Catherine of Pomerania, Countess Palatine of Neumarkt explained

Catherine of Pomerania, Countess Palatine of Neumarkt should not be confused with Catherine of Pomerania, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg.

Catherine of Pomerania
Countess Palatine of Neumarkt
Birth Name:Katharina von Pommern
Birth Date:c. 1390
Birth Place:Darłowo
Death Date:4 March 1426
Death Place:Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz
Consort:yes
Spouse:John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt
Issue:Christopher of Bavaria
House:Griffin
Father:Wartislaw VII, Duke of Pomerania
Mother:Maria of Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Catherine of Pomerania (German: Katharina von Pommern; c. 1390 – 4 March 1426), was a Pomeranian princess, and a Countess Palatine of Neumarkt as the wife of John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt, and the mother of Christopher of Bavaria, king of the Kalmar Union.

Life

Catherine was the daughter of Wartislaw VII, Duke of Pomerania in Pomerania-Stolp and Maria of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Maria was the daughter of Henry III, Duke of Mecklenburg and Ingeborg of Denmark, eldest daughter of sonless King Valdemar IV of Denmark and older sister of Margaret I of Denmark. Henry III's mother was Euphemia of Sweden, the daughter of Erik Magnusson and the sister of Magnus Eriksson. Catherine's brother was Eric of Pomerania, future king of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway.

The two siblings were adopted by their grandaunt Queen Margaret I of Denmark in 1388 and likely brought to Margaret at the same occasion. Initially, Margaret's plan was for Catherine to enter the Vadstena Abbey[1]

Catherine was a candidate for a time for marriage to Henry, Prince of Wales.[2] This marriage was suggested in 1400–1401, and it was the idea that a double wedding was to be arranged between Catherine and Henry in parallel to the wedding between her brother Eric and Henry's sister Philippa.[3]

The marriage between Catherine and Henry never occurred and was broken off in 1404. The English had wished for Catherine's children with Henry to inherit the Nordic thrones in the case of Eric dying without an heir (which was impossible since the Kalmar Union was elective), as well as an alliance against France, which Margaret could not agree to.[4] In 1406, another indirect link to the English royal house was created when the brother-in-law of Philippa (Louis III, Elector Palatine) suggested a marriage with John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt.[5] John was the son of Rupert, King of Germany. An alliance with the German king was more valuable for the Nordic Union considering their problem with the Hanseatic League.[6] The negotiations were completed in one year, and Margaret gave Catherine a dowry of 4,000 gulden, much less than was expected by her future father-in-law.

On 15 August 1407, Catherine married John in Ribe, Denmark. They would have seven children, but only their youngest, Christopher, lived past infancy. Christopher succeeded his uncle Eric as king of the three Scandinavian kingdoms.

Catherine died on 4 March 1426.

References

Notes and References

  1. https://runeberg.org/dbl/3/0434.html Dansk biografisk Lexikon / III. Bind. Brandt - Clavus
  2. [Ellen Hagen]
  3. https://runeberg.org/dbl/3/0434.html Dansk biografisk Lexikon / III. Bind. Brandt - Clavus
  4. Flemberg, Marie-Louise, Filippa: engelsk prinsessa och nordisk unionsdrottning, Santérus, Stockholm, 2014
  5. https://runeberg.org/dbl/3/0434.html Dansk biografisk Lexikon / III. Bind. Brandt - Clavus
  6. Flemberg, Marie-Louise, Filippa: engelsk prinsessa och nordisk unionsdrottning, Santérus, Stockholm, 2014