Countess Catharina Belgica of Nassau | |
Countess of Hanau-Münzenberg | |
Noble Family: | Nassau |
Father: | William the Silent |
Mother: | Charlotte of Bourbon |
Spouse: | Philip Louis II, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg |
Issue: | |
Issue-Link: |
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Birth Place: | Antwerp |
Death Place: | Hanau |
Catharina Belgica of Nassau (31 July 1578 - 12 April 1648) was a countess of Hanau-Münzenberg by her marriage to Philip Louis II, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg. She was regent of Hanau-Münzenberg during the minority of her son from 1612 until 1626.[1]
She was the third daughter of William the Silent and his third spouse Charlotte of Bourbon.
Catharina Belgica was born in Antwerp. After her father had been assassinated in 1584, her aunt Catherine took her to Arnstadt, while most of her sisters were raised by Louise de Coligny. Her older sister Juliana would later criticize Catharina's Lutheran education.[2]
In 1596, during a wedding feast in Dillenburg that lasted from 23 October - 3 November, she married Philip Louis II, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg, with whom she had ten children in just fifteen years.
When her husband died in 1612, Catharina Belgica became regent for her son Philip Maurice. When emperor Ferdinand II requested passage through Hanau for his coronation in Frankfurt in 1618, she refused him entry. Her territories were ravaged by imperial troops in 1621, and she and her children had to evacuate to The Hague.
In 1626, her son took over government. When king Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden liberated Hanau from Imperial occupation in 1631, it was Catharina Belgica who issued negotiations with the Swedish king and successfully secured the state for her son, and she guarded the alliance between Sweden and Hanau in cooperation with her daughter, the regent of Hesse-Cassel. [3]
She died, aged 69, in The Hague.
Her marriage with Philip Louis II of Hanau-Münzenberg produced 10 children, of which eight lived to adulthood: