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词条 John Henry, Margrave of Moravia
释义

  1. Biography

  2. Genealogy

  3. Ancestry

  4. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2019}}{{Infobox royalty
|monarch
| name = John Henry
| image = John Henry I of Moravia.jpg
| caption = Portrait by Anton Boys, {{circa|1580}}
| succession = Count of Tyrol
| reign = 1335-1341
| predecessor = Henry of Gorizia
| successor = Louis of Wittelsbach
| coronation =
| succession1 = Margrave of Moravia
| reign1 = 1349–1375
| predecessor1 = Charles IV
| successor1 = Jobst of Moravia
| coronation1 =
| spouse = Margaret, Countess of Tyrol
(divorced 1349)
Margaret of Opava
Margaret of Austria
Elizabeth of Oettingen
| issue = Catherine of Moravia
Jobst of Moravia
Elisabeth of Moravia
Anna of Moravia
John Sobieslaw of Moravia
Prokop of Moravia
| house = Luxembourg
| father = John of Bohemia
| mother = Elisabeth of Bohemia
| birth_date = 12 February 1322
| birth_place = Mělník, Bohemia
| death_date = 12 November 1375 (aged 53)
| death_place = Brno, Moravia
| place of burial = St. Thomas Church, Brno
}}

John Henry of Luxembourg ({{lang-cs|Jan Jindřich}}, {{lang-de|Johann Heinrich}}; 12 February 1322 – 12 November 1375),[1] a member of the House of Luxembourg, was Count of Tyrol from 1335 to 1341 and Margrave of Moravia from 1349 until his death.

Biography

Henry was born at Mělník, the third surviving son of King John of Bohemia (1296–1346) and his consort, the Přemyslid princess Elizabeth (1292–1330). John Henry therefore was the younger brother of Emperor Charles IV. At the time of his birth, the marriage of his parents was already broken; his mother fled to the Bavarian court of the Wittelsbach duke Henry XIV, the husband of her daughter Margaret, and John Henry was raised in Cham, Upper Palatinate.

During the rise of the Wittelsbach emperor Louis IV, King John had made attempts to reconcile with his former rival Henry of Gorizia-Tyrol, Duke of Carinthia and Count of Tyrol, whom he had deposed as Bohemian king in 1310. In 1327, his younger son John Henry and Henry's daughter, Countess Margaret of Tyrol (Margarethe Maultasch), were betrothed. As Henry had no male heirs, King John expected a considerable enlargement of the Luxembourg lands and control over the Tyrolean mountain passes to Italy. John Henry and Margaret were married on 16 September 1330 at Innsbruck. Nevertheless, Emperor Louis IV in the same year secretly promised the Carinthian duchy including the March of Carniola and large parts of Tyrol to the Habsburg dukes Albert II and Otto of Austria.

Thus, after Henry of Gorizia-Tyrol had died on 2 April 1335, Emperor Louis IV gave Carinthia and southern Tyrol including the overlordship of the Trent and Brixen bishoprics to the Austrian dukes, who themselves could refer to their mother Elisabeth of Gorizia-Tyrol, sister of deceased Henry. King John the Blind felt deprived, he put an end to his quarrels with the Polish king Casimir III and campaigned the Austrian duchy. A peace was concluded at the city of Enns on 9 October 1336, when John the Blind renounced Carinthia, while Margaret and John Henry could inherit the Tyrolean estates.

Charles IV acted as regent for his 14-year-old brother John Henry and soon came into conflict with the Tyrolian nobility. Furthermore, John Henry and his –reportedly– ugly wife had developed a strong aversion to each other. Margaret finally took the lead of the insurgence against her husband, when she refused him the access to Castle Tyrol on 1 November 1341. John Henry fled to the Patriarchal State of Aquileia, while his wife claimed that their marriage had never been consummated. Margaret was backed by Emperor Louis IV, who himself had plans to assure the Tyrolian heritage for the House of Wittelsbach. He had the scholars Marsilius of Padua and William of Ockham rendered an opinion that the marriage was not valid. In 1342, Margaret took her inheritance of Tirol to her next husband, the Emperor's eldest son Margrave Louis of Brandenburg.

Humiliated, John Henry returned to Bohemia. Furious King John allied with Pope Clement VI, who banned both Louis and Margaret; nevertheless, the Luxembourg rule over Tyrol was terminated. In 1346 the Bohemian king died in the Battle of Crécy and was succeeded by his eldest son Charles IV.

