Hedwig of Nordgau
Appearance
(Redirected from Hedwig of Eberhard)
Hedwig of Nordgau (c. 922 – after 993) was the wife of Siegfried of Luxembourg, first count of Luxembourg and founder of the country. They were married c. 950.[1] She was of Saxon origin but her parentage is not known for certain. Some sources claim that she was connected to the family of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.[2] Described as "saintly" herself, Hedwig of Nordgau was the mother of Saint Cunigunde of Luxembourg, the seventh of eleven children from her marriage to Siegfried.[3]
Children
[edit]Hedwig of Nordgau's children included:
- Henry, count of Luxemburg
- Adalbero , archbishop of Trier
- Luitgard, married Arnulf, Count of Holland
- Eva, married Gerhard of the Mosel, Count of Metz
- Cunigunde, married Henry II, Holy Roman Emperor
- Dietrich, bishop of Metz
- Frederik, father of the later counts Henry II and Giselbert
Notes and references
[edit]- ^ Hedwig of Nordgau on Peerage.com; Stuart (1995) p. 156
- ^ Fuchs (2006) p. 119
- ^ Butler et al. (1956) p. 470; Holböck (2002) p. 134
Sources
[edit]- Butler, Alban; Thurston, Herbert; and Attwater, Donald (1956). Butler's Lives of the Saints, Volume 1, 2nd Edition. P. J. Kenedy and Sons.
- Fuchs, Rüdiger (2006). Die Inschriften der Stadt Trier I (bis 1500). Reichert. ISBN 3-89500-555-X (in German)
- Holböck, Ferdinand (2002). Married Saints and Blesseds: Through the Centuries. Ignatius Press, p. 134. ISBN 0-89870-843-5