Gutta von Oettingen

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Miniature around 1579/87 by Antoni Boys called Anton Waiss, Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna

Gutta von Oettingen , also Jutta von Öttingen or Juditha von Habsburg (* 1302 - † March 5, 1329 in Vienna ) was a daughter of Albrecht I von Habsburg and his wife Elisabeth of Carinthia, Gorizia and Tyrol and by marriage Countess von Oettingen .

She married in Vienna, either in 1315 or 1319, Ludwig VI. von Oettingen († 1346). She was buried in the church of the Königsfelden monastery . In 1770 their bones came through the ceremonial translation of the imperial-royal-also-ducal-Austrian highest corpses first to the St. Blasien Cathedral and, after the abolition of the St. Blasien monastery in 1806, to the Spital am Pyhrn monastery , then in 1809 to the monastery church crypt of Sankt Paul monastery in Lavanttal in Carinthia.

The description of the reburial by Franz Kreutter mentions red hair and a yellow-black-striped and flowered silk dress.

Others

She is not to be confused with her aunt Guta von Habsburg .

literature

  • Martin Gerbert , Franz Kreutter : Solemn translation of the imperial-royal- also ducal-Austrian tallest corpses from their grave towns of Basel and Königsfelden in Switzerland to the princely monastery of St. Blasien in the Black Forest in the 14th winter month of 1770. , (Uffizin des Kloster St. Blasien), St. Blasien, 1770, page 38.
  • Dr. Georg Grupp: Family table of the mediatized house Oettingen 1895. Copy with notes and additions in the Fürstlich Oettingen-Wallerstein'schen Archive Harburg.

Individual evidence

  1. Martin Gerbert, Franz Kreutter Feyerliche translation of the imperial-royal- also ducal-Austrian highest corpses from their grave towns Basel and Königsfelden in Switzerland after the princely monastery St. Blasien in the Black Forest the 14th winter month 1770. , (Uffizin des Klosters St. Blasien), St. Blasien, 1770, page 16