Ursula of Munsterberg
Appearance
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (March 2017) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Ursula of Munsterberg (German: Ursula von Münsterberg; Czech: Uršula z Minstrberka, Voršila Minstrberská, kněžna a Kladská hraběnka; c. 1491/95 or 1499,[1] presumably in Teschen - after 2 February 1534, presumably in Stift Gernrode or Liegnitz) was a German nun and writer, known for her role during the reformation.
Life
[edit]She was a daughter of Victor, Duke of Münsterberg, and a granddaughter of George of Poděbrady, king of Bohemia. She came from the Crownlands of the Bohemian Kingdom, which is now the Czech Republic.
She became a nun in the Order of St Mary Magdalene. She famously left the convent during the reformation. She became a known Protestant writer.
References
[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ursula of Münsterberg.
- ^ Cf. Siegismund Justus Ehrhardt: Abhandlung vom verderbten Religions-Zustand in Schlesien. Wilhelm Gottlieb Korn, Breslau 1778, S. 197 (Google-Books); Similar to Roman von Procházka: Genealogisches Handbuch erloschener böhmischer Herrenstandsfamilien, Bd. I. Degener & Co., Neustadt an der Aisch 1973, S. 201.
Categories:
- Czech nobility
- Lutheran writers
- 1490s births
- 16th-century deaths
- Converts to Lutheranism from Roman Catholicism
- 16th-century German Roman Catholic nuns
- Podiebrad family
- 16th-century women from Bohemia
- 16th-century writers from Bohemia
- 16th-century German writers
- 16th-century German women writers
- People of the Protestant Reformation
- Czech people stubs