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  1. Anna Jagiellon (Polish: Anna Jagiellonka, Lithuanian: Ona Jogailaitė; 18 October 1523 – 9 September 1596) was Queen of Poland and Grand Duchess of Lithuania from 1575 to 1587. Daughter of Polish King Sigismund I the Old and Italian duchess Bona Sforza, Anna received multiple proposals, but remained unmarried until the age of 52.

  2. After Sigismund II Augustus, the dynasty underwent further changes. Sigismund II's heirs were his sisters Anna Jagiellon and Catherine Jagiellon.

  3. Anna of Bohemia and Hungary (23 July 1503 – 27 January 1547), sometimes known as Anna Jagellonica, was Queen of Germany, Bohemia, and Hungary and Archduchess of Austria as the wife of King Ferdinand I (later Holy Roman Emperor).

  4. ANNA JAGIELLON (1523– 1596) was a Jagiellonian princess, the daughter of King Sigismund the Old of Poland and Bona Sforza. Anna's political career started when her brother, Sigismund II August, died in 1572, leaving his three sisters, Anna, Sophie, and Catherine, the heiresses to his considerable wealth.

  5. Anna Jagiellon (1523-1596) has the distinction of being the only woman in the early modern period to stand in a royal election—and the only woman to have won one, too. Anna rose to political prominence in the aftermath of her brother, Sigismund II’s, premature death in 1572.

  6. anna jagiellon: a female political figure in the early modern polish– lithuanian commonwealth. In E. Woodacre (Ed.), A Companion to Global Queenship (pp. 67-78). Amsterdam: ARC, Amsterdam University Press.

  7. 14 de dez. de 2022 · Dariusz Chemperek’s article is concerned with the figure of Catherine Jagiellons daughter, Princess of Sweden, Anna Vasa (1568–1625), and her patronage in the field of natural science as well as her political significance as a protector of Lutheran theology in Poland during the Counter-Reformation.