Below is a snapshot of the Web page as it appeared on 3/2/2024 (the last time our crawler visited it). This is the version of the page that was used for ranking your search results. The page may have changed since we last cached it. To see what might have changed (without the highlights), go to the current page.
Bing is not responsible for the content of this page.
Judith (Habsburg) of Bohemia (1271-1297) | WikiTree FREE Family Tree
Place: Royal Crypt in St. Vitus Cathedral, Praha, Bohemia
Wikipedia biography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[1]
Judith of Habsburg (1271 ? May 21, 1297) was the youngest daughter of Rudolph I of Germany and his wife Gertrude of Hohenburg. Judith came from the Habsburg family.
Marriage
When Judith was five, she became the object of her father's political plans. Her father signed the Vienna peace treatie with Premysl Otakar II of Bohemia, they decided that Judith should marry Wenceslaus, son and heir of Premysl Otakar.
Judith's sisters also married powerful Kings and Dukes, her sister Klementia married Charles Martel of Anjou, son of Charles II of Naples, and her sister Matilda married Louis II, Duke of Bavaria.
The formal marriage (engagement) was in 1279 in Jihlava, the second marriage took place in early 1285 in Cheb, and the bride was given a dowry "from the Duchy of Austria, Moravian border to the border of Danube". The wedding in Cheb was followed by "festive" wedding night, but soon after, Rudolph took Judith back to Germany. She came to Prague two years later.
Children
The marriage produced ten children, they were:
Przemysl Otakar (May 6, 1288 - November 19, 1288)
Wenceslaus III (October 6, 1289 ? August 4, 1306); King of Bohemia, King of Hungary and King of Poland
Agnes (October 10, 1290 - after 1292)
Anna I of Bohemia (Anna P?emyslovna) (October 10, 1290 ? September 3, 1313), married in 1306 to Henry of Carinthia
Elisabeth I of Bohemia (Eli?ka P?emyslovna) (January 20, 1292 - September 28, 1330), married in 1310 to John I of Bohemia
Guta (March 3, 1293 - August 3, 1294)
John (February 26, 1294 - March 1, 1295)
John (February 21, 1295 - December 6, 1296)
Margaret of Bohemia (Markéta P?emyslovna) (February 21 1296 - April 8, 1322), married to Boles?aw III the Generous, Duke of Wroc?aw
Guta (*?May 21, 1297)
Death
Judith died 21 May 1297 in Prague, aged only twenty six. She died giving birth to her youngest child, Guta who also died. Her husband went onto marry Elisabeth Richeza of Poland who bore him a daughter, Agnes. Of the ten children only four lived to adulthood and they died rather young: Wenceslaus died aged sixteen, Anna was twenty two, Elisabeth was thirty eight and Margaret was twenty six.
Family
Wenceslaus and then Anna and Elisabeth succeeded their father as rulers of Bohemia. Elisabeth was the mother of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, his son was Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor.
Judith is also an ancestor of Anne of Denmark who married James I of England, her children were Charles I of England and Elizabeth of Bohemia; Elizabeth is one of Judith's successors as Queen of Bohemia.
Begraben: Veitsdom zu Prag6. Tochter des Königs RUDOLF I. von Habsburg aus seiner 1. Ehe mit der Gertrud Anna von Hohenberg, Tochter von Graf Burchard III.
Johann Franzl: Seite 179,231
"Rudolf I."Zur Besiegelung des Friedens mit Böhmen wurde 1278 im mährischen Iglau eine Doppelhochzeit gefeiert werden. RUDOLFS jüngster 8-jähriger Sohn Rudolf heiratete die um ein paar Jahre ältere Agnes von Böhmen <agnes_von_boehmen_graefin_von_habsburg_+_12962.html>, und der 7-jährige Wenzel erhält die kleine HABSBURGERIN Guta zur Frau. Im Jänner 1285 kam RUDOLF mit seiner Tochter, die zu einer stattlichen Jungfrau erblüht war und die Wenzel <wenzel_2_koenig_von_boehmen_+_1305.html> 6 Jahre nicht gesehen hatte, nach Eger. Hier sollte endlich das Beilager gefeiert werden. Der Bräutigam erschien zum Fest mit der Blüte der böhmischen Ritterschaft und in Begleitung seiner Mutter Kunigunde. <kunigunde_von_kiew_koenigin_von_boehmen_+_1285.html> In der Nacht vom 25. auf den 26. Jänner 1285 durfte Wenzel <wenzel_2_koenig_von_boehmen_+_1305.html> endlich mit seiner Guta das Hochzeitsbett besteigen, doch die ehelichen Freuden des Paares währten nur kurz. Am folgenden Morgen hörte der junge König mit seinem Schwiegervater die Messe in der neugeweihten Minoritenkirche, dann mußte er von seiner Gemahlin wieder Abschied nehmen. "Physisches Unvermögen" des Brautpaares hat den HABSBURGER angeblich bewogen, seine Tochter mit nach Hause zu nehmen, es könnte aber auch eine bloße Vorsichtsmaßnahme gewesen sein. Er war schlau genug, um Guta nicht gleichsam als Faustpfand in den Händen des verschlagenen Zawisch von Falkenstein zu lassen.Jutta wurde in der Fürstengruft im St.-Veits-Dom in Prag bestattet.
Pedigree Resource File CD 49 Publication: (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2002)
Ancestral File (TM) Abbreviation: Ancestral File (TM) Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SAINTS Publication: June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998
WikiTree profile Von Habsburg-8 created through the import of export-BloodTree.ged on Aug 19, 2011 by Luiz Sergio Heinzelmann. Quinn Bradlee, firsthand knowledge.
This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011. WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-77994 created through the import of FAMILY 6162011.GED on Jun 20, 2011 by Michael Stephenson.
This person was created through the import of ReedevanOudtshoornAdrianaSophiavan.ged on 19 April 2011. Travis Wagner, firsthand knowledge.
This person was created through the import of 104-B.ged on 12 September 2010.
Is Gutta your ancestor? Please don't go away! Login to collaborate or comment, or contact
the profile manager, or ask our community of genealogists a question.