Elisabeth of Carinthia, Queen of Germany


Elisabeth of Carinthia, was a Duchess of Austria from 1282 and Queen of Germany from 1298 until 1308, by marriage to King Albert I of the House of Habsburg.

Early life

Born in Munich, Bavaria, Elisabeth was the eldest daughter of Count Meinhard of Gorizia-Tyrol, and Bavaria, Queen of Germany">Duchy of Bavaria">Bavaria, Queen of Germany, widow of the late Hohenstaufen King Conrad IV of Germany.
Elizabeth thus was a half-sister of Conradin, King of Jerusalem and Duke of Swabia. Elizabeth was in fact better connected to powerful German rulers than her future husband: a descendant of earlier monarchs, for example Emperor Frederick I, [Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick Barbarossa], she was also a niece of the Bavarian dukes, Austria's important neighbors.

Duchess and Queen

Elisabeth was married in Vienna on 20 December 1274 to Count Albert I of Habsburg, eldest son and heir of the newly elected Rudolf I, [King of the Romans], thus becoming daughter-in-law of the King of the Romans and Emperor-to-be. After Rudolf had defeated his rival King Ottokar II of Bohemia in the 1278 Battle on the Marchfeld, he invested his son Albert with the duchies of Austria and Styria at the Imperial Diet in Augsburg on 17 December 1282.
Albert initially had to share the rule with his younger brother Rudolf II, who nevertheless had to waive his rights according to the Treaty of Rheinfelden the next year. Duke Albert and Elizabeth solidified their rule in what was to become the Habsburg "hereditary lands", also with the help of Elizabeth's father Meinhard, who in his turn was created Duke of Carinthia by King Rudolf I in 1286.
Elizabeth was described as shrewd and enterprising, in possession of some commercial talents. The construction of the Saline plant in Salzkammergut goes back to her suggestion.
Upon the death of Albert's father in 1291, the princes elected Count Adolf of Nassau German king, while Duke Albert himself became entangled in internal struggles with the Austrian nobility. Not until Adolf's deposition in 1298, Elizabeth's husband was finally elected King of the Romans on 23 June 1298. Two weeks later, Adolf was defeated and killed in the Battle of Göllheim. In 1299, Elizabeth was crowned Queen of the Romans in Nuremberg.

Later life

On 1 May 1308 Albert was murdered by his nephew John Parricida near Windisch, Swabia. Afterward Elisabeth had the Poor Clare monastery of Königsfelden erected at the site, where she also died on 28 October 1312 and was also buried. Today her bones rest at Saint Paul's Abbey in Carinthia.

Issue

Elizabeth's and Albert's children were:
  1. Austria (1275-1327)|Anna].
  2. # married in Graz ca. 1295 to Margrave Herman, Margrave of Brandenburg-Salzwedel ;
  3. # married in Breslau 1310 to Duke Heinrich VI of Breslau.
  4. Agnes
  5. # married in Vienna on 13 February 1296 to King Andrew III of Hungary.
  6. Rudolf III, married but line extinct. He predeceased his father.
  7. # married on 25 May 1300 to Duchess Blanche of France ;
  8. # married in Prague on 16 October 1306 to Elizabeth Richeza of Poland.
  9. Elisabeth.
  10. # married in 1304 to Frederick IV, Duke of Lorraine.
  11. Frederick I.
  12. # married on 11 May 1315 to Isabella of Aragon, Queen of Germany but line extinct.
  13. Leopold I.
  14. # married in 1315 to Catherine of Savoy.
  15. Catherine.
  16. # married in 1316 to Charles, Duke of Calabria.
  17. Albert II.
  18. # married in Vienna on 15 February 1324 to Joanna of Pfirt.
  19. Henry the Gentle.
  20. # married Countess Elizabeth of Virneburg but line extinct.
  21. Meinhard.
  22. Otto.
  23. # married on 15 May 1325 to Elizabeth of Bavaria, Duchess of Austria ;
  24. # married on 16 February 1335 to Anne of Bohemia, Duchess of Austria.
  25. Jutta.
  26. # married in Baden 26 March 1319 to Count Ludwig VI of Öttingen.