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| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Wenceslas II |
For more information on Wenceslas II, visit Britannica.com.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Wenceslaus II |
| Wikipedia: Wenceslaus II of Bohemia |
| Wenceslaus II | |
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| King of Bohemia and Poland | |
| Wenceslaus II from a manuscript | |
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| Reign | 1278/1300-1305 |
| Coronation | 1297, Prague and 1300, Opole |
| Predecessor | Ottokar II |
| Successor | Wenceslaus III |
| Spouse | Judith of Habsburg Elisabeth Richeza |
| Issue | |
| Wenceslaus III Anne, Queen of miaBohe Elisabeth, Queen of Bohemia Margaret, Duchess of Wroclaw Agnes, Duchess of Jawor |
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| Father | Ottokar II of Bohemia |
| Mother | Kunigunda of Slavonia |
| Born | September 27, 1271 Prague, Bohemia |
| Died | June 21, 1305 (aged 33) Prague, Bohemia |
Wenceslaus II Premyslid (Czech: Václav II.; Template:Lang-sil; September 27[1], 1271 – June 21, 1305) was King of Bohemia (1278 - 1305), King of Poland(1300 - 1305), Duke of Opole (1291 - 1305).
He was the only son of King Ottokar II "the Great" of Bohemia and Ottokar's second wife Kunigunda. He was born in 1271, ten years after the marriage of his parents. Kunigunda was the daughter of Rostislav, lord of Slavonia, son of a Grand Duke of Kiev and Anna of Hungary, daughter of Béla IV of Hungary. His great-grandfather was the German king Philip of Swabia.
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In 1276 Rudolf I, King of Romans, placed Ottokar under the ban of the empire and besieged Vienna. This compelled Otakar in November 1276 to sign a new treaty by which he gave up all claims to Austria and the neighbouring duchies, retaining for himself only Bohemia and Moravia. Ottokar's son Wenceslaus was also betrothed to Rudolph's daughter Judith. It was an uneasy peace. Wenceslaus's father died in battle August 26, 1278, shortly before Wenceslaus's seventh birthday.
Before Wenceslaus became of age, the government was handled by Otto IV Margrave of Brandenburg, who is said to have held Wenceslaus captive in several locations. He returned to Bohemia in 1283, at the age of twelve. His mother's secret husband, Záviš of Falkenštejn ruled for him.
On January 24, 1285, Wenceslaus married Judith of Habsburg, daughter of Rudolf I, to whom he had been betrothed since 1276. In 1290 Wenceslaus had Záviš beheaded for alleged treason and began ruling independently.
Wenceslaus II. became King of Bohemia in May 1283rd This does not mean an immediate calming conditions. The power and influence on the young king, two groups vying nobility. While the faction led by Tobias of the Prague bishop Bechyně was driven out of the court, won a domination of the rebel Vítkovec, Zavis of Falkenstein and his supporters.
Záviš the lover (and perhaps husband) Wenceslas Kunhuta mother and his demeanor quickly earned the Wenceslas, for the next few years which de facto ruled. Falkenštejn proved a capable administrator earth, handpicked by the authorities Vitkovci, but also strengthened the royal power of well-shaken (Václav finally gave permission for his marriage with Kunhuta).
But the king grew up and still wanting more after samostatnějším application. His relationship to the death Falkenstein Kunhuta Queen Mother (1285) initially unchanged and gave him permission to marry another with Elizabeth Kumánkou. Then promote its influence on the Prague court Václavova wife Judith of Austria. Judith and her father thought the defendant Zavis Habsburgs. Not only is the course Vítkovec antagonized. Václav gave Falkenštejna arrested in January 1289 (probably from selfish reasons), and finally executed at the castle "Deep River Vltava.
As the king in many ways diferent from her bohemian father, in whose shadow he had built to be Dante Alighieri. Wenceslaus II. a smart man with a good memory, but never learned to write. Become an important warrior. Before the military action he preferred a diplomatic negotiation, subtle bribery to wait and indecisive and disaffected princes and church dignitaries.
Although Wenceslaus gained during his youth, education major, was interested in contemporary knowledge, collected rare writings and invited to his court a foreign artist (he worked there as poets and Etzenbach Ulrich von Heinrich von Meissen, called Frauenlob). King himself apparently composed songs, but wrote them in German. He thought of establishing the University of Prague, which, however, met with the unwillingness of the aristocracy as well as efforts to introduce land code.
