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  1. Agnes I (c. 1090 – 29 December 1125) was Abbess of Gandersheim and Quedlinburg. She was the second daughter of Judith of Swabia and Władysław I Herman. She was the granddaughter of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor. Agnes became abbess at Gandersheim Abbey, the place of several famous women, such as Hroswitha of Gandersheim, recorded ...

  2. Agnes of Quedlinburg (1184–1203) German abbess and artist. Name variations: Agnes of Meissen. Born in 1184 in Meissen, Germany; died in 1203 at the abbey of Quedlinburg.

  3. arts.st-andrews.ac.uk › monasticon › quedlinburgMonastic Matrix

    Quedlinburg became the center of a small monastic empire with several dependent houses. The abbess of Quedlinburg was appointed by Henry I as abbess of Gernrode and its dependency at Frose (McNamara, 198). Other dependent communities were Wendhausen, Walbeck, and the Marienkloster of Munzenberg.

  4. List of princess-abbesses of Quedlinburg. This is a list of the princess-abbesses of Quedlinburg Abbey. [1] [2] [3] Daughter of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, and Adelaide of Italy; granddaughter of Saint Matilda, founder of the abbey. Niece of Matilda and daughter of Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor, and Theophanu .

    No.
    Name
    Image
    Reign
    1
    Matilda 955 - 7 February 999
    0 966–999
    Daughter of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor, ...
    2
    Adelaide I 977- 14 January 1044
    0 999–1044
    Niece of Matilda and daughter of Otto II, ...
    3
    Beatrice I 1037- 13 July 1061
    1044–1062
    Daughter of Henry III, Holy Roman ...
    4
    Adelaide II 1045 - 11 January 1096
    1062–1096
    Half-sister of Beatrice I and daughter of ...
  5. Adelaide I (German: Adelheid; 973/74 – 14 January 1044 or 1045), a member of the royal Ottonian dynasty was the second Princess-abbess of Quedlinburg from 999, and Abbess of Gernrode from 1014, and Abbess of Gandersheim from 1039 until her death, as well as a highly influential kingmaker of medieval Germany.

  6. Agnes became abbess at Gandersheim Abbey, the place of several famous women, such as Hroswitha of Gandersheim, recorded by Conrad Celtes. She was Princess-Abbess of Quedlinburg from 1110 until 1125. She was excommunicated by Pope Calixtus II for her loyalty to her maternal cousin, Henry V, the King of the Romans in 1119. [1] She died in ...

  7. Agnes I (born c. 1090; died 29 December 1125 in Quedlinburg) was Abbess of Gandersheim and Quedlinburg. She was the second daughter of Judith of Swabia and Władysław I Herman. She was the granddaughter of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.