Anna Maria von Baden-Durlach was a daughter of Margrave Georg Friedrich von Baden from his second marriage to Agathe of Erbach. After the early death of her mother (1621) she grew up under the care of her
"faithful Starschedelin" in the Margrave's Dragon Castle on the Ill in Strasbourg. Like her younger sister Elisabeth, she received a thorough education, although at the time the
Thirty Years War was worsening. She had a poetic and artistic talent, and quite early she began to write and paint. Anna Maria of Baden-Durlach also wrote a longer poem about the Swedish king
Gustavus Adolphus (1647), a lovely
bukolika on "the Lord's President Selmmitzen Feldgut zu Berghausen". She also translated poems from Italian and French, occasional poems wrote to name days. Her literary work was not published during her lifetime. Anna Maria von Baden-Durlach was closely associated with her younger sister Elisabeth, who was also artistically active, but less gifted. They worked together on many things. Anna Maria maintained contacts to numerous artists. She was skilled in the field of paper cutting. After she had spent her youth in Strasbourg, she later lived alternately in the Margravial courts in Basel and Strasbourg. She remained unmarried. Although she died in Basel, she was buried in
Pforzheim on November 1, 1672. ==References==