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  1. Jutta of Saxony (c. 1223 – before 2 February 1267) was Queen of Denmark as the wife of King Eric IV of Denmark. She was the daughter of Albert I, Duke of Saxony. [1] She married king Erik in 1239, [1] and became junior queen consort, since her husband was junior king, even though there was no senior queen at the time.

  2. Agnes of Denmark (1249 – after 1290) was the youngest daughter of Eric IV of Denmark and his wife Jutta of Saxony. She was the official founder of the St. Agnes' Priory, Roskilde , becoming prioress there.

    • Life
    • Inheritance and Descendants
    • Double Statue of The Brothers at The Siegesallee
    • References

    Regency and guardianship

    John was the elder son of Albert II of the Brandenburg line of the House of Ascania and Mechthild (Matilda), the daughter of Margrave Conrad II of Lusatia, a junior line of the House of Wettin. Since both John and his two years younger brother Otto III were minors when their father died in 1220, Emperor Frederick II transferred the regency to Archbishop Albert I of Magdeburg. The guardianship was taken up by the children's first cousin once removed, Count Henry I of Anhalt, the older brother...

    Domestic policies

    After the death of Count Henry of Brunswick-Lüneburg in 1227, the brothers supported his nephew, their brother-in-law Otto the Child, who was only able to prevail against Hohenstaufen claims and its vassals by force of arms. In 1229, there was a feud with former regent Archbishop Albert, which ended peacefully. Like their former opponents and defenders, they appeared at the Diet of Mainz in 1235, where the Public Peace of Mainzwas proclaimed. After the dispute over the kingship between Conrad...

    Developing the country

    John I and his brother Otto III developed the territory of their margraviate and expanded market towns and castles, including Spandau, Cölln and Prenzlau into towns and centers of commerce. They also expanded Frankfurt an der Oderand John I awarded it city status in 1253.

    The joint rule of the Margraves ended in 1258 with a division of their territory. A cleverly managed division and continued consensual policy prevented the Margraviate from falling apart. The preparations for the reorganization may have begun in 1250, when the Uckermark was acquired, but no later than 1255, when John I married Jutta (Brigitte), the...

    The double statue depicted on the left stood in the Siegesallee in the Großer Tiergarten in Berlin. The Siegesallee was a grand boulevard commissioned by Emperor Wilhelm II in 1895 with statues illustrating the history of Brandenburg and Prussia. Between 1895 and 1901, 27 sculptors led by Reinhold Begascreated 32 statues of Prussian and Brandenburg...

    Primary references

    1. Heinrici de Antwerpe: Can. Brandenburg., Tractatus de urbe Brandenburg, edited and elucidated by Georg Sello, in: 22. Jahresbericht des Altmärkischen Vereins für vaterländische Geschichte und Industrie zu Salzwedel, Magdeburg, 1888, issue 1, p. 3-35, internet version by Tilo Köhn with transcriptions and translation. 2. Chronica Marchionum Brandenburgensium, ed. G. Sello, FBPrG I, 1888. 3. Schreckenbach, Bibliogr. zur Gesch. der Mark Brandenburg, vols. 1–5, Publications of the State Archive...

    Secondary references

    1. Tilo Köhn (publisher): Brandenburg, Anhalt und Thüringen im Mittelalter. Askanier und Ludowinger beim Aufbau fürstlicher Territorialherrschaften, Böhlau, Cologne, Weimar and Vienna, 1997, ISBN 3-412-02497-X 2. Helmut Assing: Die frühen Askanier und ihre Frauen, Kulturstiftung Bernburg, 2002, ISBN 3-9805532-9-9 3. Wolfgang Erdmann: Zisterzienser-Abtei Chorin. Geschichte, Architektur, Kult und Frömmigkeit, Fürsten-Anspruch und -Selbstdarstellung, klösterliches Wirtschaften sowie Wechselwirku...

  3. Jutta of Saxony (d. around 1267)Margravine of Brandenburg. Died before February 2, 1267; daughter of Albert I, duke of Saxony, andAgnes of Thuringia ; married Erik or Eric IV Ploughpenny (1216–1250), king of Denmark (r. Source for information on Jutta of Saxony (d. around 1267): Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia dictionary.

  4. or Jutta, a daughter of hertug Albrect I af Saxony. While E. was said in his younger years to be very fond of the joys of life, he was later serious and pious. One of the first letters, he issued after his accession to the throne - at his father's death 28. March 1241 --, holds a declaration that he want to die dressed in the dress of the ...

  5. When Jutta Of Saxony House of Ascania Queen Consort of Denmark was born in 1223, her father, Albrecht I. Herzog von Sachsen, was 48 and her mother, Agnes of Austria, was 17. She married Eric IV of Denmark in 1239, in Denmark. They were the parents of at least 2 sons and 4 daughters. She died on 2 February 1267, at the age of 44.

  6. Jutta of Saxony (c. 1223 – before 2 February 1267) was a Danish Queen consort, spouse of King Eric IV of Denmark. Jutta was the daughter of Albert I, Duke of Saxony. She married king Erik in 1239, and became junior queen consort, since her husband was junior king, even though there were no senior queen at the time.