-7021-841-9. 
  • Gabriela V. Šarochová (2004). Radostný úděl vdovský: královny-vdovy přemyslovských Čech. ISBN 80-86569-24-1. 
  • References

    Kunigunda of Halych Wikipedia