- Source: List of Hungarian royal consorts
This is a list of the queens consorts of Hungary (Hungarian: királyné), the consorts of the kings of Hungary. After the extinction of the Árpád dynasty and later the Angevin dynasty, the title of King of Hungary has been held by a monarch outside of Hungary with a few exceptions. After 1526, the title of Queen of Hungary belonged to the wife of the Habsburg Emperors who were also King of Hungary.
Queens of Hungary also held the titles after 1526: Holy Roman Empress (later Empress of Austria) and Queen consort of Bohemia. Since Leopold I, all kings of Hungary used the title of Apostolic King of Hungary – the title given to Saint Stephen I by the Pope – and their wives were styled as Apostolic Queens of Hungary.
The title lasted just a little over nine centuries, from 1000 to 1918.
The Kingdom of Hungary also had two queens regnant (királynő) who were crowned as kings: Maria I and Maria II Theresa.
Grand Princesses of the Hungarians
Queens consort of Hungary
= House of Árpád, 1000–1038
== House of Orseolo, 1038/44–1041/46
== House of Aba, 1041–1044
== House of Árpád, 1046–1301
== House of Přemyslid, 1301–1305
== House of Wittelsbach, 1305–1308
=Wenceslaus's successor Otto's first wife, Katharine of Habsburg, died 23 years before her husband became King of Hungary; and he married his second wife, Agnes of Glogau, two years after he lost the throne to Charles I.
= Capetian House of Anjou, 1308–1395
=Charles Martel of Anjou pressed his claim to the throne of Hungary and became titular King of Hungary in 1290; his wife, Klementia of Habsburg became titular queen consort of Hungary, but Charles Martel failed to govern Hungary and died in 1295. Charles Martel and Klementia were never the proper King and Queen. Charles Martel also died in his parents' lifetime.
= House of Luxembourg, 1395–1437
== House of Habsburg, 1437–1439
== House of Jagiellon, 1440–1444
=Ulászló I had no children and did not get married (contemporary opinions, quoted by Jan Długosz, suggested that he was homosexual). He was succeeded in Poland by his younger brother Casimir IV Jagiellon in 1447 after a three-year interregnum. In Hungary, he was succeeded by his former rival, the child Ladislaus the Posthumous.
= House of Habsburg, 1440/44–1457
=Ladislaus the Posthumous died suddenly in Prague on 23 November 1457 while preparing for his marriage to Magdalena of Valois, daughter of Charles VII of France. He and Magdalena, therefore, never married.
= House of Hunyadi, 1458–1490
== House of Jagiellon, 1490–1526
== House of Szapolyai, 1526–1570
=In dispute with the Habsburgs.
= House of Habsburg, 1526–1780
== House of Habsburg-Lorraine, 1780–1918
=References
See also
List of Austrian consorts
List of Bohemian consorts
List of Transylvanian consorts
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of Hungarian royal consorts
- List of Hungarian monarchs
- List of Polish royal consorts
- List of Albanian royal consorts
- List of French royal consorts
- List of royal consorts of Persia
- List of Bohemian royal consorts
- List of Serbian royal consorts
- List of Lithuanian royal consorts
- List of Saxon royal consorts