Sibylle of Baden


Sibylle of Baden was a Margravine of Baden by birth and by marriage, Countess of Hanau-Lichtenberg. She was a daughter of Margrave Christoph I of Baden and his wife, Countess Ottilie of Katzenelnbogen, the daughter of Philip the Younger of Katzenelnbogen and thus a granddaughter of Philipp I, Count of Katzenelnbogen.

Marriage and Issue

Sibylle married on 24 January 1505 to Count Philipp III of Hanau-Lichtenberg. She brought a dowry of 5000 guilders into the marriage. They had six children:
  1. Johanna, married on 6 November 1522 to Count Wilhelm IV of Eberstein.
  2. Christophora, a nun in Marienborn Abbey from November 1526, and later the last abbess there.
  3. Amalie, also a nun in Marienborn Abbey from November 1526.
  4. Felicitas.
  5. Philipp IV, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg.
  6. Felicitas, also a nun in Marienborn Abbey from November 1526.

    Altar in Babenhausen

By 1513, Sibylle had given birth to four daughters, but no son. She vowed that she would donate an altar if she had a son. In 1514, Philipp was born and Sibylle donated a high altar to the City Church of St. Nicholas in Babenhausen. This altar is considered a major work of art from the Middle Rhine area in this period. With this artist, Sibylle created a monument to herself and her relatives. The left wing of the altar depicts, among other people, her great-uncle, the blessed Bernard II, who was famous for his pious life and was beatified in the 18th century.

Death

Sibylle died on 10 July 1518 and was buried in the family crypt of the Hanau-Lichtenberg dynasty in the City Church of St. Nicholas in Babenhausen, where her husband was later buried.

Ancestors

Footnotes