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  1. 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.

  2. Media in category "Adelaide II, Abbess of Quedlinburg" This category contains only the following file. Hase Quast 1877 S 12 Nr 3 Adelheid II.jpg 362 × 848; 343 KB

  3. Maria, Abbess of Quedlinburg. Marie Elisabeth, Abbess of Quedlinburg. Matilda, Abbess of Quedlinburg. Categories: German Roman Catholic abbesses. Female heads of state. Secular abbesses. Princesses in Germany. Nobles of the Holy Roman Empire by title.

  4. 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.

  5. Adelaide II ( Almanca : Adelheid; 1045 - 11 Ocak 1096), Salian hanedanının bir üyesi, 1061'den Gandersheim'ın Başrahibesi ve ölümüne kadar Quedlinburg'un Başrahibi idi. Wikipedia'ya hoş geldiniz.

  6. Anna II, Abbess of Quedlinburg. Countess Anna of Stolberg-Wernigerode (28 January 1504 – 4 March 1574) was a German noblewoman who reigned as Princess-Abbess of Quedlinburg from 1516 until her death. She was elected princess-abbess under the name Anna II at the age of twelve, succeeding Magdalena of Anhalt.

  7. Adelaide II (Adelheid of Swabia) (1045 – 11 January 1096) was Abbess of Gandersheim and Quedlinburg. Adelaide was born in the autumn of 1045 as the first child of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor, and Agnes of Poitou, his second wife. In 1061, she was elected successor to her older half-sister, Beatrice, as Imperial