Judith of Babenberg

Margravine of Montferrat From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Judith (called Julitta in Latin,[1] Giuditta in Italian;[2] c.1120 1191?) was a German noblewoman who was the marchioness of Montferrat by marriage from 1133 until her death. She was a member of the House of Babenberg through her father and related to the House of Hohenstaufen through her mother.

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Judith of Babenberg
Marchioness of Montferrat
An imaginary portrait of Judith of Babenberg, painted by Hans Part in 1490, as part of the Genealogy of the Babenberg Ladies at Klosterneuburg Abbey, founded by her parents. The inscription misnames her husband as "Renier".
Bornc. late 1110s/1120
Austria
DiedAfter 1168
Montferrat
Noble familyHouse of Babenberg
SpouseWilliam V of Montferrat
IssueWilliam, Count of Jaffa and Ascalon
Conrad I, King of Jerusalem
Boniface I, King of Thessalonica
Frederick, Bishop of Alba
Renier, Caesar of the Byzantine Empire
Agnes, Countess of Modigliana
Azalaïs, Marchioness of Saluzzo
FatherLeopold III, Margrave of Austria
MotherAgnes of Germany
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With her husband, Marquis William V, she had five sons and three daughters. Four of her sons played major roles in Mediterranean politics. In the later Middle Ages, she was remembered for her piety and beauty.

Life

Judith was born around 1120.[3] She was a daughter of Margrave Leopold III of Austria (10731136) and his second wife, Agnes (10721143).[4] Through her mother she was the half-sister of King Conrad III of Germany and the aunt of Emperor Frederick Barbarossa.[5] She was the full sister of the historian Otto of Freising.[6]

Sometime before 28 March 1133, Judith married the Marquis William V of Montferrat.[4][7] The Aleramici were among the leading dynasties in the Crusades; William accompanied his nephew King Louis VII of France on the Second Crusade of 1147.[8]

Judith's usual title was countess. She appears as a witness in donations to the monasteries of Lucedio (1145) and Grassano (1156). On 18 October 1168, she bought some land in Montebello. She was also mentioned in the treaties with the communes of Asti (1170×1174) and Alessandria (1178), which stipulated that she or her sons could stand in for William.[9]

In the early 1180s, according to later historians Galeotto del Carretto and Benvenuto Sangiorgio, Judith travelled to the Holy Land to visit her grandson, the future King Baldwin V of Jerusalem, and thence to Constantinople to visit her son, Renier. Renier and his wife, Maria Komnene, gave her many relics, including some wood from the True Cross, which she gave to Lucedio after her return in 1183.[10][11] This story, found only in accounts by later historians, is inconsistent in detail. While Leopoldo Usseglio [it] considers the basic fact of such a journey difficult to doubt,[10] Walter Habserstumpf regards it as a legendary backstory for a relic.[11]

Death and legacy

Lucedio records Judith's death as occurring on 14 December without specifying the year.[9][12] According to Sangiorgio, she died around 1183, not long after returning from Constantinople.[13][14] He also says that she died not long after her husband, who is known to have died in 1191. Olimpio Musso thus places her death on 14 December 1191.[15][16]

In later legend, Judith was renowned for her virtue and beauty.[17] Guglielmo Catanio da Lu, writing at the same time as Galeotto, declared Judith to have been "worthy of the government of the imperial seat", where her son Renier was caesar.[18] According to Musso, she was "the most celebrated marchioness of Montferrat".[16] Musso posits the reputation of her beauty and virtue as partial inspiration for the figure of the marchioness of Montferrat in Boccaccio's Decameron, day 1, tale 5.[19][20] She was the marchioness when Philip Augustus went on crusade, but by then over 70 years old. Boccaccio's tale of Philip's falling in love with her is fiction.[19][21]

Marriage and issue

Judith and William had eight children together:

References

Sources

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