Thursday, October 8, 2009
Dagmar and Berengaria, Valdemar's two queens
Dagmar, –1212, Valdemar Sejr's first queen, was a daughter of king Premysl Ottokar I of Bohemia and Adela of Meissen. Ottokar had been living in ab. 20 years of marriage to Adela, when he under the pretext of too close kinship applied for divorce (ab. 1198) and married Constantia of Hungary. Adela went with her children, 1 son and 3 daughters to her homeland and applied in vain during many years via help from the Pope to regain her rights; she died in a kloster, which she had established in Meissen 1211. One of the daughters became an abbess and was after her death considered a saint, another got married in Bavaria. The third daughter, Dagmar, was brought to Denmark as king Valdemar's bride in 1205. Her mother's hard fate had probably early matured Dagmar and developed the best sides of her character, as queen of Denmark she won the Danish people's love and affection, and she was described in contemporary poetry as the paragon of a faithful wife and humble Christian and as the princess, who always wanted to ease the life of the suffering. The Danes gave her a name which bears witness of this. Her church name was Margareta/Margrethe , the other was a Slavic name Dragomir/Drahomir (meaning peace-loving) was by the Danes changed into Dagmar - like Vladimir became Valdemar - among people her name was interpreted as Dagens Mø (Dag-Maar).(a beautiful lady).
Historical sources know little about her, but they know like the folk songs that she influenced king Valdemar to free his relative, bishop Valdemar, who had been Valdemar's prisoner for 13 years. In 1209 she gave birth to the son Valdemar. After only 7 years of marriage she died 24 May 1212. A beautiful folk song was written and sung by people about her illness and Valdemar's long ride to come to her deathbed. The folksong says that when Valdemar kneeled at her bier, she woke up and told him about her last pious wishes and about her gnawing self-reproach , because she had sinned "on Sundays I have laced up my sleeves". Dagmar's grave is in Ringsted kirke (St. Bendts) beside Valdemar's; when it was opened in 1855, it was empty.
Schiern, Hist. Studier II, 208 ff. Grundtvig, Danmarks Folkeviser III.
After Johannes C. H. R. Steenstrup's Danish text: grethe bachmann
Dansk Biografisk Lexicon
Carl Fr. Bricka
Project Runeberg
Berengaria, –1221, Valdemar Sejr's second queen, was the youngest daughter of king Sancho I of Portugal and queen Aldonca. When her mother died in 1198 after 24 years of marriage and after having given birth to 11 children, B. was probably born after 1192. After the mother's death B. was brought up by her eldest sister who had been married to king Alfonso of Leon. The Portuguese chronicles assume that she died unmarried , but maybe she during the sisters' feud with their eldest brother king Alfonso I of Portugal, went to her younger brother, Ferdinand, who via his marriage to (Jeanne de Flandre) had become a count of Flandern, and from there she could easlily be known in Denmark.
In 1214 she was married to king Valdemar. She became the mother of 3 kings, but died already 27. March 1221, leaving a reputation about a great beauty, but also about arrogance and strictness, especially against the peasanttry. This rumour was taken up by the folk poetry and used freely, since the folk songs changed her name into "Bengjærd" which was not flattering. When her grave was opened in 1855, the bone structure confirmed the rumour about her beauty; but there some trouble around the grave after her death also indicated the hatred against her. None of her sons named their daughters after her.
(Note : The last remark is hostile. We don't know all those daughters of her sons.)
Duarte Nunez, Primeira parte das Chronicas dos reis de Portugal, reformadas, Bl. 64 v. Suhm, Hist. af Danmark IX. Worsaae, Kongegravene i Ringsted Kirke.
After J. Kinch's Danish text: grethe bachmann.
Dansk Biografisk Lexicon
Carl Fr. Bricka
Project Runeberg
Article in Thyra-blog from Dec. 2005:
Queen Berengaria of Denmark
Skt. Bendts Church, Ringsted
When queen Berengaria's grave was opened in 1885, they found her thick plait of hair, her finely formed skull and finely built body bones. A portrait drawing was made to show how she might have looked. Berengaria was a daughter of king Sancho I of Portugal and queen Aldonca and a descendant of Robert Capet. She was married on May 3rd 1214 to king Valdemar II Sejr of Denmark. She became the mother of three kings, but she died already on March 27th 1221 and was buried in Sankt Bendts Church in Ringsted, the burial place for the early Danish kings and queens.
Her three sons and a daughter with Valdemar:
Erik IV Plovpenning, born 1216 , king from 1241-1250; he was murdered by his brother Albert at Slien August 9th 1250. Erik was married to Jutta of Saxony.
Albert, born ab. 1218, king from 1250-1252, was killed in a battle against the Frisians at the peninsula Eiderstedt June 29th 1252. Married to Mechtilde of Holstein.
Christopher I, born 1219, king 1252-1259, died in Ribe May 29th 1259, possibly poisoned by alter wine. Married to Margrethe Sambiria of Pommern.
Sophie, who was married to Johan 1. of Brandenburg in 1236. She died November 2nd 1247.
Eleonora of Portugal, Berengaria's niece, was a daughter of Berengaria's brother, king Alfonso II el Pancudo and Urraca of Castile, she was married in 1231 to Valdemar the Young, Valdemar's son with his first queen, Dagmar of Bohemia. Eleonora was born in 1211 and died in childbirth August 28th 1231, her child died the same year. Valdemar the Young was killed by an accidental shot at Refsnæs November 28th 1231. Buried in Ringsted with Eleonora.
photo Ringsted St.Bendt's kirke: grethe bachmann
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