Anna Maria Vasa

Polish princess (1593–1600) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anna Maria Vasa (23 May 1593 – 9 February 1600)[1] was a Polish princess, the eldest daughter of King Sigismund III Vasa and his first wife, Queen Anne of Austria. She was the heiress presumptive to the Swedish throne from 1593 until 1595.[a]

Born(1593-05-23)23 May 1593
Kraków, Poland
Died9 February 1600(1600-02-09) (aged 6)
Kraków, Poland
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Anna Maria Vasa
Portrait by Martin Kober (1596)
Born(1593-05-23)23 May 1593
Kraków, Poland
Died9 February 1600(1600-02-09) (aged 6)
Kraków, Poland
Burial
HouseVasa
FatherSigismund III Vasa
MotherAnne of Austria
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Life

Birth and background

Anna Maria was born on 23 May 1593 in Kraków, Poland. Her parents' marriage was a politically motivated union, aimed to maintain peace between the newly established House of Vasa and the imposing neighboring Habsburgs.[2][3]

Miniature portraits of Anna Maria and her brother, Władysław, by Martin Kober (1598)

She and her only surviving sibling, Władysław, were raised by Urszula Meyerin (1570–1635), whose influence had significantly skyrocketed since her introduction as a lady of the court of Queen Anne.[4][5]

In July 1593, the infant princess was taken to her baptism by her paternal aunt, the elder Anna Vasa of Sweden. Her great-aunt, the former Queen Anna Jagiellon, whose supervision she was left in when her father embarked on a visit to Sweden,[6] also participated in the event.[7]

Her mother died on 10 February 1598, less than three years after giving birth to her brother.[8] On the day before the second anniversary of the death of her mother, Anna Maria died from a bout of measles at the age of six in Kraków. She was buried in the Wawel Cathedral, with her coffin positioned in front of that of the ill-fated Queen Barbara Zápolya, the first wife of great-grandfather, King Sigismund I the Old.[9]

Ancestry

References

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