Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Richeza of Lotharingia" ¶ 27
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Richeza and made
Whether this was done at the behest of Anno II, or whether it may have made by Richeza, isn't clarified.

Richeza and Brauweiler
The Brauweiler Chronicle indicated that soon after the escape of her husband, Richeza and her children fled to Germany with the Polish royal crown and regalia, which were given to Emperor Conrad II and she subsequently played an important role in mediating a peace settlement between Poland and the Holy Roman Empire.
In 1054 in connection with some donations to the Abbey of Brauweiler, Richeza expressed her desire to be buried there beside her mother.
Richeza responded to Anno II's ambitions with the formal renunciation of her possessions in Brauweiler to the monastery of Moselle, while reserving the lifelong use of the lands.
Richeza was buried in Köln's church of St. Maria ad Gradus and not, as she had wished, in Brauweiler.
After the death of his brother Otto, Richeza decided that Brauweiler became in the center of Ezzonen memory.

Richeza and Ezzonen
Richeza received Saalfeld, a possession that didn't belong to the Lower Rhine area in which the Ezzonen dynasty tried to build a coherent dominion.
Richeza now inherited large parts of the Ezzonen possessions.
By a charter dated on 17 July 1051 is noted that Richeza participated in the reorganization of the Ezzonen properties.
The reason for the transfer was likely that the future wasn't secured to the descendants of the Ezzonen: From Ezzo's ten children only Richeza and Otto had children.
He was the only son of Mieszko II Lambert by his wife Richeza, daughter of Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia ( Ezzonen ) and granddaughter of Emperor Otto II.
Ezzo ( – 21 March 1034 ), sometimes called Ehrenfried, Count Palatine of Lotharingia of the Ezzonen dynasty, brother-in-law of Emperor Otto III, father of Queen Richeza of Poland and many other illustrious children, is undoubtedly one of the most important figures of the Rhenish History of his time.

Richeza and so
This purpose wasn't enough of the original building so Richeza built a new Abbey, which is substantially conserved until today.
This precipitated a rebellion by local barons, which coupled with the so called " Pagan Reaction " of the commoners, forced Casimir and Richeza to flee to Saxony.

Richeza and she
After she returned to Germany following the deposition of her husband in 1031, she became later a nun and today is reverenced as Blessed Richeza of Lotharingia.
Then Richeza went to Saalfeld, where she met similar arrangements in favor of the Diocese of Würzburg.
Possibly can be more precisely from the condition of the Codex date: After 1047, when Richeza assumed her clerical vows, she had no need for a personal representative signature.
In this way, the marriage with Sverker I give Richeza the opportunity to help her son, and some historians assume that she partially married the Swedish King for this reason.
Richeza is known to have survived Sverker I's death, although facts of her later life and her date of death are unknown: the legend says that she remarried the stable master who took part in the assassination of Sverker I.
After Magnus's death, his widow Richeza returned to the east where she married Volodar of Minsk, a Rurikid ruler of Viking origins.
After that, she was known as Countess Richeza of Everstein ().
Her name at birth was Richeza ; she adopted the name Elizabeth after her first marriage.
Because of her young age, the marriage was not celebrated until 26 May 1303, when she arrived in Prague and was crowned the Queen of Bohemia and Poland, adopting the name Elizabeth at the same time ( as Richeza was unused and seen as strange in Bohemia ).

Richeza and placed
Of the seven daughters only Richeza was conspicuously married, while the others were placed in monasteries of which they all became abbesses.

Richeza and her
Queen Richeza and her children found refuge in Germany.
Through her mother, Richeza was a niece of Emperor Otto III ( who was instrumental to her betrothal ), Adelheid I, Abbess of Quedlinburg and Sophia I, Abbess of Gandersheim.
Richeza still called herself Queen of Poland, a privilege that was given to her by the Emperor.
In Saalfeld Richeza led the Polish opposition which supported her son Casimir, who in 1039, with the help of Conrad II, finally obtain the Polish throne.
Otto's death seems to have touched Richeza ; apparently, they were very close ( Otto named his only daughter after her ).
At the end Richeza only maintain her direct rule over the towns of Saalfeld and Coburg, but retained the right to use until her death seven other locations in the Rhineland with their additional incomes, and 100 silver pounds per year by the Archdiocese of Köln.
According to witnesses, Richeza had a small and graceful stature ; her collarbone showed traces of a fracture, which may have been caused by falling from a horse.
Among these, in addition to Richeza were named Anno II and her parents.
Richeza of Poland (, ; 12 April 1116 – after 25 December 1156 ), was a Polish princess and member of the House of Piast, and by her three marriages Queen consort of Sweden and Princess of the Principality of Minsk ( now the capital and largest city in Belarus ).
Richeza bore her husband two sons: Knud in 1129 and Niels ( Saint Niels ) in 1130.
Richeza and her husband returned to Denmark.
Now a widow, Richeza returned to Poland, apparently leaving her two sons behind in Denmark.
Richeza returned again to Poland, this time with her daughter Sofia, but left her two sons behind with her former husband.

Richeza and sister
Due to the childlessness of Otto III, the seven daughters of his sister Mathilde ( the only of Otto II's daughters who married and produced children ), were the only potential brides for Mieszko, Bolesław I's son and heir ; the oldest of Otto III's nieces, Richeza, was the chosen one.
Magnus, whose birth year has never been confirmed in modern times, was probably the second son of Birger Jarl ( Birger Magnuson, 1200 – 66 ) and Princess Ingeborg, herself the sister of the childless king Eric Ericson of Sweden, thus a daughter of king Eric the Survivor and his queen, Richeza of Denmark.
At that time, king Eric X married princess Richeza of Denmark, daughter of the late Valdemar I of Denmark, and sister of the then reigning Valdemar II the Victorious.

Richeza and father
The relationship between Richeza and her stepsons wasn't good, especially after King Sancho III declared war on Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Barcelona, father of Alfonso ( later King of Aragon ), who was betrothed to Richeza's daughter Sancha.

0.219 seconds.