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・ Agnes Nixon
・ Agnes Nyanhongo
・ Agnes Nygaard Haug
・ Agnes O'Farrelly
・ Agnes Obel
・ Agnes of Antioch
・ Agnes of Aquitaine
・ Agnes of Aquitaine, Countess of Savoy
・ Agnes of Aquitaine, Queen of Aragon
・ Agnes of Aquitaine, Queen of Aragon and Navarre
・ Agnes of Aquitaine, Queen of León and Castile
・ Agnes of Assisi
・ Agnes of Austria
・ Agnes of Austria (1154–1182)
・ Agnes of Austria (1281–1364)
Agnes of Austria (1322–1392)
・ Agnes of Babenberg
・ Agnes of Baden, Countess of Holstein-Rendsburg
・ Agnes of Baden, Duchess of Carinthia
・ Agnes of Bavaria
・ Agnes of Bavaria (nun)
・ Agnes of Bavaria, Margravine of Brandenburg-Stendal
・ Agnes of Beaujeu
・ Agnes of Bohemia
・ Agnes of Bohemia, Duchess of Jawor
・ Agnes of Brandenburg
・ Agnes of Brandenburg, Duchess of Pomerania
・ Agnes of Brunswick-Grubenhagen
・ Agnes of Brunswick-Lüneburg
・ Agnes of Burgundy


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Agnes of Austria (1322–1392) : ウィキペディア英語版
Agnes of Austria (1322–1392)

Agnes of Austria ((ポーランド語:Agnieszka Habsburska), (ドイツ語:Agnes von Habsburg)) (1322 – 2 February 1392) was a German princess member of the House of Habsburg and by marriage Duchess of Świdnica.
She was the second daughter of Leopold I, Duke of Austria, by his wife Katharina, daughter of Amadeus V, Count of Savoy.〔(Genealogical database by Herbert Stoyan )〕
==Life==

After the early death of her father in 1326, Agnes and her older sister Katharina (later by marriage Lady of Coucy) were place under the guardianship of their paternal uncles, Frederick the Fair and Albert II.
On 1 June 1338 Agnes married with Bolko II the Small, Duke of Świdnica, who wanted with this union to enhance his international position against the House of Luxembourg, direct competitors of the Habsburgs.
The marriage apparently was childless, although some sources〔(BOLKO II MAŁY (ŚWIDNICKI) )〕 stated that they had two children: a daughter, Elisabeth (d. 1407) and a son, Bolko, who, according to old Silesian legend, died with only nine-years-old, accidentally killed by the court jester Jakob Thau, when he threw a stone to him during a game.
After the death of her husband in 1368, and according to his will, Agnes received Świdnica, Jawor and Lwówek as her ''Oprawa wdowia''.
Agnes died on 2 February 1392 in Świdnica and was buried in the Franciscan Princely Chapel (''Fürstenkapelle'') of the Grüssau Abbey. According to the treaty of 1353 between Bolko II and the Emperor Charles IV, on her death the Duchies were incorporated into the lands of Bohemia by Wenceslaus, King of the Romans.
Under the rule of the Abbot Benedict II Seidel (1735–1747) was built in the ''Fürstenkapelle'' a sculpture of white marble from Agnes, who was still there.〔''This article was translated from his originals in Polish and German Wikipedia.''〕

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