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  1. Elizabeth of Austria (German: Elisabeth von Habsburg; Polish: Elżbieta Rakuszanka; Lithuanian: Elžbieta Habsburgaitė; c. 1436 – 30 August 1505) was Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania as the wife of King Casimir IV of Poland. Orphaned at an early age, she spent her childhood in the court of Holy Roman Emperor ...

    • c. 1436, Vienna
    • 30 August 1505 (aged 68–69), Kraków
    • 10 February 1454
    • 1454–1492
  2. Isabel de Habsburgo (en húngaro: Habsburg Erzsébet; 1437-Cracovia, 30 de agosto de 1505) fue una princesa real húngara, princesa austríaca. Se convirtió en Reina consorte de Polonia tras su matrimonio con el rey Casimiro IV Jagellón de Polonia , nació posteriormente el rey Vladislao Jagellón .

    • Elisabeth von Habsburg
    • Elżbieta Rakuszanka
  3. Elisabeth of Austria (5 July 1554 – 22 January 1592) was Queen of France from 1570 to 1574 as the wife of King Charles IX. A member of the House of Habsburg , she was the daughter of Maximilian II, Holy Roman Emperor , and Maria of Spain .

  4. She was betrothed to her cousin the young Emperor Franz Joseph at Bad Ischl in 1853; they married at the Augustinerkirche in Vienna in 1854. Elisabeth became a symbol of the declining years of the Habsburg Monarchy and in the twentieth century the object of a veritable cult. Her

  5. Catherine of Austria. Elizabeth of Austria ( Polish: Elżbieta Habsburżanka; 9 July 1526 – 15 June 1545) was Queen of Poland by marriage. She was the eldest of fifteen children of Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor, and his wife Anne of Bohemia and Hungary. [1] A member of the House of Habsburg, she was married to Sigismund II ...

    • 8 May 1543
    • 5 May 1543 – 15 June 1545
  6. When Elizabeth von Habsburg was born in 1436, in Vienna, Austria, her father, Graf Albrecht Albert IX von Habsburg II of Germany, was 39 and her mother, Elisabeth von Luxemburg, was 27. She had at least 6 sons and 7 daughters with Casimir Andrew IV. Jagiellon. She died on 30 August 1505, in Kraków, Poland, at the age of 69, and was buried in ...

  7. From the 1860s, the couple could no longer be said to have had a married life together. Franz Joseph and Elisabeth maintained a bond of friendship, corresponding and meeting regularly. ‘You have no idea how much I loved this woman’, Franz Joseph is said to have exclaimed after Elisabeth was murdered. With Elisabeth’s full support, she ...