Sophia of Minsk
Sophia of Minsk | |
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Queen consort of Danmark | |
Tenure | 1157–1182 |
Born | 1138/41 |
Died | 5 May 1198 |
Burial | St. Bendt's Church |
Spouse | Valdemar I of Denmark Louis III, Landgrave of Thuringia |
Issue among others... |
Sophia, Countess of Orlamünde King Canute VI of Denmark King Valdemar II of Denmark Ingeborg, Queen of France Helena, Duchess of Lüneburg Richeza, Queen of Sweden |
Dynasty | Rurikid? |
Father | Volodar of Minsk? |
Mother | Richeza of Poland |
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Sophia of Minsk (or Sophia of Polotsk) (c. 1140 – 5 May 1198) was a Danish medieval queen consort as the spouse of King Valdemar I of Denmark, and later a landgravine of Thuringia.
Contents
Life
Sophia was the daughter of Richeza of Poland, Dowager Queen of Sweden, from her marriage to a man called "Valador" King in Poloni Land. Several speculations have been put forward as to exactly who her father was, but his identity is still uncertain. It is guessed[who?] to have been Prince Volodar of Minsk or Prince Vladimir of Halicz. Most probably it was Volodar (Valadar in Belarusian) of Minsk, who united the principalities of Minsk, Polotsk, and Hrodna under his rule, and had military interests in the Baltic region (for example, his military campaign in Northern Poland in 1159).[citation needed]
Sophia was the half-sister of Canute V of Denmark. After her mother's marriage to the Swedish king, she followed her to Sweden and was raised at the Swedish court. She was betrothed to Valdemar in 1154 as a form of alliance between Denmark and Sweden. As she had no property in Denmark, she was promised 1/8 of Canute's estates. She left Sweden and arrived in Denmark at the time of the engagement (1154), but as she was not considered old enough to marry, she was given to the custody of a woman named Bodil. She was married to Valdemar in Viborg in 1157, three years later.
Sophia is described as beautiful, dominant and cruel. According to myth, she murdered Valdemar's mistress Tove and injured his sister Kirsten, but this is not confirmed.[1] She was widowed in 1182. Sophia received a proposal from, and married, Louis III, Landgrave of Thuringia in about 1184, and was escorted to the border by her son and a grand entourage. She was repudiated in 1190 and returned to Denmark.
Children
Sophia married Valdemar I of Denmark (c. 1131–1182), and they had the following children:
- Sophia (1159–1208), married Siegfried III, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde
- King Canute VI of Denmark (1163–1202)
- Maria (born c. 1165), nun at Roskilde (1188).
- Margaret (born c. 1167), nun at Roskilde (1188).
- King Valdemar II of Denmark (1170–1241).
- Ingeborg (1175–1236), married King Philip II of France.
- Helena (c.1177–1233), married William of Lüneburg.
- Richeza of Denmark (c. 1180–1220), married King Eric X of Sweden.
After Valdemar's death, Sophia remarried to Landgrave Louis III of Thuringia. This marriage remained childless.
References
- ↑ Smith-Dampier, Eleanor. Danish Ballads, pp. 15-24 (Cambridge U. Press 1920).
- This article is partially based on its equivalent on Swedish wiki
- (Danish) Dansk biografisk Lexikon / XVI. Bind. Skarpenberg - Sveistrup
External links
Sophia of Minsk
Born: circa 1140 Died: 5 May 1198 |
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Danish royalty | ||
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Preceded by | Queen consort of Denmark 1157–1182 |
Succeeded by Gertrude of Bavaria |
- Pages with broken file links
- All articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases
- Articles with specifically marked weasel-worded phrases from July 2009
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- 1140 births
- 1198 deaths
- Rurik Dynasty
- Danish royal consorts
- Women of medieval Denmark
- Burials at St. Bendt's Church
- People from Polotsk
- Belarusian nobility
- Landgravines of Thuringia