Sibylla of Anhalt

Sibylla of Anhalt (28 September 1564 – 26 October 1614) was a princess from the House of Ascania, who became Duchess of Württemberg as the wife Duke Frederick I.

Sibylla of Anhalt
Sibylla of Anhalt
Duchess consort of Württemberg
Tenure18 August 1593 - 29 January 1608
Born28 September 1564
Bernburg
Died26 October 1614(1614-10-26) (aged 50)
Leonberg
SpouseFrederick I, Duke of Württemberg
HouseAscania
FatherJoachim Ernest, Prince of Anhalt
MotherAgnes of Barby-Mühlingen

Life

Sibylla of Anhalt was born in Bernburgon 28 September 1564, as the fourth child of Joachim Ernest, Prince of Anhalt (1536–1586) and his first wife, Agnes of Barby-Mühlingen (1540–1569), daughter of Wolfgang I, Count of Barby-Mühlingen. She had three older sisters and two younger brothers. Sybilla lost her mother when she was 5 years old, and her father remarried two years later. By her stepmother, Eleonore of Württemberg (1552–1618), she had ten half-siblings.

In 1577, Sybilla's older sister Anna Maria was relieved from her post as Imperial abbess of Gernrode and Frose in order to marry Joachim Frederick of Brieg; under pressure from their father, the chapter elected Sibylla as her successor. Sibylla was confirmed in her office by the emperor, Rudolph II. During her reign as abbess the only record of her activities comes from an abbey document in which she invests the widow of Stefan Molitor (the first Evangelical superintendent of the abbey) with a piece of land.

In 1581, Sibylla was relieved from her post in order to marry Frederick, Count of Mömpelgard and heir apparent of the Duchy of Württemberg. The marriage was arranged by her stepmother, Eleonore of Württemberg, and the wedding took place in Stuttgart on 22 May of that year. Her successor as abbess was her younger half-sister Agnes Hedwig.

Only 16 years old at the time of her wedding, Sibylla bore her husband fifteen children during the first fifteen years of their marriage.[1] She did not play a prominent role in court life or have any influence over her husband, and after the birth of their last child, the couple virtually lived apart. On his frequent travels to France, Italy, and England, Frederick did not take Sybilla with him. He succeeded his father's cousin Ludwig as Duke of Württemberg in 1593.

Sibylla was anxious to expand her knowledge of botany and chemistry. To veil her interest in the dubious discipline of alchemy, she explained her activity as gathering an herbal collection for the production of medicine for the poor. As scientific adviser, she appointed Helena Magenbuch, a daughter of Johann Magenbuch, the personal physician of Martin Luther and Emperor Charles V. Helena Magenbuch was awarded the title of Pharmacist of the Württemberg Court. From 1606 to 1607, Maria Andreae took over this post.

After the death of her husband in 1608, Sibylla withdrew to Leonberg, where she commissioned the architect Heinrich Schickhardt to develop Schloss Leonberg and create the famous Pomeranzengarten (Orange Garden) in Renaissance style. In 1609 Schickhardt built a lakeside house not far from Leonberg (Seehaus Leonberg) that was used as a hunting lodge. Sibylla died in Leonberg 1614.

Issue

References

  1. Marek, Miroslav. "Complete Genealogy of the House of Württemberg". Genealogy.EU.
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