Theodora Komnene, Duchess of Austria
Theodora Komnene | |
---|---|
Gertrude of Süpplingenburg and Theodora Komnene | |
Spouse(s) | Henry II, Duke of Austria |
Noble family | Komnenos |
Father | Andronikos Komnenos |
Mother | Eirene |
Died | 2 January 1184 |
Theodora Komnena or Theodora Comnena (Greek: Θεοδώρα ἡ Κομνηνή, died 2 January 1184) was a daughter of Andronikos Komnenos and his wife, Eirene (?Aineiadissa). Based on the writings of Niketas Choniates, it is likely Theodora was Andronikos' second daughter. The year of Theodora's birth is unknown.
Life and Death
Little is known of Theodora's early life, except that her father died in 1142. She does not appear in the historical record again until the late 1140s, when she was betrothed to and married Henry II of Austria, whose first wife, Gertrude of Supplingenburg had died in 1143. The marriage had been arranged by her uncle, Manuel I and her eventual husband's half-brother, Conrad III of Germany, during the latter's stay in Constantinople.[1]
Theodora and Henry were married in Constantinople, and subsequently granted the Duchy of Austria by Frederick I Barbarossa in 1156.[2]
Theodora died on 2 January 1184.[3][4]
Family
Theodora had three children by her husband Henry:
- Agnès (?1154 – 13 January 1182) married to Stephen III of Hungary
- Leopold V, Duke of Austria (1157 – 31 December 1194)
- Henry, Duke of Mödling (1158 – 31 August 1223) married Richeza of Bohemia.[5]
Ancestry
8. Alexios I Komnenos | ||||||||||||||||
4. John II Komnenos | ||||||||||||||||
9. Irene Doukaina | ||||||||||||||||
2. Andronikos Komnenos | ||||||||||||||||
10. Ladislaus I of Hungary | ||||||||||||||||
5. Piroska of Hungary | ||||||||||||||||
11. Adelaide of Swabia | ||||||||||||||||
1. Theodora Komnene | ||||||||||||||||
3. Eirene (?Aineiadissa) | ||||||||||||||||
Footnotes
- ↑ Runciman (1978), Vol. 2, p. 270
- ↑ Fuhrmann, H., trans. Reuter, T. (1995) Germany in the high middle ages c.1050-1200 (1995), p. 150
- ↑ Continuatio Zwetlensis Altera 1184, MGH SS IX, p. 542
- ↑ Necrologium Seccoviense, Salzburg Necrologies (Regio Styriaca), p. 403
- ↑ Cawley, Charles, Cawley C.; Austria in Medieval Lands Project, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, retrieved August 2012,
References
- Runciman, S.; A History of the Crusades, Vols. 1-3 (Penguin Books, 1978)
- Fuhrmann, H., (trans. Reuter, T.); Germany in the high middle ages c.1050-1200 (Cambridge University Press, 1995)
- Pertz, G. H. (ed.); Auctarium Zwetlensis et Continuatio (Hannover, 1851, 1925)
- Hereberg-Fränke, S. (ed.); Diocesis Salisburgensis Regiones Salisburgensis et Bavarica (Berlin, 1904)
- Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Von Ostarrichi an den Bosporus. Ein Überblick zu den Beziehungen im Mittelalter (From Ostarrichi to the Bosporus: an overview of relations in the Middle Ages), in: Pro Oriente Jahrbuch 2010. Vienna 2011, p. 66-77 (online: http://oeaw.academia.edu/JohannesPreiserKapeller/Papers/640940/Von_Ostarrichi_an_den_Bosporus._Ein_Uberblick_zu_den_Beziehungen_im_Mittelalter_From_Ostarrichi_to_the_Bosporus_an_overview_of_relations_in_the_Middle_Ages_)
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