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  1. Born in Eisenach, Frederick was the son of Albert II, Margrave of Meissen and Margaret of Sicily. According to legend, his mother, fleeing her philandering husband in 1270, was overcome by the pain of parting and bit Frederick on the cheek: therefore he became known as the Bitten . After the death of Conradin in 1268, he became the legitimate ...

  2. Balthasar first married, in the spring of 1374, with Margaret, the daughter of Burgrave Albert of Nuremberg (d. 1390). With her, he had a son and a daughter: Frederick the Peaceable, who succeeded him as Landgrave of Thuringia. Anna of Meissen (d. 4 July 1395), who married Rudolf III, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg.

  3. Friedrich III of Thuringia, painting from Albrechtsburg in Meißen. Frederick III, the Strict ( Friedrich III. der Strenge; 14 December 1332, in Dresden – 21 May 1381, in Altenburg ), Landgrave of Thuringia and Margrave of Meissen, was the son of Frederick II, Margrave of Meissen and Mathilde of Bavaria. [1]

  4. Judith of Thuringia (Czech: Judita Durynská; c. 1135 – c. 1210), a member of the Ludovingian dynasty, was Queen consort of Bohemia from 1158 until 1172 as the second wife of King Vladislaus II. She was the second Queen of Bohemia after Świętosława of Poland , wife of King Vratislaus II , had received the title in 1085.

  5. Balthasar, Landgrave of Thuringia. Mother. Margaret of Nuremberg. Frederick IV (before 30 November 1384 – 7 May 1440), nicknamed the Peaceful ( German: Friedrich der Friedfertige) or the Simple ( der Einfältige ), was a member of the House of Wettin and Margrave of Meissen who ruled as the last independent Landgrave of Thuringia from 1406 ...

  6. Elizabeth of Hungary ( German: Heilige Elisabeth von Thüringen, Hungarian: Árpád-házi Szent Erzsébet, Slovak: Svätá Alžbeta Uhorská; 7 July 1207 – 17 November 1231), also known as Elisabeth of Thuringia, was a princess of the Kingdom of Hungary and the landgravine of Thuringia . Elizabeth was married at the age of 14, and widowed at 20.

  7. The Margravate or Margraviate of Meissen ( German: Markgrafschaft Meißen) was a medieval principality in the area of the modern German state of Saxony. It originally was a frontier march of the Holy Roman Empire, created out of the vast Marca Geronis ( Saxon Eastern March) in 965. Under the rule of the Wettin dynasty, the margravate finally ...