In June 1546 Anna's dowry was set at 50,000
guilders. But before Anna and Albert could be wed they would need a
papal dispensation since they were second cousins through
Kunigunde of Austria being the grandmother of Albert and her brother
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor being the great-grandfather of Anna. An envoy was hastily dispatched to Rome to obtain the dispensation from
Pope Paul III. The dispensation was granted on 17 June, and the marriage contract was signed on 19 June. Anna was married to Albert on 4 July 1546 in a lavish ceremony with festivities which lasted for eight days, and two weeks later on 18 July 1546, Anna's sister married the Duke of Jülich-Kleve. After the marriage festivities were over, Anna and her new husband left for Bavaria, accompanied by her brother
Maximilian. The young couple lived at the
Trausnitz Castle in
Landshut until Albert became duke upon his father's death on 7 March 1550. At the
Munich Residenz, Anna and Albert had great influence on the spiritual life in the
Duchy of Bavaria, and enhanced the reputation of
Munich as a city of art, by founding several museums and laying the foundations for the
Bavarian State Library. Anna and Albert were also patrons to the painter
Hans Muelich and the
Franco-Flemish composer
Orlande de Lassus. In 1552, the duke commissioned an inventory of the jewellery in the couple's possession. The resulting manuscript, still held by the Bavarian State Library, was the
Jewel Book of the Duchess Anna of Bavaria ("Kleinodienbuch der Herzogin Anna von Bayern"), and contains 110 drawings by Hans Muelich. A religious woman, Anna made extensive donations to the
Catholic abbey of
Vadstena in
Sweden and generously supported the
Franciscan Order. She also provided a strict education of her grandson, the later Elector
Maximilian I of Bavaria.
Widowhood When her husband died on 24 October 1579 and was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,
William V, Anna as duchess dowager maintained her own court at the Munich Residenz. In 1740, 150 years after her death in 1590, her descendant Elector
Charles Albert of Bavaria would use her marriage treaty with Albert as a pretext to claim the
Austrian and
Bohemian crown lands of the
Habsburg monarchy. == Death ==