In particular, he deftly Wenceslaus acted in relation to the Czech nobility. Unlike Přemysla her share of the supreme power in the country and not enter into open conflict. During the reign of Wenceslas II. , Bohemia and Moravia, the restoration of the Czech kingdom, quickly recovering from the horrors of past years and again began to thrive economically. Soon as he got allies among the nobility home and abroad to try to further extend Přemyslid power. Rudolf I of Germany had previously granted the fief of all the territories which Wenceslaus can get, in exchange for his vote in favor of the elector Rudolf younger.
In 1291 Przemysł II, High Duke of Silesia, ceded the sovereign duchy of Opole to Wenceslaus. Opole was associated with the overlordship of Silesia, but Przemysł held the other duchies and in 1295 was crowned King of Silesia. After Przemysł's death in 1296 Wenceslaus became overlord of Silesia and in 1300 was in Opole crowned King of Poland.[2]
In 1298 silver was discovered at Kuttenberg, Hory Kutné (Kutná Hora in Central Bohemia. Wenceslaus took control of the mine by making silver production a royal monopoly, and issued the Prague groschen which became the most popular of the early Groschen-type coins. Kuttenberg (Kutná Hora) was one of the richest European silver strikes ever: between 1300 and 1340 the mine may have produced as much as 20 tons of silver a year.
In 1300 Wenceslaus issued the new royal mining code Ius regale montanorum. This was a legal document that specified all administrative as well as technical terms and conditions necessary for the operation of mines.[3]
Queen Judith had died in 1297. Wenceslaus's second wife was Elisabeth Richeza, daughter of Przemysł II, King of Silesia 1295 - 1296 (later she remarried to Rudolph of Habsburg, duke of Austria, who also became king of Silesia for a brief period in those unruly years).
In 1301, Wenceslaus' kinsman Andrew III of Hungary died and with him the Árpád dynasty in male line. Wenceslaus was one of the relatives who claimed the throne, and he accepted it from a party of Hungarians on behalf of his young son. On August 27, 1301, Wenceslaus III was crowned in Székesfehérvár as the King of Hungary and as such assumed the name Ladislaus V (Hungarian: László [4], Czech, Slovak and Croatian: Ladislav).
At that time the Kingdom of Hungary was split into several de-facto principalities, and young Wenceslaus was only accepted as the King of Hungary by the rulers in modern Slovakia (Matthew Csák and the Abas), in Burgenland (the Güssings [Kőszegis]) and on territory around the capital, Buda. But the Abas and Matthew Csák switched sides in 1303 and started to support Wenceslaus' rival Charles Robert of Anjou. Consequently, the young Wenceslaus, in Ofen (Buda), became afraid and wrote to his father in Prague for help. His father took a large army and invaded Buda, but having considered the situation, he took his son and the Hungarian crown and returned to Silesia (1304). Ivan of Güssing was named to represent Wenceslaus III in Hungary.
Wenceslaus II died in 1305, at the age of 34, probably of tuberculosis. He was planning to invade Austria at this time, but that never happened. He was succeeded by his son, Wenceslaus III (Václav III.), last of the Přemyslid kings in male line.
The Wenceslas II, the government was completing the major economic and social changes of recent Přemyslid Czech state, which were associated with large colonization, the establishment of cities, development of crafts and commerce. Late 13th century, were discovered rich deposits of silver ore in Kutná Hora, whose use has contributed significantly to the power expansion of the Kingdom of Bohemia. King prepared in cooperation with their Italian a financial and legal advisers coin reform, which became the year 1300 embossed tin Prague, which is rapidly becoming the requested currency abroad, and issued the Kutna Hora new mining code Jus regale montanorum. Wenceslas II, belongs to a very important kings of Czech and Central European history.
He was married twice[2]:
In 1285 in Eger (Cheb), he married Judith of Habsburg (1271–1297), daughter of Rudolph I of Germany and his wife Gertrude of Hohenburg. She died shortly after their 10th child was born:
In 1300, he married Elisabeth Richeza (1286 – 1335), daughter of Przemysł II. They had one child:
Wenceslaus has also numerous illegitimate children, including Jan Volek (?? - September 27, 1351), bishop of Olomouc
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| Regnal titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Premysl Ottokar II |
King of Bohemia 1278-1305 |
Succeeded by Wenceslaus III |
| Preceded by Jan II of Silesia |
King of Silesia 1300-1305 |
Succeeded by Wenceslaus III |
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