Barbara of Hesse

Barbara of Hesse
Duchess of Württemberg-Mömpelgard
Countess of Waldeck
Spouse(s) George I of Württemberg-Mömpelgard
Daniel, Count of Waldeck

Issue

Noble family House of Hesse
Father Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse
Mother Christine of Saxony
Born 8 April 1536
Kassel, Hessen, Germany
Died 8 June 1597
Schloss Waldeck

Barbara of Hesse, Duchess of Württemberg-Mömpelgard (8 April 1536 – 8 June 1597)[1] was a German noblewoman, and the wife of Count George I of Württemberg-Mömpelgard. Her second husband was Daniel, Count of Waldeck.

Family

Barbara was born in Kassel, Hessen on 8 April 1536, one of the ten children of Philip I, Landgrave of Hesse and his legitimate wife Christine of Saxony. She had four sisters and five brothers including George I, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt. Her father was a leading champion of the Protestant Reformation. While married to her mother, he also married bigamously his morganatic wife, Margarethe von der Saale, by whom he had another nine children.

Her paternal grandparents were William II of Hesse and Anna of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, and her maternal grandparents were George, Duke of Saxony and Barbara Jagiellon, daughter of King Casimir IV Jagiellon of Poland and Elisabeth of Austria.

Barbara's son Frederick I, Duke of Württemberg and his family

Marriages and issue

On 10 September 1555 in Reichenweier, Barbara married her first husband, George I, Count of Württemberg-Mömpelgard, son of Henry, Count of Württemberg and Eva of Salm. She was nineteen years of age and Georg was fifty-seven. They made their residence at the Chateau de Montbeliard in the principality of Mömpelgard, a staunch Lutheran enclave in France.

Together George and Barbara had one son:[2]

Barbara was widowed on 18 July 1558 after less than three years of marriage. She married her second husband Daniel, Count of Waldeck ten years later on 11 November 1568 in Kassel,[3] when she was thirty-two years old.

She died on 8 June 1597 at Waldeck Castle. Among her numerous descendants are the current Spanish and British Royal Families.

Ancestry

References