Catherine of Austria (1420–1493)

Catherine of Austria (1424 in Wiener Neustadt 11 September 1493 at Hohenbaden Castle in Baden-Baden) was a member of the House of Habsburg and through marriage Margravine of Baden.

Catherine of Austria
Born1424
Wiener Neustadt
Died(1493-09-11)11 September 1493
Hohenbaden Castle in Baden-Baden
BuriedBaden-Baden
Noble familyHouse of Habsburg (by birth)
House of Zähringen (by marriage)
Spouse(s)Charles I, Margrave of Baden-Baden
Issue
FatherErnest, Duke of Austria
MotherCymburgis of Masovia

Life

Catherine was a daughter of the Duke Ernest I of Austria and Styria, nicknamed "the Iron" (1377-1424) from his marriage to Cymburgis (1394-1429), a daughter of Duke Siemowit IV of Masovia. Catherine's older brother Frederick III was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1452. She grew up in Wiener Neustadt, together with her brothers Frederick III and Albert VI.[1]

She married Margrave Charles I of Baden-Baden (1427-1475) in Pforzheim 15 July 1447. She brought him a dowry of 30000ducats.[2] She expressed the preservation of her high rank by putting the Austrian coat of arms next to the shield of Baden in her personal coat of arms.[3] after his marriage, Charles I was appointed governor of Further Austria by Archduke Sigismund of Austria and Tyrol. In this position, he became acquainted with Sigismund's councillor Matthäus Hummel.[4]

Catherine outlived her husband, with whom she was joined in tender marriage for 18 years. She became the ancestress of the House of Baden. Her son Christopher left her Hohenbaden Castle as a widow seat and built the New Castle in Baden-Baden for himself.

Catherine died in 1493 and was buried in Baden-Baden.

Issue

From her marriage with Charles I, Catherine had the following children:

  1. Catherine (15 January 1449 before 8 May 1484), married on 19 May 1464 to Count George III of Werdenberg-Sargans
  2. Zimburgis (15 May 1450 5 July 1501), married on 19 December 1468 to Count Engelbert II of Nassau-Dillenburg
  3. Margareta (1452–1495), Abbess in Lichtenthal
  4. Christopher I, Margrave of Baden-Baden (13 November 1453 19 April 1527)
  5. Albert, Margrave of Baden-Hachberg (1456–1488)
  6. Frederick (9 July 1458 24 September 1517), Bishop of Utrecht
gollark: Slightly unoptimized and buggy hash tables, linked lists even though they're generally awful datastructures because they're easy to implement, actually I can't think of other instances immediately.
gollark: This sort of attitude leads to mildly worse code everywhere.
gollark: Doesn't C have some `hcreate` thing?
gollark: osmarkslispFPGA™ when?!
gollark: It's not like C is very close to the hardware nowadays *either*. With enough investment we could probably have had fast Lisp machines too.

References

  • Constant von Wurzbach: Biographisches lexikon des kaiserthums Oesterreich, S. 401 f., K. K. Hof- und Staatsdruckerei, 1860

Footnotes

  1. Ferdinand Carl Böheim: Chronik von Wiener-Neustadt, self-published, 1863, p. 99
  2. Christoph Friedrich von Stälin: Wirtembergische Geschichte, J. G. Cotta'scher Verlag, 1856, p. 725
  3. Alterthums-Verein zu Wien: Berichte und Mittheilungen des Alterthums-Vereines zu Wien, vol. 2, Buchhandlung Prandel und Meyer, 1857, p. 143
  4. Sönke Lorenz (ed.): Attempto, oder wie stiftet man eine Universität?, Franz Steiner Verlag, 1999, p. 105
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