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Elisabeth of Carinthia, Queen of the Romans

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Elizabeth of Carinthia
German Queen
Tenure1299 – 1 May 1308
Bornc. 1262
Died28 October 1312
Königsfelden Monastery
Burial
Königsfelden Monastery
SpouseAlbert I of Germany
IssueRudolf I of Bohemia
Frederick the Fair
Leopold I, Duke of Austria
Albert II, Duke of Austria
Otto, Duke of Austria
Anna, Duchess of Breig
Agnes, Queen of Hungary
Elisabeth, Duchess of Lorraine
Catherine, Duchess of Calabria
Judith, Countess of Öttingen
HouseHouse of Gorizia
FatherMeinhard, Duke of Carinthia
MotherElisabeth of Bavaria

Elizabeth of Carinthia (c. 1262 – 28 October 1312) from the House of Meinhardin was Queen of the Romans, Queen of Germany and Duchess of Austria by marriage. She is also known as Elizabeth of Tyrol.

Family

She was the eldest daughter of Meinhard, Duke of Carinthia, Count of Gorizia and Tyrol.

Her mother was Elizabeth of Bavaria, daughter of Otto II, Duke of Bavaria and his wife Agnes, herself daughter of Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine and Agnes of Hohenstaufen. Her mother was also the widow of Conrad IV of Germany. Therefore, the young Elizabeth was a half-sister of Conradin, King of Jerusalem and Duke of Swabia.

Marriage

She was married in Vienna on 20 December 1274 to the future Albert I of Germany, one of the founders of the House of Habsburg, thus becoming daughter-in-law of the King of the Romans. Her husband, then a Count of Habsburg, was invested as Duke of Austria and Styria in December 1282 by his father King Rudolf I. They solidified their rule in what was to become the Habsburg patrimony, also with the help of Elizabeth's father who in his turn in 1286 was created Duke of Carinthia.

Elizabeth was in fact better connected to powerful German rulers than her husband: a descendant of earlier kings, for example Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, she was also a niece of dukes of Bavaria,[1] Austria's important neighbours.

In 1298, her husband was finally elected king upon the end of the reign of Adolf of Nassau. In 1299 she was Nuremberg was crowned Queen of Germany and the Romans. Her husband was murdered on 1 May 1308 by his nephew John "the Parricide" in Windisch, located in modern-day Switzerland.

After the murder of her husband, Elizabeth joined the monastery of Königsfelden where she died on 28 October 1312 and was later buried.[2]

Elizabeth was a shrewd and enterprising woman who had some commercial talents. The construction of the Saline plant in Salzkammergut goes back to her suggestion.[3]

Their children were:

  1. Rudolf III (ca. 1282 – 4 July 1307), married but line extinct. He predeceased his father.
  2. Frederick I (1289 – 13 January 1330). Married but line extinct.
  3. Leopold I (4 August 1290 – 28 February 1326, Strassburg).
  4. Albert II (12 December 1298, Vienna – 20 July 1358, Vienna).
  5. Henry the Gentle (1299 – 3 February 1327, Bruck an der Mur). Married but line extinct.
  6. Meinhard, 1300 died young.
  7. Otto (23 July 1301, Vienna – 26 February 1339, Vienna). Married but line extinct.
  8. Anna 1280?, Vienna – 19 March 1327, Breslau), married:
    1. in Graz ca. 1295 to Margrave Hermann of Brandenburg;
    2. in Breslau 1310 to Duke Heinrich VI of Breslau.
  9. Agnes (18 May 1281 – 10 June 1364, Königsfelden), married in Vienna 13 February 1296 King Andrew III of Hungary.
  10. Elisabeth (d. 19 May 1353), married 1304 Frederick IV, Duke of Lorraine.
  11. Catherine (1295 – 18 January 1323, Naples), married 1316 Charles, Duke of Calabria.
  12. Jutta (d. 1329), married in Baden 26 March 1319 Count Ludwig VI of Öttingen.
Judith, Elizabeth's youngest child

Ancestry

Family of Elisabeth of Carinthia, Queen of the Romans
16. Engelbert II of Gorizia
8. Engelbert III, Count of Gorizia
17. Adelaide von Valley
4. Meinhard I, Count of Gorizia-Tyrol
18. Berthold I of Istria
9. Matilda of Andechs
19. Hedwig of Wittelsbach
2. Meinhard, Duke of Carinthia
20. Henry I, Count of Tyrol
10. Albert IV, Count of Tyrol
21. Agnes of Wangen
5. Adelaide of Tyrol
22. Henry III, Count of Frontenhausen
11. Uta of Frontenhausen
23. Adelaide
1. Elisabeth of Gorizia-Tyrol
24. Otto I of Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria
12. Louis I, Duke of Bavaria
25. Agnes of Loon
6. Otto II Wittelsbach, Duke of Bavaria
26. Frederick, Duke of Bohemia
13. Ludmilla of Bohemia
27. Elizabeth of Hungary
3. Elisabeth of Bavaria
28. Henry the Lion
14. Henry V, Count Palatine of the Rhine
29. Matilda of England
7. Agnes of the Palatinate
30. Conrad, Count Palatine of the Rhine
15. Agnes of Hohenstaufen
31. Irmingard of Henneberg

References

Preceded by German Queen
1298 – 1 May 1308
Succeeded by