Hellicha of Wittelsbach

Hellicha of Wittelsbach (Czech: Hellicha z Wittelsbachu, German: Heilika von Wittelsbach; c.1160 - 13 August 1198), was Duchess consort of Bohemia from 1189 to 1198, married to Duke Conrad II.

Hellicha of Wittelsbach
Duchess of Bohemia
Bornc.1160
Died13 August 1198
Noble familyHouse of Wittelsbach
Spouse(s)Conrad II, Duke of Bohemia
FatherOtto VII of Wittelsbach
MotherBenedicta of Donauwörth

Life

She was born in Bavaria, the daughter of Count palatine Otto VII (d. 1189), himself a son of Count Otto IV of Wittelsbach, and his wife Benedicta, daughter of Count Mangold of Donauwörth.

She and Conrad, then Duke of Znojmo, married before 1176, when she was about 16 years old and her husband was about 25 years her senior. In 1182 she became first Margravine of Moravia, when her husband was appointed margrave by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in 1182. She became duchess when her husband, backed by both the emperor and the local nobles, ascended to the Bohemian throne in 1189.

In 1191 Duke Conrad II accompanied Frederick's son and successor Henry VI on his campaign against the Kingdom of Sicily and never returned as he died on 9 September during the siege of Naples. Hellicha died on 13 August 1198.

gollark: The horse contains code, and is not an emergent property of anomalous cellular automata embedded in Discord infrastructure?!
gollark: <@231856503756161025> Instead of SRV records, I could also do horrible DNS things to return different A(AAAA)/CNAME records.
gollark: This does sound like an actual mental health problem of some kind.
gollark: What of your previous unfinished games?
gollark: It temporarily became sentient, for purposes.

References

    • Čechura. J.; Jiří Mikulec, J.; Stellner, F. Lexikon českých panovnických dynastií. Praha, 1996, s. 96; Velké dějiny zemí Koruny české. Díl 1. Praha a Litomyšl, 1999, s. 752.
    Hellicha of Wittelsbach
    Born: c.1160 Died: 13 August 1198
    Preceded by
    Elizabeth of Hungary
    Duchess consort of Bohemia
    1189–1191
    Succeeded by
    Adelaide of Meissen
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.