Anastasia Lvovna of Halych–Volhynia
Appearance
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Anastasia Lvovna of Halych–Volhynia (Ukrainian: Анастасія Львівна) (?-1335), was a Duchess of Dobrzyń by marriage to Siemowit of Dobrzyń, (r. 1288–1293, 1295–1303 and 1305–1312).[1][2][3] She served as Regent of Dobrzyń with her brother-in-law Władysław I Łokietek during the minority of her sons, Władysław the Hunchback and Bolesław of Dobrzyń between 1312 and 1316.[4]
Issue
[edit]- Leszek (bef. 1302 - bef. 10 July 1316).
- Władysław (bef. 1303 - 5 June 1351/April 1352).
- Casimir (bef. 1304 - bef. 10 July 1316).[5]
- Bolesław (bef. 1305 - 1 October 1327/12 March 1329).
- Judith (d. aft. 24 September 1313).[6]
References
[edit]- ^ Войтович Л. Княжа доба: портрети еліти [1]. — Біла Церква, 2006.
- ^ Rosenwein, Barbara H. (2013-11-18). Reading the Middle Ages: Sources from Europe, Byzantium, and the Islamic World, Second Edition. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-0602-9.
- ^ Chwalba, Andrzej; Zamorski, Krzysztof (2020-10-15). The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth: History, Memory, Legacy. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-20399-8.
- ^ Szczur, Stanisław; Ożóg, Krzysztof; Jurek, Tomasz (1999). Piastowie: leksykon biograficzny (in Polish). Wydawn. Literackie. ISBN 978-83-08-02829-2.
- ^ Existence disputed; he appears only in the testimony of Archbishop Janisław and voivode of Inowrocław John of Płonkow in the Polish-Teutonic trial in Warsaw in 1339: the witnesses have identified Casimir and Władysław as brothers, but they didn't mention Bolesław, so is probable that they transcribed a wrong name.
- ^ Origin uncertain; her existence is confirmed in a document dated 24 September 1313 and issued by the Abbess of the Cistercian monastery of Trzebnica, who named her as Juttę de Cujavia.