Kunigunde von Orlamünde

Kunigunde, Countess of Weimar-Orlamünde (1303 – 29 April 1382) was a German noblewoman and nun. After the death of her husband, she served as the Abbess of the Convent of the Celestial Throne in Nuremberg. In German folklore she has been associated with the Weiße Frauen of Hohenzollern.

Kunigunde
Countess of Weimar-Orlamünde
Born1303
Died29 April 1382
Spouse(s)Otto VI, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde
FatherUlrich I, Landgrave of Leuchtenberg

Biography

Kunigunde von Orlamünde was born in 1303. She was the first child of Ulrich I, Landgrave of Leuchtenberg.[1] In 1321 she married Otto VI, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde.[2] Their marriage produced no children. She and her husband adopted a daughter, Podika von Schaumnerg, whom married Poske Ritter von Schweritz in 1341. Kinigunde's husband died in 1340, leaving her with a vast inheritance. She used her inheritance to fund the Convent of the Celestial Throne, a Cistercian monastery in Nuremberg, where she later entered into service as the abbess. According to legends, she was the founder of the convent, although the in reality it was founded half a century earlier. In 1342 she did give an endowment to the convent.[3]

Legend

In German folklore Kunigunde has been associated with the ghost story of the Weiße Frauen of Hohenzollern.[4] According to legend, Kunigunde fell in love with Albrecht the Fair, a son of Frederick IV, Burgrave of Nuremberg. He proclaimed that he would marry her if "four eyes did not stand in the way", referring to his parents who did not approve of the match. Kunigunde mistook his message and thought the eyes referred to her two children, a son and a daughter.[5] She stabbed their eyes out with a needle, killing both children.[6] Albrecht, horrified by her actions, refused to marry her. Devastated, she made a pilgrimage to the Vatican to obtain absolution for her sins from the Pope.[7] As penance, the Pope ordered her to build a monastery and then enter into consecrated life. Some versions state that she was sentenced to life in prison for murder and others that she died of exhaustion while on pilgrimage. The legend ends with her as a ghost, haunting the castles of the House of Hohenzollern.[8] Historians refute the legend, as Kunigunde von Orlamünde was childless.[9]

gollark: It's basically the same principle, just higher frequency than normal "radio" things.
gollark: Well, microwaves, but so is the micro:bit radio, so meh.
gollark: It is not currently, strictly speaking, osmarks internet *radio™*.
gollark: I kind of want to attain two micro:bits, thingy them to my server and laptop via UART over USB, and transmit osmarks internet radio™ over their surprisingly capable wireless radios.
gollark: Unrelatedly, it turns out that the unused micro:bit on my desk still functions perfectly.

References

  1. "I513411: Kunigunde v.Leuchtenberg". ww-person.com.
  2. "Ascania 12". genealogy.euweb.cz.
  3. Thackeray, William Makepeace (12 June 1887). "The Cornhill Magazine". Smith, Elder. via Google Books.
  4. HELBIG, Friedrich (12 June 1860). "Kunigunde von Orlamünde. Tragödie in fünf Acten [and in verse]. (Manuscript.)" via Google Books.
  5. Bruckbräu, Friedrich Wilhelm (12 June 1860). "Gräfin-Wittwe Kunigunde von Orlamünde, Mörderin ihrer zwei Kinder aus wahnsinniger Liebe, und ihre gespenstischen Erscheinungen als weiße Frau". Lutzenberger via Google Books.
  6. Flocken, Jan von (7 October 2007). "1812: Die Weiße Frau – Ein Gespenst macht Geschichte" via www.welt.de.
  7. "Berühmte Sage: Die Weiße Frau von Orlamünde". Thüringer Allgemeine.
  8. "Gemeinde Himmelkron: 900 Jahre Zisterzienser". web.archive.org. 2 April 2015.
  9. "The White Ladies of German Lore". Historical Blindness.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.