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Sibylle of Bavaria

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sibylle of Bavaria
Electress Palatine
Tenure23 February 1511 – 18 April 1519
Born16 June 1489
Died18 April 1519(1519-04-18) (aged 29)
Heidelberg
Burial
SpouseLouis V, Elector Palatine
FatherAlbert IV of Bavaria-Munich
MotherKunigunde of Austria

Sibylle of Bavaria (16 June 1489 – 18 April 1519 in Heidelberg) was a member of the House of Wittelsbach was a princess of Bavaria-Munich and by marriage Electress Palatine.

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Transcription

Life

Sibylle was the daughter of Duke Albert IV of Bavaria-Munich (1447–1508) from his marriage to Kunigunde of Austria (1465–1520), daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III. She married on 23 February 1511 in Heidelberg Elector Palatine Louis V (1478–1544). The couple had no children.

Louis had earlier been engaged to Sibylle's elder sister Sidonie, but Sidonie had died before she could marry, barely 17 years old.[1] The marriage was the starting point of the relaxation of the relations between Bavaria and the Palatinate, which were severely impacted by the Landshut War of Succession.[2] Relationships between the Palatinate and Emperor Maximilian I, who was Sibylle's uncle, also improved and Louis came closer politically to the Contra League.[3]

Sibylle died in 1519 and was buried in the Church of the Holy Spirit in Heidelberg. For a while, Sibylle's inheritance was claimed by her brother Ernest. This claim was denied by her widower and her brother William. Instead, Ernest was promised a high ecclesiastic office.[4]

References

  • Katrin Nina Marth (2009), "Dem löblichen Hawss Beirn zu pesserung, aufnemung vnd erweiterung ...". The dynastic politics of the House of Bavaria at the turn of the late Middle Ages and early modern times (thesis), Regensburg: University of Regensburg, pp. 154–171

Footnotes

  1. ^ Constant von Wurzbach: Biographical Dictionary of the Austrian Empire, Vol. 6. K.K. Court and State Printing, 1860, p. 405
  2. ^ Andreas Kraus: Handbook of Bavarian history: History of the Upper Palatinate and the Bavarian Circle until the end of the 18th Century, Volume 3, C.H. Beck, 1995, p. 83
  3. ^ Hermann Wiesflecker: Emperor Maximilian I, Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag, 1986, p. 24
  4. ^ Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences: Historical class: Proceedings of the historical class of the Royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences, volume 10, The Academy, 1867, p. 119
This page was last edited on 6 April 2024, at 15:08
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