(Redirected from Gertrude of Austria)'Gertrude of Austria' (
1226 –
1288) was the niece of Duke
Frederick II of Austria, the last male member of the
Babenberg dynasty (daughter of his elder brother
Henry of Mödling), and granddaughter of
Leopold VI of Austria and
Theodora Angelina.
She was the primogenitural heir of the entire Babenberg line of Dukes of Austria.
Her uncle, Duke Frederick, had a long quarrel with
Emperor Frederick II, during which he had even been under imperial ban. When she was barely in her teens, in
1239, in a spectacular change in imperial politics, duke Frederick however became one of the emperor's most important allies. Negotiations about the elevation of Vienna to a bishopric and of Austria (including Styria) to a
kingdom were initiated. However, a condition for those were that the duke's niece Gertrude would have had to marry the almost fifty-year-old emperor. Gertrude refused.
She married first in 1246 (year of her uncle's death)
Vladislaus, Margrave of Moravia, (died 1247), eldest son and heir of king
Wenceslaus I of Bohemia, secondly
Herman VI, Margrave of Baden (died 1250), and after his death in 1252 thirdly
Roman of Halicz (divorced 1253), each of which unsuccessfully tried to establish themselves as Dukes of Austria, as did her son
Frederick I, Margrave of Baden (1249-68).
Because the Babenberg Austria was inheritable by females according to provisions of
Privilegium Minus, she claimed the inheritance first on basis of her father's successor against her uncle Frederick (died 1246), and then against her aunt
Margaret, Duchess of Austria (died 1267) and her second husband king
Ottokar II of Bohemia (deposed in 1276 and killed in 1278) also as heiress of Frederick, and ultimately as heiress of Margaret.
Her first husband Vladislav of Bohemia, Margrave of Moravie (died 1247) had already claimed Austrian duchy against duke Frederick, as Gertrude was heiress of the elder brother.
Her second husband
Herman VI, Margrave of Baden was able to hold some control in the duchies, but he died in 1250.
Her and Herman's son
Frederick I, Margrave of Baden's claim was asserted to the Babenberg inheritance, but he was killed in Naples in 1268, leaving a sister (the future Countess of
Heunburg) to continue the line. Their rights were ultimately lost quite fully as
Rudolf I of Germany granted her duchies to his own sons in 1282. Gertrude survived her three husbands and her son.
See also
★
List of rulers of Austria