Aborted Krewo - A Timeline idea

Aborted Krewo - A Timeline idea
The death of Jadwiga
Jogaila's Russian mother Uliana of Tver urged him to marry Sofia, daughter of Prince Dmitri of Moscow, who required him first to convert to Orthodoxy. That option, however, was unlikely to halt the crusades against Lithuania by the Teutonic Knights, who regarded Orthodox Christians as schismatics and little better than heathens. Jogaila chose therefore to accept a Polish proposal to become a Catholic and marry the eleven-year-old Queen Jadwiga of Poland. The nobles of Malopolska made this offer to Jogaila for many reasons. They wanted to neutralize the dangers posed by Lithuania itself and to secure the fertile territories of Galicia–Volhynia. The Polish nobles saw the offer as an opportunity for increasing their privileges and avoiding Austrian influence, brought by Jadwiga's previous fiancé William, Duke of Austria.
On August 14 1385 in Kreva Castle, Jogaila confirmed his prenuptial promises in the Union of Krewo (Union of Kreva). The promises included the adoption of Christianity, repatriation of lands "stolen" from Poland by its neighbours, and terras suas Lithuaniae et Russiae Coronae Regni Poloniae perpetuo applicare, a clause interpreted by historians to mean anything from a personal union between Lithuania and Poland to a complete incorporation of Lithuania into Poland.The agreement at Kreva has been described both as far-sighted and as a desperate gamble.

However, Jadwiga died on December 1385 due to suspicious circumstances some people believed that it is Siemowit of Plock and Wladyslaw of Opole, the Piast Faction that ordered the death or the Bohemian Faction led by Sigismund of Luxembourg, the heir of Casimir III that caused the death and so the marriage between Jogaila and Jadwiga did not happen.
 
An unexpected alliance
Wladyslaw of Opole, already married to a sister of Siemowit IV, fetched his daughter, Kunigunde from a convent, already in her 30’s to Siemowit IV in order to be remarried and to strengthen their alliance, in this time, Wladyslaw the White is ailing and he is the last Kuyavian Piast, Wladyslaw of Opole made an alliance with Siemowit IV and he would swear to be a vassal of Siemowit IV.

Elisabeth of Bosnia would be weeping for the death of her young daughter, Jadwiga and another is that her daughter Mary, the Queen regnant of Hungary and titular Queen of Poland is facing a dillemna on Charles of Naples, Louis of Orleans and Sigismund of Luxembourg, the opportunity to marry Siemowit is dashed due to a marriage alliance between Wladyslaw of Opole who shifted alliance Siemowit IV,
Wladyslaw the White would die and the claim to his own duchy would pass to Elisabeth of Bosnia.

the Polish nobles from Silesia, Greater Poland, Mazovia and Kuyavia would prefer the King of Poland to be the one from the Piast lineage, however it is the nobles from Lesser Poland that would be divided.

On 1390, when Wenceslaus IV as King of Bohemia gave the Duchy of Wroclaw to him and the sole suzerainty of Silesia would be transferred to Siemowit IV, that was a way to gain an alliance against Sigismund, Catherine of France, the daughter of Charles V of France is betrothed to Siemowit IV as a symbol of truce between the Luxembourgs and the Piasts, Wenceslaus IV would support the rebirth of Poland.

Jogaila thought about the cancelled union between Poland and Lithuania and tried to marry Mary of Hungary and continue the planned union of Krewo but the agreement was cancelled because she would not marry a pagan ruler.
 
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