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Maria of Swabia

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Maria of Hohenstaufen
Born3 April 1201
Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy
Died29 March 1235 (aged 33)
Leuven, Brabant
Noble familyHohenstaufen
Spouse(s)Henry II, Duke of Brabant and Lothier
IssueMatilda of Brabant
Beatrice of Brabant
Maria of Brabant
Margaret of Brabant
Henry III, Duke of Brabant
Philip of Brabant
FatherPhilip of Swabia
MotherIrene Angelina of Byzantium

Maria of Hohenstaufen (3 April 1201 – 29 March 1235) was a member of the powerful Hohenstaufen dynasty of German kings which lasted from 1138 to 1254. She is also known to history as Marie of Swabia.

She was the second daughter of Philip of Swabia and Irene Angelina of Byzantium, and her husband was Henry II, Duke of Brabant and Lothier. As she had died six months before her husband succeeded to the dukedom, Maria was never Duchess of Brabant and Lothier.

Family

Philip of Swabia and Irene Angelina of Byzantium, the parents of Maria of Hohenstaufen

Maria of Hohenstaufen was born in Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy on 3 April 1201. Her paternal grandparents were Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor and Beatrice I, Countess of Burgundy, and her mother's parents were Byzantine Emperor Isaac II Angelos and his first wife Herina.[1]

Emperor Frederick II was her first cousin.

In 1208, at the age of seven, Maria was left an orphan by the unexpected deaths of her parents. On 21 June, her father was murdered by Otto of Wittelsbach, and two months later her mother died after giving birth to a daughter, who did not live beyond early infancy. Maria had three surviving sisters.

Siblings

  1. Beatrice of Hohenstaufen (1198–1212), married Otto IV, Holy Roman Emperor. The marriage was childless.
  2. Cunigunde of Hohenstaufen (1200–1248), married in 1228 King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia, by whom she had issue.
  3. Elizabeth of Hohenstaufen (1203 – 5 November 1235), married in 1219 King Ferdinand III of Castile, by whom she had issue, including King Alfonso X of Castile. She was his first wife. Ferdinand married his second wife Jeanne de Dammartin, Countess of Ponthieu before August 1237, by whom he had issue, including Eleanor of Castile, Queen consort of King Edward I of England.

Marriage and issue

Sometime before 22 August 1215, she married as his first wife Henry II, heir to the Duchy of Brabant (present-day Belgium) and Lothier. They had six children, and through them, Maria is the ancestress of every royal house in Europe:

Death

Maria of Hohenstaufen died on 29 March 1235 in Leuven, Brabant, five days before her thirty-fourth birthday. Less than six months later, her husband succeeded his father as Duke of Brabant and Lothier.

In 1241, Henry married his second wife, Sophie of Thuringia, the daughter of Ludwig IV of Thuringia and Elisabeth of Hungary. The marriage produced two children: Henry I, Landgrave of Hesse and Elizabeth of Brabant, who married Albert I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. Sophie was the only wife of Henry to be styled Duchess of Brabant and Lothier.

Ancestry

Family of Maria of Swabia
Frederick I, Duke of Swabia
Frederick II, Duke of Swabia
Agnes of Germany
Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor
Henry IX, Duke of Bavaria
Judith of Bavaria
Wulfhild of Saxony
Philip of Swabia
Stephen I, Count of Burgundy
Renaud III, Count of Burgundy
Beatrix of Lorraine
Beatrice I, Countess of Burgundy
Simon I, Duke of Lorraine
Agatha of Lorraine
Adelaide of Leuven
Maria of Hohenstaufen
Konstantinos Angelos, Admiral of Sicily
Andronikos Dukas Angelos of Byzantium
Theodora Komnene
Isaac II Angelos, Byzantine Emperor
Theodoros Kastamonitis
Euphrosyne Kastamonitissa
Irene Angelina of Byzantium
Andronikos Doukas Palaiologos
George Komnenodoukas Palaiologos
(1125–1168)
Unknown Komnene
Unknown Palaiologina?, afterwards Irene
?Irene Komnene Kantakouzene?

References

Sources

  1. Template:MLCC
  2. Template:MLCC