After John Henry's marriage was conclusively divorced according to canon law in 1349, he married Margaret of Opava, daughter of Duke Nicholas II and Charles IV gave him the Bohemian Margraviate of Moravia as appanage. In turn, John henry had to renounce all rights to the Bohemian throne. His second marriage produced several sons, none of whom however was able to leave surviving children, so John Henry's line ended in 1411. The eldest was Margrave Jobst of Moravia, the Elector of Brandenburg from 1388 on, who in 1410 became elected King of the Romans, but remained actually a rival king.

After Margaret of Opava had died in 1363, John Henry married Margaret of Austria, the daughter of Duke Albert II and widow of Margaret Maultasch's son from her marriage with Louis of Wittelsbach, Count Meinhard III of Tyrol.

He is buried at St Thomas's Abbey, in Brno.

Genealogy

Henry VII
12 July 1275(6) – 24 August 1313
 Margaret of Brabant
4 October 1276 – 14 December 1311
 Wenceslaus II
27 September 1271 – 21 June 1305
 Judith of Habsburg
13 March 1271 – 18 June 1297
     
   
 John of Bohemia
10 August 1296 – 26 August 1346
 Elisabeth of Bohemia
20 January 1292 – 28 September 1330
 
   
  
1
Margaret of Tyrol
1318 – 3 October 1369
OO   16 September 1330, div.1342
2
Margaret of Opava
26 September 1329 – 1363
OO   March 1350
John Henry
12. February 1322 – 12. November 1375
3
Margaret of Austria
1346 – 14. January 1366
OO   26: February 1364
4
Elizabeth of Oettingen

OO   c. 1366
          
  1  2/1  2/2  2/3  2/4  2/5  2/6 
0 - childless
Catherine of Moravia Duchesse of Falkenberg
1353–1378
Jobst of Moravia

King of the Romans
Oktober 1354–18. January 1411

Elisabeth of Moravia Margravine of Meissen
1355–20. November 1400
Anna of Moravia
1356–98
John Sobieslaw of Moravia

Patriarch of Aquilea
October 1357– 12. November 1394

Prokop of Moravia

younger (titular) Margrave of Moravia
1358–September 1403

  3  4    
0 - childless
0 - childless

Ancestry

{{ahnentafel
|collapsed=yes |align=center
|boxstyle_1=background-color: #fcc;
|boxstyle_2=background-color: #fb9;
|boxstyle_3=background-color: #ffc;
|boxstyle_4=background-color: #bfc;
|boxstyle_5=background-color: #9fe;
|1= 1. John Henry, Margrave of Moravia
|2= 2. John I of Bohemia
|3= 3. Elisabeth of Bohemia
|4= 4. Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor
|5= 5. Margaret of Brabant
|6= 6. Wenceslaus II of Bohemia
|7= 7. Judith of Habsburg
|8= 8. Henry VI, Count of Luxembourg
|9= 9. Beatrice d'Avesnes
|10= 10. John I, Duke of Brabant
|11= 11. Margaret of Flanders
|12= 12. Ottokar II of Bohemia
|13= 13. Kunigunda of Slavonia
|14= 14. Rudolph I of Germany
|15= 15. Gertrude of Hohenburg
|16= 16. Henry V, Count of Luxembourg
|17= 17. Margaret of Bar
|18= 18. Baudoin d'Avesnes
|19= 19. Felicite de Coucy
|20= 20. Henry III, Duke of Brabant
|21= 21. Adelaide of Burgundy
|22= 22. Guy of Dampierre
|23= 23. Matilda de Bethune
|24= 24. Wenceslaus I of Bohemia
|25= 25. Kunigunde of Hohenstaufen
|26= 26. Rostislav Mikhailovich
|27= 27. Anna of Hungary
|28= 28. Albert IV, Count of Habsburg
|29= 29. Heilwig of Kiburg
|30= 30. Burchard III of Hohenberg
|31= 31. Mechtild of Tübingen
}}

References

1. ^Spock Beta(dead link)
{{Commons category}}{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:John Henry, Margrave Of Moravia}}

6 : 1322 births|1375 deaths|Margraves of Moravia|Bohemian princes|House of Luxembourg|Burials at the Church of St. Thomas (Brno)

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