Mary Of Hungary (other)
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Mary Of Hungary (other)
Mary, Queen of Hungary was the reigning queen of Hungary, 1382–95. Mary of Hungary or Maria of Hungary may also refer to: * Margaret of Hungary or Byzantine Empress Maria (1175–1223) * Mary of Hungary, Queen of Naples (1257–1323), Queen Consort of Naples * Mary of Hungary (governor of the Netherlands) Mary of Austria (15 September 1505 – 18 October 1558), also known as Mary of Hungary, was Queen of Hungary and Bohemia as the wife of King Louis II, and was later governor of the Habsburg Netherlands. The daughter of Queen Joanna and King ...
(1505–1558), wife of Louis II of Hungary and queen consort of Bohemia and Hungary; later, the governor of the Habsburg Netherlands {{hndis ...
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Mary, Queen Of Hungary
Mary, also known as Maria of Anjou (, , ; 137117 May 1395), queen regnant, reigned as Queen of Hungary and List of dukes and kings of Croatia, Croatia between 1382 and 1385, and from 1386 until her death. She was the daughter of Louis I of Hungary, Louis the Great, King of Hungary and King of Poland, Poland, and his wife, Elizabeth of Bosnia. Mary's marriage to Sigismund of Luxembourg, a member of the imperial Luxembourg dynasty, was already decided before her first birthday. A delegation of Polish prelates and lords confirmed her right to succeed her father in Poland in 1379. Having no male siblings, Mary was crowned "king" of Hungary on 17September 1382, seven days after Louis the Great's death. Her mother, who had assumed the regent, regency, absolved the Polish noblemen from their oath of loyalty to Mary in favour of Mary's younger sister, Jadwiga of Poland, Jadwiga, in early 1383. The idea of a female monarch remained unpopular among the Hungarian noblemen, the majority of ...
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Margaret Of Hungary
Margaret of Hungary (''Margit'' in Hungarian; b. 1175 – d. after 1229) was a Hungarian princess from the House of Árpád. She was a Byzantine Empress by marriage to Isaac II Angelos (d. 1204), and Queen of Thessalonica by marriage to Boniface of Montferrat (d. 1207). She was regent of Thessalonica during the minority of her son Demetrius of Montferrat, from 1207 to 1216. In later years (c. 1223) she governed some of the most southern regions of the Kingdom of Hungary, with her domains being centered in the region of Syrmia. Early life Margaret was the eldest daughter of Béla III of Hungary and his first wife Agnes of Antioch. She was a younger sister of Emeric, King of Hungary. Her younger siblings were Andrew II of Hungary and Constance of Hungary. Two other siblings, Solomon and Stephen, are mentioned in the standard reference work on the genealogy of medieval European aristocracy, "Europäische Stammtafeln" (1978–1995) by Detlev Schwennicke. They reportedly died ...
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Mary Of Hungary, Queen Of Naples
Mary of Hungary ( 1257 – 25 March 1323), of the Árpád dynasty, was List of consorts of Naples, Queen of Naples and Kingdom of Albania (medieval), Queen of Albania by marriage to King Charles II of Naples, Charles II. She was a daughter of Stephen V of Hungary and his wife Elizabeth the Cuman. Mary served as regent in Provence in 1290–1294 and in Naples in 1295–96, 1296–98, and 1302, during the absences of her husband. Early life Mary's mother followed the Shamanist religion, like other Cumans. She was considered a Pagan by contemporary Christians of Europe and Elizabeth had to convert to Catholicism in order to marry Mary's father, Stephen. It's unknown at what age she converted to Christianity, but could be possible that she was already raised as an Eastern Orthodox Church, Orthodox christian in the Hungarian royal court since her childhood. Mary was the second of six children. Her sisters, Elizabeth of Hungary, Queen of Serbia, Elizabeth and Catherine of Hungary, Qu ...
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