Bathsheba
Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah, later became David's wife and the mother of Solomon.
Bathsheba was the wife of Uriah the Hittite and subsequently the wife of King David, whose seduction or coercion by David led to an affair and pregnancy while Uriah served in battle (2 Samuel 11). David arranged Uriah's death in battle to conceal the sin, an action roundly condemned by the prophet Nathan's parable of the ewe lamb (2 Samuel 12). The child born of the union died, but Bathsheba later bore Solomon, who succeeded David as king. She exercised significant political influence at the close of David's reign, securing Solomon's succession over his rival Adonijah (1 Kings 1–2). She appears in Matthew's genealogy of Jesus as 'the wife of Uriah' (Matthew 1:6), one of four women included by the evangelist in what is normally a patrilineal list.