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Maria of the Palatinate Simmern

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Mother
  
Elisabeth of Hesse

Name
  
Maria the


Maria of the Palatinate-Simmern httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Father
  
Louis VI, Elector Palatine

Born
  
24 July 1561 Heidelberg (
1561-07-24
)

Role
  
Charles IX of Sweden's wife

Died
  
July 29, 1589, Eskilstuna, Sweden

Spouse
  
Charles IX of Sweden (m. 1579–1589)

Children
  
Catherine of Sweden, Countess Palatine of Kleeburg

Parents
  
Elisabeth of Hesse, Electress Palatine, Louis VI, Elector Palatine

Grandchildren
  
Charles X Gustav of Sweden

Similar People
  
Charles IX of Sweden, Christina Magdalena of the Pal, Charles X Gustav of Sweden, John III of Sweden, Christina of Holstein‑Gottorp

Noble family
  
House of Wittelsbach

Maria of the Palatinate, (24 July 1561 in Heidelberg – 29 July 1589 in Eskilstuna), was a German Princess and a Swedish Princess and Duchess of Södermanland by marriage, the first spouse of the future King Charles IX of Sweden. She died before he became King, and was therefore never Queen.

Maria of the Palatinate-Simmern Maria of the PalatinateSimmern Wikipedia

Biography

Maria was born to Louis VI, Elector Palatine and Elisabeth of Hesse. In April 1578, the Swedish Prince Charles, Duke of Södermanland, visited her home town Heidelberg and proposed. Maria was brought up to be an ardent Lutheran, and her religion and upbringing according to the principles of the Augsburg Confession was one reason why she was chosen by the sternly Protestant Charles. She also spoke Latin. Her father accepted the marriage proposal on the condition that she be secured the right to practice her faith in Sweden which was then ruled by Charles' brother John III, who was known for his Catholic sympathies. The wedding took place in Heidelberg 11 May 1579. Afterwards, she followed him to Sweden, where they resided in his Duchy in Södermanland. They left Germany in July, and in September 1579, Maria received the oath of loyalty from the subjects in her dower lands Gripsholm, Tynnelsö and Rävsnäs estates, Strängnäs city with the parishes Åkers, Selebo and Daga as well as Överenhörna and Ytterenhörna.

No portrait exists of Maria. She is described as beautiful, gentle and diplomatic, but also sickly. Her marriage to Charles IX of Sweden is described as happy. Her calmness was said to be the opposite of the fierce temperament of her consort. Maria is said to have influenced the rule of Charles in the Duchy, intervening on behalf of supplicants and to ask him to show mercy. Because she had a reputation for being able to control the feared temperament of Charles, she was often approached by supplicants. She accompanied him around the Duchy as long as her pregnancies allowed for that possibility. Maria remained a committed Lutheran: in letters to her father, she expressed her discontent with the spread of Calvinism in Simmern, and in 1585 asked him to send her a Lutheran preacher. Charles described her as more educated in religion than anyone to be found, and she is believed to have affected Charles to adopt an even stronger pro-Lutheran political view.

Maria bore six children, but only one survived for more than a few years. She herself died in Eskilstuna Palace after a long term illness in 1589, and was buried in the Strängnäs Cathedral. Later examinations of her remains showed her to have been a small, fragile brunette.

Duke Charles was said to have mourned her greatly. The town Mariestad, founded in 1583, and the royal estate Marieholm are named after her.

Children:

  1. Margareta Elisabet (1580–1585)
  2. Elisabet Sabina (1582–1585)
  3. Ludvig (*/† 1583)
  4. Catharina (1584–1638)
  5. Gustav (*/† 1587)
  6. Maria (1588–1589)

References

Maria of the Palatinate-Simmern Wikipedia