See also

Family of Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Husband: (unknown)
Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA (aft1011-1087)
Marriage 1039

Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA

picture

Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Name: Maria + DOBRONIEGA
Sex: Female
Father: Vladimir I + (960-1015)
Mother: Anna of the BYZANTINE EMPIRE (963-1011)
Birth aft 1011 Kiev, Ukraine
Occupation Duchess Consort of Poland
Title Princess of the Ukraine
Title frm 1040 to 1058 (age 28-47) Duchess Consort of Poland
Death 1087 (age 75-76) Krakow, Poland

Note on Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Maria Dobroniega of Kiev (b. aft. 1012[1] - d. 1087), was a Kievian Rus princess of the Rurikid dynasty and by marriage Duchess of Poland.

 

She was one of the youngest children of Vladimir I, Grand Prince of Kiev. The identity of her mother is disputed among historians and web sources.

 

Grand Prince Vladimir I had married seven times and had fathered many children, legitimate and illegitimate. Anna Porphyrogeneta, his sixth wife, is known to have predeceased Vladimir by four years. Chronicle Thietmar of Merseburg, writing from contemporary accounts, mentions that Boleslaw I of Poland captured Vladimir I's widow during his raid on Kiev in 1018. The historians long had no clue as to identity of this wife. The emigre historian Nicholas Baumgarten, however, pointed to the controversial record of the "Genealogia Welforum" and the "Historia Welforum Weingartensis" that one daughter of Count Kuno von Oenningen (future Duke Konrad I of Swabia) by "filia Ottonis Magni imperatoris" (Otto the Great's daughter; possibly Rechlinda Otona [Regelindis], claimed by some as illegitimate daughter and by others legitimate, born from his first marriage with Edith of England) married "rex Rugorum" (King of Russia). He interpreted this evidence as pertaining to Vladimir I's last wife. This woman is a possible identity for Maria's mother.

 

[edit] MarriageMaria married around 1040 to Casimir I the Restorer, Duke of Poland. This marriage helped Casimir to gain support in his reclaim over the Polish throne. Casimir had attempted to seize the throne twice before, both times he failed. With the support of Maria's brother, Yaroslav I the Wise, Casimir was able to make a successful claim.

 

The couple had five children:[2]

 

1.Boleslaw II the Bold (b. ca. 1043 - d. 2/3 April 1081/82).

2.Wladyslaw I Herman (b. ca. 1044 - d. 4 June 1102)

3.Mieszko (b. 16 April 1045 - d. 28 January 1065).

4.Otto (b. ca. 1046 - d. 1048).

5.Swietoslawa (b. ca. 1048 - d. 1 September 1126), married ca. 1062 to Duke (and since 1085 King) Vratislaus II of Bohemia.

Maria's husband died on 28 November 1058. Her sixteen year old son, Boleslaw, became King of Poland. Boleslaw II is considered one of the most capable of the Piast rulers; however, he was deposed and expelled from the country in 1079. Boleslaw II died two years later, in 1081.

 

Maria survive her son six years and died in 1087, aged seventy-seven or seventy-six.