Agnes of Poitou

empress consort
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Also known as: Agnès d’Aquitaine, Agnès de Poitou, Agnes of Aquitaine
Quick Facts
Also called:
Agnes of Aquitaine
French:
Agnès de Poitou, or Agnès d’Aquitaine
Born:
c. 1024
Died:
Dec. 14, 1077, Rome [Italy]
Also Known As:
Agnes of Aquitaine
Agnès de Poitou
Agnès d’Aquitaine
Notable Family Members:
son Henry IV

Agnes of Poitou (born c. 1024—died Dec. 14, 1077, Rome [Italy]) was the second wife of the Holy Roman emperor Henry III. She was regent (1056–62) during the minority of her son, the future Henry IV.

Agnes was a daughter of William V the Great, duke of Aquitaine, and was a descendant of the kings of Burgundy and Italy. She married Henry III on Nov. 1, 1043, forming an alliance designed to cement the empire’s relations with its neighbouring states to the west. On Henry’s death she assumed the regency for her son until it was wrested from her by Archbishop Anno of Cologne in 1062. Agnes then retired to a convent, but she remained an important figure in the movement for ecclesiastical reform, which strongly influenced imperial politics throughout the rest of the 11th century.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.