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Adelaide of Rheinfelden | |
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Queen consort of Hungary | |
Tenure | 25 April 1077 – May 1090 |
Born | c. 1065[1] |
Died | May 1090 |
Spouse | Ladislaus I of Hungary |
Issue | Unnamed daughter, wife of Iaroslav Sviatopolchich of Volhinia Empress Irene of Byzantium |
House | Rheinfelden |
Father | Rudolf of Rheinfelden |
Mother | Adelaide of Savoy |
Adelaide of Rheinfelden (or Adelaide of Swabia) (German: Adelheid) (1060s – May 1090), was Queen of Hungary by marriage to King Ladislaus I.
Adelaide was born circa 1065 to Rudolf of Rheinfelden, duke of Swabia and German anti-king,[2] and his second wife, Adelaide of Savoy.[1] Her maternal aunt was Bertha of Savoy, who was married to Henry IV of Germany.[3]
Around 1077/8 Adelaide married Ladislaus I of Hungary, a member of the Árpád dynasty.[4] Ladislaus agreed to support Rudolf in his struggle for the throne against Henry IV of Germany. In 1079 Adelaide's mother died, followed in 1080 by her father, who fell at the Battle of Elster.[1]
In 1081, Pope Gregory VII wrote to Adelaide, urging her to encourage her husband to support monasteries and be generous to the poor and the weak.[5] He also exhorted her to emulate the Virgin Mary.[6]
Adelaide died in May 1090 and her husband outlived her by 5 years. She was buried in Veszprém Cathedral, Veszprém, Hungary, where her gravestone remains.
Adelaide had two children: