Dagmar of Bohemia

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Dagmar of Bohemia
Queen Dagmar, church in Ringsted
Queen consort of Denmark
Tenure1205–1213
Bornc. 1186
Meissen
Died24 May 1212
Ribe
Burial
SpouseValdemar II of Denmark
IssueValdemar the Young
HouseHouse of Přemysl
FatherOttokar I of Bohemia
MotherAdelheid of Meissen
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Dagmar of Bohemia (also known as Margaret of Bohemia; c. 1186 – 24 May 1212 in Ribe) was queen consort of Denmark as the first spouse of King Valdemar II of Denmark. She was the daughter of King Přemysl I Ottokar of Bohemia and his first wife, Adelheid of Meissen.

Family

Margaret (Markéta in Czech) had one brother, Vratislav, and two sisters, Božislava and Hedwig. Her father became the Duke of Bohemia in 1192, but in 1193 was deposed. He then left Bohemia with his family.

Adelheid with her children found a new home at the court of her brother Albert, Margrave of Meissen, and her husband Ottokar became a mercenary for German rulers. In 1197, Ottokar became the Duke of Bohemia for a second time. He repudiated Adelheid and divorced her in 1199 on the grounds of consanguinity. He married Constance of Hungary later the same year.[1] This step, together with other maneuvers, helped him later to obtain the hereditary elevation of his title to king.

Adelheid did not waive her rights. In 1205, she returned to Prague temporarily. At that time, Ottokar decided to marry their daughter, Margaret, to Valdemar II of Denmark. However, Constance gave birth to a son, later King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia the same year. Adelheid left Bohemia soon and died a few years later.

Queen Dagmar

Before his first marriage, Valdemar had been betrothed to Richeza of Bavaria, daughter of the Duke of Saxony. When that engagement fell through, he married Markéta in 1205 in Lübeck. She quickly won over the hearts of the Danes. In 1209, the new queen, now known as Dagmar, gave birth to her son Valdemar.

Not many things are known about Dagmar as a person. According to Rydårbogen (1250), queen Dagmar influenced Valdemar to release one of his most fervent enemies, Bishop Valdemar of Slesvig, in 1206. Most of the image of Dagmar comes from later folksongs, myths and legends, designed to present her as an ideal Christian Queen; mild, patient and universally loved, in contrast to her unpopular successor, Queen Berengaria.

Queen Dagmar died on 24 May 1212 while giving birth to her second son, who didn't survive. Old folk ballads say that on her deathbed she begged Valdemar to marry Kirsten, the daughter of Karl von Rise, and not the "beautiful flower" Berengária of Portugal (Danish: Bengerd). In other words, she predicted a struggle for the Danish throne between the sons of Berengaria.

After Dagmar's death, in order to build good relations with Flanders (a commercially important territory to the west of Denmark's hostile southern neighbours), Valdemar married Berengária of Portugal in 1214.

Queen Dagmar is buried in St. Bendt's Church in Ringsted, Denmark, on one side of Valdemar II, with Queen Berengária buried on the other side of the King.

Valdemar II elevated his son with Dagmar as co-king at Schleswig in 1218. Prince Valdemar was accidentally shot while hunting at Refsnæs in 1231.

Dagmar Cross

Dagmar Cross

A pectoral cross now well known as the Dagmar Cross was found lying on the breast of Queen Dagmar remains when the tomb was opened about 1690. The jewel of Byzantine design and workmanship, is of gold, enamelled, having on one side a crucifix, and on the other side portraits of Christ in the center, St Basil, St John Chrysostom, Mary the Virgin and St John the Apostle-Evangelist.[2]

Ancestry

Family of Dagmar of Bohemia

Gallery

References

  1. ^ Template:MLCC
  2. ^ Sommerville, Maxwell (1894). The Encyclopaedia Britannica, Volume 6. p. 542.
Dagmar of Bohemia
Born: 1186? Died: 24 May 1212
Danish royalty
Preceded by Queen consort of Denmark
1205–1213
Succeeded by

Template:Persondata