České královny - Kunhuta Štaufská - zlato
weight: 31,1 g
purity: 999,9/1000 Au
quality: proof
limited mintage: 2000 pcs
edge: plain
Objednávkový kód: CRM1219
Kunhuta Stauffer (circa 1200 - 13. 9. 1248) - wife of Czech King Wenceslas I. and mother Ottokar II. Czech queen was crowned in 1228th
Father Kunhuty was the Holy Roman king Philip of Swabia, mother Irena came from the Byzantine royal dynasty Angelos. Dede's paternal was King Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor.
Ottokar I. his son Wenceslas Kunigunde became engaged in 1207, when Vaclav were just two years. Marriage was to strengthen relations with Philip, who in the struggle for the German throne defeated rival Otu Brunvickho. Pemysl while before alternately supported both opponents. Philip, who also had become a Roman Emperor, but in 1208 in Bamberg murdered. Although favor with the Roman Emperor did not fulfill, was Kunhuta due to its origin weighted excellent candidate for the successor to the throne of a woman to marry and Vaclav finally in 1224 occurred. Four years came with her husband to the throne. Kunhuta was the mother of Vladislav and younger Ottokar II., Who with his father led an irreconcilable dispute. In addition to the two sons of the royal couple brought into the world three daughters. In 1234 Kunhuta the support of Vaclav founded a Cistercian monastery in Marienthal Ostritz in Upper Lusatia, which is the oldest of its kind in Germany. Kunhuta Stauffer died September 13, 1248 and is buried at St. Agnes Convent in Prague.