Agnes of Rheinfelden

Summary

Agnes of Rheinfelden (*c. 1065; † 19 December 1111)[1] was the daughter of Rudolf of Rheinfelden, and the wife of Berthold II of Zähringen, Duke of Swabia.

Agnes of Rheinfelden
Duchess of Swabia
Duchess of Zähringen
Bornc. 1065
Died19 December 1111
Noble familyRheinfelden
Spouse(s)Berthold II, Duke of Swabia
FatherRudolf of Rheinfelden
MotherAdelaide of Savoy

Life edit

Agnes was the daughter of Rudolf von Rheinfelden, duke of Swabia, and anti-king of Germany, and his wife Adelaide of Savoy. Her sisters were Bertha of Rheinfelden, countess of Kellmünz, and Adelaide of Rheinfelden, queen consort of Hungary. In 1079, shortly after her mother’s death. Agnes married Berthold II of Zähringen.[2] After the deaths of her father, Rudolf, in 1080, and her sister, Adelaide, and her brother, Berthold of Rheinfelden, who both died in 1090, Agnes inherited much of the property of her natal dynasty.[3]

Agnes was the founder of the abbey of St. Peter in the Black Forest, burial site for members of her husband’s dynasty (the Zähringer).[4]

Agnes and her husband died within a few months of each other in 1111. They were both interred at St Peter in the Blackforest, an abbey they founded, which became the main burial place for their dynasty.[5]

Marriage and children edit

Agnes had at least eight children with Berthold II, including four sons, and four (or perhaps five) daughters:

  • Berthold (* c.1080)
  • Rudolf II (* c.1082; † 1111), count of Rheinfelden
  • Berthold III, duke of Zähringen (r.1111-1122), succeeded by his brother, Conrad I
  • Conrad I, Duke of Zähringen
  • Agnes (d. after 8 January 1125), married William II of Burgund-Besançon
  • Liutgard (died young)
  • Petrissa (* c.1095; d. before 1116), married Frederick I of Pfirt
  • Liutgard (* c.1098; d. 25 March 1131), married Godfrey of Calw
  • Judith (* c.1100), married Ulrich II of Gammertingen

References edit

  • Hans-Otto Mühleisen: Die Beziehung der Abtei St. Peter auf dem Schwarzwald zum Oberaargau. In: Jahrbuchvereinigung Oberaargau (Hg.): Jahrbuch des Oberaargaus, Jg. 46, Langenthal 2003, S. 97–135 (hier (PDF; 2,6 MB) im Volltext online abrufbar)
  • K. Schmid, ed., Die Zähringer. Schweizer Vorträge und neue Forschungen (Sigmaringen, 1990)
  • E. Heyck, Geschichte der Herzöge von Zähringen (Baden, 1891).
  • J. Krimm-Beumann, ‘Der Rotulus Sanpetrinus und das Selbstverständnis des Klosters St. Peter im 12. Jahrhundert.’ in: H-O. Mühleisen, H. Ott, and T. Zotz, eds., Das Kloster St. Peter (Waldkirch 2001).

Notes edit

  1. ^ Heyck, Geschichte der Herzöge von Zähringen, p. 117.
  2. ^ Heyck, Geschichte der Herzöge von Zähringen, p. 117.
  3. ^ Schmid, Die Zähringer, p. 60.
  4. ^ Krimm-Beumann, ‘Der Rotulus Sanpetrinus’, p. 165
  5. ^ Heyck, Geschichte der Herzöge von Zähringen, p. 157.