Career
She was the wife of Bretislaus I of Bohemia. She was a scion of the House of Babenberg. The House of Přemysl wished to confirm its good relationship with the Babenbergs through a marriage to Judith in 1020.
Judith was a desirable bride, but Oldřich of Bohemia had only one son, Bretislaus, and he was of illegitimate birth, thus complicating the prospect of a marriage with the high-born Judith.
Bretislaus solved the problem by kidnapping Judith from a monastery in Schweinfurt, although he was never punished for the crime. After Bretislaus died in 1055, Judith may have been sent by Spytihněv out of Bohemia, like other Germans, and moved to Hungary.
In Hungary she may have married the former king Peter Urseolo of Hungary, who had been deposed in 1046. Judith died in 1058 and was buried in Saint Vitus Cathedral in Prague.