Catherine of Mecklenburg
Duchess consort of Saxony
Margravine consort of Meissen
Tenure1539–1541
Born1487
Died6 June 1561 (aged 7374)
Torgau
Burial
SpouseHenry the Pious
IssueSybille, Duchess of Saxe-Lauenburg
Emilie, Margravine of Brandenburg-Ansbach
Sidonie, Duchess of Brunswick-Kalenberg
Maurice, Elector of Saxony
Prince Severinus
Augustus, Elector of Saxony
HouseHouse of Mecklenburg
FatherMagnus II, Duke of Mecklenburg
MotherSophie of Pomerania-Stettin
ReligionLutheranism

Catherine of Mecklenburg (1487 6 June 1561, Torgau), was a Duchess of Saxony by marriage to Henry IV, Duke of Saxony. She was the daughter of the Duke Magnus II of Mecklenburg and Sophie of Pomerania-Stettin.

Life

She married on 6 July 1512 in Freiberg Duke Henry the Pious of Saxony.

Catherine sympathized early with Martin Luther's teachings, while her husband suppressed the Reformation until 1536 for fear of his brother, the reigning Duke George the Bearded. Later, the Freiberg area became Lutheran.

When duke George tried bear down on Catherine, she told the envoy: You could do me a big favor by leaving Freiberg right now. In 1539, after the death of Duke George, the couple moved to Dresden and brought the Reformation there. Duke Henry died on 18 August 1541; Catherine outlived him by 20 years. She spent her days in Wolkenstein castle. In 1560, she published a book on etiquette for ladies, which is culturally and historically very interesting.

Issue

She had six children with Henry the Pious:

Ancestry

References

  • Elizabeth Werl (1977), "Catherine, Duchess of Saxony, born Duchess of Mecklenburg", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 11, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 325–326
  • Franz Otto Stichart: Gallery of the Saxon princesses. Biographical sketches of all the ancestress of the royal house of Saxony, Fleischer, Leipzig, 1857, p. 229-247 (Google Book Search).
  • Theodor Distel: News on the Duchess Catherine of Saxony and her people In: New archive for Saxon history (NASG), Volume 15, 1894, ISSN 0944-8195, p. 326 ff. (digitized).
  • John Meyer: Female characters and women's sway in the House of Wettin, Weller, Bautzen, 1912.
  • Sabine Ulbricht: princesses in the Saxon History (1382-1622), Sax, Beucha/Markham, 2010, ISBN 3-86729-053-9, p. 99-125.

See also


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