Matilda of Brandenburg, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg
Matilda of Brandenburg, a member of the House of Ascania, was first Duchess consort of Brunswick-Lüneburg from 1235 to 1252 by her marriage with the Welf duke Otto the Child.
Matilda was the elder daughter of Margrave Albert II of Brandenburg and his wife Matilda, a daughter of the Wettin margrave Conrad II of Lusatia. Albert's uncle Count Bernhard of Anhalt had received the Duchy of Saxony after the deposition of the Welf duke Henry the Lion in 1180 and Matilda's father, ruling the Margraviate of Brandenburg since 1205, initially had been a loyal supporter of the Imperial Hohenstaufen dynasty. However, upon the assassination of Philip of Swabia in 1208, he switched sides to the Welf rival King Otto IV. Upon his death in 1220, he was succeeded by Matilda's brothers, John and Otto III, who continued to support the Saxon Welfs in the struggle for their allodial lands around Brunswick.
In the course of the reconciliation between the Welf and Ascanian dynasties, Matilda in 1228 was married to the Welf heir Otto I the Child, a nephew of the late Emperor Otto IV and grandson of Henry the Lion. As both were descendants of the Billung duke Magnus of Saxony, a dispensation had been obtained from Pope Honorius III. At the same time, Matilda's younger sister Elisabeth married the Ludovingian landgrave Henry Raspe of Thuringia. The marriage of Matilda and Otto produced ten known children, the basis for a profound marriage policy:
- Elisabeth, married William II of Holland
- Helen, married Hermann II, Landgrave of Thuringia and secondly Albert I, Duke of Saxony
- Adelaide, married Henry I, Landgrave of Hesse
- Matilda, married Henry II, Prince of Anhalt-Aschersleben, later Abbess of Gernrode
- Agnes, married Vitslav II, Prince of Rügen
- Albert
- John
- Otto, Prince-Bishop of Hildesheim
- Conrad, Prince-Bishop of Verden.
Literature
- Gudrun Pischke: Mechthild. In: Horst-Rüdiger Jarck : Braunschweigisches Biographisches Lexikon. 8. bis 18. Jahrhundert, Braunschweig 2006, S. 483