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  1. Hedwig of Bavaria. Hedwig also Heilwig, [1] ( c. 778 – c. 835) was a Saxon noblewoman, abbess of Chelles, [1] the wife of Count Welf, and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter. [2] Life. Hedwig was possibly born at Altdorf in the Frankish lands of Alamannia (present-day Germany).

  2. 21. Jan. 2023 · Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria. Hedwig (c. 778 – after 833) was a Saxon noble woman, the wife of Count Welf I and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter. Tunnettu myös nimellä: Eigilwich of Bavaria HEDWIG or EDITH Ava Bava de Morvois. Life.

    • Altdorf, Mittelfranken, Bayern
    • Welf I, Count in Swabia
    • Bayern
  3. Hedwig Jagiellon (Polish: Jadwiga Jagiellonka, Lithuanian: Jadvyga Jogailaitė, German: Hedwig Jagiellonica; 21 September 1457 – 18 February 1502), baptized as "Hedwigis", was a Polish princess and member of the Jagiellonian dynasty, as well as Duchess of Bavaria by marriage.

  4. Quick Reference. ( c. 1174–1243), duchess of Silesia. Born at Andechs (Bavaria), the daughter of count Berthold, she lived as a child in the monastery of Kitzingen. At the age of twelve she married Henry, future duke of Silesia, then eighteen years old, who succeeded his father in 1202.

  5. Hedwig Jagiellon (Jadwiga Jagiellonka) Every four years over half a million visitors make a pilgrimage to the Bavarian town of Landshut, to witness the “Landshut Royal Wedding”.

  6. Welf married Hedwig (Heilwig), [1] daughter of the Saxon count Isambart; Hedwig later became abbess of Chelles. The couple had the following children: Judith of Bavaria ( c. 797 –843); married Louis the Pious, [1] who was King of the Franks and co-emperor with his father, Charlemagne.

  7. The oldest daughter of the Polish king Casimir IV (1447 – 1492) and Elisabeth of Habsburg (1454 – 1492) Hedwig (1457 – 1502) was the first among the group of Polish royal daughters who married into the most important noble families of the Holy Roman Empire at the verge of the 15th and 16th century. The wedding of Hedwig with George, Duke ...