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Anna of Hungary, Duchess of Macsó

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Anna of Hungary
Bornc. 1226[citation needed]
SpouseRostislav Mikhailovich[citation needed]
IssueBéla of Macsó
Michael of Bosnia
Kunigunda, Queen of Bohemia
Gryfina, High Duchess consort of Poland[citation needed]
HouseÁrpád dynasty[citation needed]
FatherBéla IV of Hungary[citation needed]
MotherMaria Laskarina[citation needed]

Anna of Hungary (born c. 1226) was a daughter of Béla IV of Hungary and his wife, Maria Laskarina. Anna was a member of the House of Árpád. Anna gained many titles from her marriage to Rostislav Mikhailovich.[citation needed]

Family

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Anna was the third of ten children born to her parents. She was sister to three saints: Kinga, Margaret and Blessed Jolenta. Other siblings included Stephen V of Hungary and Elizabeth of Hungary, Duchess of Bavaria.[citation needed]

Her paternal grandparents were Andrew II of Hungary and Gertrude of Merania, sister to Agnes of Merania.[citation needed]

Her maternal grandparents were Theodore I Laskaris and Anna Komnena Angelina.[citation needed]

Marriage

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In 1243, Anna married Rostislav Mikhailovich. Rostislav could not strengthen his rule in Halych, so he went to the court of King Béla IV of Hungary, and there he married Anna. Anna had always been her father's favourite daughter. He allowed her to exercise more and more influence over him. In his last will, Béla entrusted his daughter and his followers to her son-in-law, Ottokar II of Bohemia, because he did not trust his eldest son Stephen. Michael inherited their father's part of Bosnia. King Béla IV, having made these assignments to his grandsons, decided also to make some further changes in his peripheral territories, and assigned Slavonia, Dalmatia, and Croatia, which until then had all been under his heir, the future Stephen V of Hungary, to a younger son named Béla.[citation needed]

Stephen was infuriated and immediately revolted against his father; during the ensuing war, Anna and her son, Béla of Macsó assisted Béla IV.[1] Anna's father and brother concluded a peace on 5 December 1262, and according to the peace the kingdom was divided, the latter acquiring the territories east of the river Danube as “junior king”. After the peace, Stephen V occupied the possessions which Anna's sons had inherited from their father in the eastern parts of the kingdom (the former royal possessions in Bereg County and the Castle of Füzér). Anna submitted a formal complaint against her brother to Pope Urban IV, but the "junior king" did not hand back their possessions.[citation needed]

Anna went to live at her son-in-law's royal court in Bohemia. Ottokar married Anna's daughter, Kunigunda in 1261 and they became parents to Wenceslaus II of Bohemia. Anna's husband died in 1262, leaving Anna a widow. It is unknown when Anna died but probably about 1274.[citation needed]

Children

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The couple had the following children:[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ Kristó, Pál; Makk, Ferenc. Korai magyar történeti lexikon (9-14. század).