Anne of Bohemia (1290–1313)

Anne of Bohemia (15 Oct 1290 – 3 Sep 1313) was the eldest surviving daughter of Wenceslaus II of Bohemia and Poland and his first wife Judith of Habsburg. Her siblings included Elizabeth of Bohemia and Wenceslaus III of Bohemia.[1][2]

Anne of Bohemia
Queen consort of Bohemia
Tenure1306
Queen consort of Bohemia
Tenure1307–1310
Born15 October 1290
Bohemia
Died3 September 1313(1313-09-03) (aged 22)
Ljubljana, Carniola
SpouseHenry of Bohemia
DynastyPřemyslid
FatherWenceslaus II of Bohemia
MotherJudith of Habsburg

Family

Anne was born in 1290 in the Kingdom of Bohemia. Her mother, Judith, died in 1297 when Anne was seven years old. Of her mother's ten children, only four of them lived to adulthood: Wenceslaus, Anne, Elizabeth and Margaret.

In 1300 Anne's widowed father, Wenceslaus, remarried a Polish princess called Elizabeth Richenza from the genus Piast dynasty. Anne's father then gained the Crown of Poland for the next five years (he died in 1305). They had a daughter, Agnes of Bohemia.

Her father also had numerous illegitimate children, including Jan Volek (?? – 27 September 1351), bishop of Olomouc.

Marriage

In 1306 Anne married Henry of Carinthia, a son of Meinhard, Duke of Carinthia and Elisabeth of Bavaria.

After the murder of Anne's brother, Wenceslaus, in 1306, Anne's husband was elected King of Bohemia and titular King of Poland. However, all power was soon taken over by Rudolf of Habsburg. Anne and Henry then fled to Carinthia out of reach from Rudolph. Rudolph only reigned for one year and on his death Henry assumed the throne of Bohemia again.

The royal couple turned their attention to Anne's younger unmarried sister Elisabeth. They wished to have her married but Elisabeth refused every suitor that came forward. In 1310 Elisabeth married John of Luxembourg. This union caused Anne and Elisabeth to fall out. It was said that Elisabeth was more beautiful than Anne and that Anne was jealous of her.

By 1310 John and Elisabeth occupied Prague; Anne and Henry were sent back to live in Carinthia in exile. She died in 1313 in Ljubljana, the capital of Carniola, then part of her husband's domains.[3] She was buried in Bolzano, Tyrol. She died aged only twenty two and childless. Her husband married twice more.

Ancestry

Sources in English

  • Anne's Bohemia; Czech Literature and Society, 1310–1420, by Alfred Thomas University of Minnesota Press, 1998, Preface by David Wallace

References

  1. Anne of Bohemia
  2. Ancestors of Anne of Bohemia
  3. Janez Mlinar, "Janez Vetrinjski in njegovo poznavanje Kranjske v Knjigi resničnih zgodb (Liber certarum historiarum)", Zgodovinski časopis 58 (2004), p. 297
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