Kunigunde

Kunigunde, Kunigunda, or Cunigunde, is a European female name of German origin derived from "kuni" (clan, family) and "gund" (war). In Polish this is sometimes Kunegunda or Kinga. People with such names include:
 * Kunigunde of Rapperswil (c. early 4th century), Christian saint
 * Cunigunda of Laon, wife of Bernard of Italy (797–818)
 * Cunigunde of Swabia (died 918), wife and consort of King Conrad I of East Francia
 * Holy Roman Empress St. Cunigunde (of Luxembourg) (c. 975 – 1040), wife and consort of Holy Roman Emperor St. Henry II
 * Queen Kunigunde (of Hohenstaufen) (1200? – 13 September 1248), wife and consort of Wenceslaus I of Bohemia
 * Queen Kunigunda (of Slavonia) (died 1285), consort of Bohemia and its regent from 1278 to 1285
 * St. Kinga of Poland (1234–1292), Patroness of Poland and Lithuania
 * Kunigunde of Poland (c. 1298 – 1331), daughter of King Wladyslaw I the Elbow-High of Poland
 * Cunigunde of Poland (died 1357), wife of Louis VI the Roman, Duke of Bavaria and Margrave of Brandenburg
 * Kunigunde von Orlamünde (1303–1382), consort of Otto VI, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde
 * Kunigunde of Sternberg (died 1449), first wife of George of Poděbrady
 * Queen Kunigunde of Bohemia (died 1464), wife and consort of King Matthias of Hungary
 * Kunigunde of Austria (died 1520), archduchess and wife of Albert IV, Duke of Bavaria
 * Theresa Kunegunda Sobieska (1676–1730), Electress of Bavaria and of the Electorate of the Palatinate
 * Kunigunde Streicher, wife of Julius Streicher
 * Kunigunde Bachl (1919–1994), German physician and politician
 * Kunegunda Godawska-Olchawa (b. 1951), Polish Olympic slalom canoeist

Fictional or legendary

 * Princess Kunegunda, from a legend of the Chojnik Castle
 * Cunégonde, a fictional character in Voltaire's novel Candide