Sophia of Halshany | |
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16th-century miniature of Sophia
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Queen consort of Poland | |
Reign | February 1422 – 1 June 1434 |
Coronation | 5 March 1424 |
Born | c. 1405 |
Died | 21 September 1461 Kraków, Poland |
Burial | Wawel Cathedral |
Spouse | Władysław II Jagiełło |
Issue |
Władysław III of Poland Casimir Casimir IV of Poland |
Dynasty | Jagiellon |
Father | Andrew Olshansky |
Mother | Alexandra Drucka |
Sophia of Halshany or Sonka Olshanskaya (Belarusian: Соф'я Гальшанская, Sofja Halšanskaja; Lithuanian: Sofija Alšėniškė; Polish: Zofia Holszańska; c. 1405 – September 21, 1461 in Kraków) was a Grand Duchy of Lithuania princess of Halshany. As the fourth and last wife of Jogaila, King of Poland and Supreme Duke of Lithuania, she was Queen consort of Poland (1422–1434). As the mother of Władysław III, King of Poland and Hungary, and Casimir IV, Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland, she was the founder of the Jagiellon dynasty.
Sophia was a middle daughter of Andrew Olshansky, son of Vytautas' right-hand man Ivan Olshansky, and Alexandra Drucka, daughter of Dmitry of Druck. Historians disagree on the identity of Dmitry: Polish historiography usually provides Jogaila's half-brother Dmitry I Starshiy while Russian historians provide Dimitri Semenovich of Rurikid origin. Her father died when she was young and the family moved to Druck to live with Alexandra's brother Siemion Drucki. Sophia grew up in a Ruthenian environment and was an Eastern Orthodox Christian (her Orthodox name is Sonka). It is believed that she was illiterate and largely uneducated.