Joanna of Bavaria | |
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Tenure | 1378–1386 |
Spouse | Wenceslaus, King of the Romans |
House | House of Wittelsbach (by birth) House of Luxembourg (by marriage) |
Father | Albert I, Duke of Bavaria |
Mother | Margaret of Brieg |
Born | c. 1362 |
Died | 31 December 1386 (aged 23–24) |
Burial | Prague Castle |
Joanna of Bavaria (c. 1362–1386) was the second child of Albert I, Duke of Bavaria, by his first wife Margaret of Brieg. Her siblings included William VI, Count of Holland, Johanna Sophia of Bavaria and Margaret of Bavaria. Her paternal grandparents were Holy Roman Emperor Louis IV and Margaret II, Countess of Hainault.
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Joanna married on 29 September 1370 to Wenceslaus, King of the Romans, son of Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV by his second wife, Anna of Swidnica. At the time of the wedding, Johanna was eight years' old, and Wenceslaus was nine.
Joanna was not the first choice of a bride for Wenceslaus; Charles IV had planned for him to marry Elisabeth of Nuremberg, but the marriage never happened, since Elisabeth married Rupert of Germany instead.
On Charles's death in 1378, Wenceslaus inherited the kingdom of Bohemia. In the cathedral of Monza there is preserved a series of reliefs depicting the coronations of the kings of Italy with the Iron Crown of Lombardy. The seventh of these depicts Wenceslaus being crowned in the presence of six electors, he himself being the seventh. The depiction is probably not accurate and was likely made solely to reinforce the claims of the cathedral concerning the custody of the Iron Crown. With Wenceslaus' accession, Joanna became Queen of Bohemia, Germany, Rome and she also became Electress of Brandenburg, succeeding Wenceslaus' half-sister Katharine of Bohemia.
The marriage lasted for sixteen years, however the couple had no children and Joanna died in 1386, at the age of twenty-three or twenty-four. It is said that Wenceslaus was infertile.[1]
Wenceslaus gave Johanna a magnificent funeral, which took place at Žebrák castle. According to custom, Joanna's body was exposed for a few days in Prague churches and was later buried in Prague Castle.
Wenceslaus later married Joanna's cousin, Sofia of Bavaria, but this marriage also bore no issue. Wenceslaus was deposed from the throne of Germany and was succeeded by Elisabeth of Nuremberg's husband, Rupert.
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Louis II, Duke of Bavaria | ||||||||||||
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Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor |
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Matilda of Habsburg | ||||||||||||
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Albert I, Duke of Bavaria |
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William I, Count of Hainaut | ||||||||||||
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Margaret II, Countess of Hainault |
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Joan of Valois | ||||||||||||
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Joanna of Bavaria |
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Bolesław III the Generous | ||||||||||||
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Ludwik I the Fair |
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Margaret of Bohemia | ||||||||||||
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Margaret of Brieg |
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Henry IV the Faithful | ||||||||||||
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Agnes of Głogów |
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Matilda of Brandenburg | ||||||||||||
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German royalty | ||
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Preceded by Elizabeth of Pomerania |
Queen consort of Germany 10 June 1376 – 31 December 1386 |
Vacant
Title next held by
Sofia of Bavaria |
Queen consort of Bohemia 29 November 1378 – 31 December 1386 |
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German nobility | ||
Preceded by Katharine of Bohemia |
Electress consort of Brandenburg 2 October 1373 – 29 November 1378 |
Succeeded by Mary of Hungary |
Preceded by Joanna of Brabant |
Duchess consort of Luxembourg 29 November 1378 – 31 December 1386 |
Vacant
Title next held by
Agnes of Opole |