Elisabeth of Culemborg

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Elisabeth of Culemborg
Culemborg coat of arms

Elisabeth of Culemborg (30 March 1475, the former slot of Hoogstraten - 9 December 1555,

Archduchess Margaret of Austria
.

Life

She was the heiress of jonker

Antoon I van Lalaing
, later acting-governor of the Netherlands. She had no children.

She served as

Archduchess Margaret of Austria in 1506.[1]
She spent a great deal of her life at the court of the Netherlands, where she was an important and leading figure.

In parallel, she ruled in her domains, where she was known for her appreciation of arts and architecture as well as for the seminary (from 1532 a retirement home) she founded in 1520. She was also known as a pious Catholic and opposition toward the Protestant reformation, issued repression of "heretic" books, such as the work of Erasmus, and allowed the Jesuits to establish in Culemborg.[2]

After the death of her second spouse, she retired permanently to rule Culemborg.

References

  1. ^ Peter G. Bietenholz & Thomas Brian Deutscher: Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Volym 1–3
  2. ^ Peter G. Bietenholz & Thomas Brian Deutscher: Contemporaries of Erasmus: A Biographical Register of the Renaissance and Reformation. Volym 1–3

Sources

External links

Media related to Elisabeth of Culemborg at Wikimedia Commons