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King Louis on the throne around his knights (Chronicon Pictum, 1358) Louis's brother Andrew was murdered in Aversa on 18 September 1345. [58] Louis and his mother accused Queen Joanna I, Prince Robert of Taranto, Duke Charles of Durazzo, and other members of the Neapolitan branches of the Capetian House of Anjou of plotting against Andrew.
King Louis II of Hungary (Nádasdy Mausoleum, 1664) After his father's death in 1516, the minor Louis II ascended to the throne of Hungary and Croatia. Louis was adopted by the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I in 1515. When Maximilian I died in 1519, Louis's cousin George, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach, became his legal guardian.
King Louis II of Hungary died at Battle of Mohács in 1526. After the death of the Hungarian king, both the Hungarian noble Zápolya family and the Austrian Habsburg family claimed the whole kingdom. King John I of Hungary ruled the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom, and the Habsburgs ruled the western part of Hungary.
Louis I r. 1342-1382 (1345-1386) Charles II r. 1385-1386 (1325-1375) Elenora ... King of Hungary; Holy Crown of Hungary This page was last edited on 24 October ...
Mary was born in the latter half of 1371 to Louis the Great, King of Hungary and Poland, and his second wife, Elizabeth of Bosnia. [1] [2] She was the second daughter of her parents. [2] They had been childless for over a decade before Mary's older sister, Catherine, was born in 1370. [2] [3] Mary and Catherine gained another sibling, Jadwiga ...
Louis II of Hungary (1506–1526), King of Hungary and Bohemia. Louis II was the son of Ladislaus II Jagiellon and his third wife, Anne of Foix-Candale. In 1515 Louis II was married to Mary of Austria, granddaughter of Emperor Maximilian I, as stipulated by the First Congress of Vienna in 1515.
At Wartburg Castle in 1220 at age twenty, Louis married 14-year-old Elizabeth of Hungary, [4] with whom he had three children: Hermann II, Sophie, and Gertrude, later abbess at Altenberg. He set up his court at Wartburg Castle near Eisenach.
They had three children: Charles I of Hungary (1288–1342), King of Hungary [4] Beatrix (1290–1354, Grenoble), married on 25 May 1296 Jean II de La Tour du Pin, Dauphin du Viennois [4] Clementia (February 1293 – 12 October 1328, Paris), married near Troyes on 31 August 1315 Louis X of France [4]