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Barbara of Saxe-Wittenberg

Barbara of Saxe-Wittenberg
Margravine of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
Born1405
Died10 October 1465 (aged 59–60)
Bayreuth
Noble familyAscania
Spouse(s)John, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach
IssueRudolf of Brandenburg
Barbara Gonzaga, Marchioness of Mantua
Elisabeth, Duchess of Pomerania
Dorothea, Queen of Denmark
FatherRudolf III, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg
MotherBarbara of Legnica

Barbara of Saxe-Wittenberg (1405 – 10 October 1465), from the Saxe-Wittenberg line of the House of Ascania, was the wife of John, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach (1406–1464), called "John the Alchemist", and mother of Dorothea (1430–1495), Queen of Denmark.

Biography

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Barbara was born in Dresden in 1405 as the eldest daughter of Rudolf III, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg and his second wife, Barbara of Silesia-Liegnitz. She had three brothers, Rudolf (died 1406), Wenceslas (died 1407), and Sigismund (died 1407), and a half-sister, Scholastica (1393–1463; married to Jan I of Żagań), from her father's first marriage to Anne of Meissen. Sigismund and Wenceslas were killed in the collapse of a castle tower.[1]

Barbara was betrothed at an early age to John of Brandenburg-Kulmbach, who was one year younger than she. She married John in 1416 when she was eleven and he ten. The marriage was arranged by the future Emperor Sigismund, who had initially planned to grant John the Electorate of Saxony, though this plan was abandoned.

The couple resided for a long time at Plassenburg castle near Kulmbach, then later at Scharfeneck Palace near Baiersdorf, and finally in a city apartment in Nuremberg. Barbara spent the time after her husband's death in Bayreuth. She died there on October 10, 1465, almost a year after her husband's death.

Family and children

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Barbara and John had four children, of whom the three girls survived childhood:

Through her daughter Dorothea, Barbara was a great-grandmother of James IV of Scotland and thus the ancestor of all subsequent monarchs from the House of Stuart.

References

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  1. ^ Karl Heinrich Ludwig Pölitz (1826). Die Geschichte des Königreiches Sachsen (in German). Vol. Band 1. Hilscher. p. 110.
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