Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria
Hedwig Wittelsbach Duchess of Bavaria, was a 9th-century noble woman of the Holy Roman Empire, and Mother in law of Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith her daughter.
Early life
She was born circa 780AD at Altdorf, Mittelfranken, Bayern in what was the Frankish Empire (Present Germany). She was daughter of Isanbart Des Franken. She had a sister Adalung des Franken, half brother Hunfrid I de Recia e de Istria, and brother Guelph, Count of Andech.
In her early life she was Abbess of Chelles Abbey, however, left that role to marry.[1][2][3]
Family
In 810AD, she married Welf I of Altdorf[4] and together they had the following children:
- Judith, Roman Empress and Frankish Queen, died 843;
- Rudolph, died 866;[5]
- Conrad,[6] Count of Paris, ancestor of the Welf kings of Burgundy;
- Hemma, Frankish Queen, married to Louis the German, son of Louis the Pious, died 876.
- Mathilda d'Andech von Altdorf
Through her marriage to Welf she is the matriarch of the Dynastic Welf Family[7] and is an ancestor of the Carolingian dynasty, the Kings of Italy, Russia, Brittan, the Hagenéter rulers of Piedmont and the Bavarian Welfs.
Hedwig died 19 April 843 in Bayern, Frankish Empire (present Germany) and was buried in Bayern Lande.
Gallery
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Husband Welf I
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Tomb effigy of daughter Queen Hemma.
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Daughter, Judith of Bavaria
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Seal of grandson Charles the Bald
See also
References
- ↑ Hedwig of Saxony at cft-win.com.
- ↑ Hedwig or Heilwig, Duchess of Bavaria at connectedbloodlines.com.
- ↑ Pierre Riche, The Carolingians, A family who Forged Europe (translated by Michael Idomir Allen; University of Philadelphia Press, 1993), pp. 52, 149.
- ↑ Hedwig Duchess Of Bavaria at family Tree maker.com.
- ↑ by Cesare Rivera, I Conti de' Marsi e la loro discendenze fino alla fondazione dell'Aquila, (Teramo, 1915).
- ↑ The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Reuter, Timothy (trans.) (Manchester University Press, 1992).
- ↑ Halliday, Sir Andrew (1826). Annals of the house of Hanover. Vol. 1. London, UK: N. Sams. OCLC 674208974. Retrieved 2014-09-05.