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Anne of Bohemia and Hungary

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Revision as of 09:57, 18 June 2006 by Dimadick (talk | contribs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) For others Annes of Bohemia, see Anne of Bohemia (disambiguation). For others Annas of Hungary, see Anna of Hungary (disambiguation). For others Annas of Jagello, see Anna Jagello.

Anna Jagellonica of Bohemia and Hungary (July 23, 1503 - January 27, 1547) was the only daughter of Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Hungary and Anna of Foix-Candale. She was an older sister of Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia, and his eventual heiress.

Her paternal grandparents were king Casimir IV of Poland, Grand duke of Lithuania, and Elisabeth of Austria, one of the heiresses of heiress of Bohemia, duchy of Luxembourg and duchy of Kujavia. Her maternal grandparents were Gaston de Foix, Count of Candale and Catherine de Foix, Intanta of the Kingdom of Navarre.

Life account

She was born in Prague and for ther first three years of her life was the Heiress Presumptive to the thrones of Bohemia and the Kingdom of Hungary. The birth of her younger brother Louis on July 1, 1506 demoted her to second-in-line heiress. Her mother died on July 26 of the same year.

The death of Vladislaus II on March 13, 1516 left both siblings in the care of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor. She was arranged to marry his grandson Ferdinand, second son of Queen regnant Joanna of Castile and her husband and co-ruler Philip I of Castile.

Anne married Ferdinand on May 25, 1521 in Linz, Austria. At the time Ferdinand was controling the Habsburg hereditary lands in name of his older brother Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.

Her brother Louis was killed in the Battle of Mohács against Suleiman the Magnificent of the Ottoman Empire on August 29, 1526. This left vacant the thrones of both Bohemia and Hungary with Anne being his closest living relative. Ferdinand claimed both Kingdoms in her right and was elected King of Bohemia on October 24 of the same year.

Hungary was a more difficult case. Suleiman had annexed much of its lands. Ferdinand was proclaimed King of Hungary but a faction of Hungarian nobles who proclaimed that no foreign ruler could held that title. They elected John Zápolya as a rival King and conflict between them and their heirs would last until 1571.

Meanwhile Anne served as Queen consort of Bohemia and one of two rival Queen consorts of Hungary until her death. She died in her native Prague.

Children

Anna and Ferdinand had fifteen children:

Genetics

Anne of Bohemia was a direct matrilineal ancestor of Queen Victoria (and therefore of the last Russian czarina Alexandra Fyodorovna as well as HRH Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh). Provided this genealogy is correct, Anne of Bohemia must therefore have been of mitochondrial haplogroup H according to tests on the latter two descedants.

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