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Boleslaw I "den djärve" Chroby, född cirka 967
i Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Polen, död 1025-06-17
i Gniezno, Wielkopolskie, Polen.
Boleslaw Chrobry w Wikipedii po Polsku
Boleslaw Chrobry on Wikipedia in English
http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boles%C5%82aw_I_av_Polen
Boleslaw I Chrobry (Boleslaw I the Brave or the Valiant) (967 – 17 June 1025), in the past also known as Boleslaw I the Great
(Wielki), was a Duke of Poland from 992-1025 and the first King of Poland from 19 April 1025 until his death. He also ruled as
Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia during 1002-1003. He was the firstborn son of Mieszko I by his first wife, Dobrawa, daughter of
Boleslav I the Cruel, Duke of Bohemia. He was named after his maternal grandfather. Boleslaw I was a remarkable politician,
strategist and statesman. He was able to turn Poland into one of the largest and most powerful monarchies in eastern Europe.
Boleslaw conducted successful military campaigns to the west, south and east. He consolidated the Polish lands and conquered
territories outside of modern borders of Poland such as Slovakia, Moravia, Red Ruthenia, Meissen and Lusatia as well as Bohemia.
-------------------------- Yrke: Furste av Polen 992-1025
Far: Mieszko I av Polen (922 - 992)
Mor: Dubrawka av Böhmen (925 - 977)
Född: omkring 967 Poznan, Polen 1)
Död: 1025-07-17 1)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Familj med Judith av Ungern
Vigsel: 988 1)
Barn: Mieszko II Lambert av Polen (990 - 1034)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Noteringar
Var även hertig av Böhmen 1003-1004.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Källor
1) Directory of Royal Genealogical Data, Hull, England
död 1025. kung. den dristige.
det polska rikets grundloggare, furste 992, kung 1025. Han
erövrade Pommern och hade kontakter med Norden, von med Erik
Segersoll och motstOndare till Sven Tveskogg. Även i söder gjorde
han erövringar, Lausitz och Böhmen.Ett katolskt orkestift
inröottades i Gnesen 1000 och en oberoende polsk kyrka kom till
stOnd mot att tyske kejsarens överhöghet erkondes. Han förde dock
ett kraftigt motstOnd mot den tyska expansionen och erkondes som
vostslavernas fromste talesman.
Boleslaw I, King of Poland (1)
M, #145541, d. 1025
Last Edited=7 Mar 2007
Boleslaw I, King of Poland is the son of Mieszko I, Duke of Poland. (1) He died in 1025. (1)
Boleslaw I, King of Poland also went by the nick-name of Boleslaw 'the Brave' (?). (1) He was a member of the House of Piast. (1)
He succeeded to the title of Duke of Poland in 992. (1) He succeeded to the title of Duke of Bohemia in 1003. (2) He was deposed
as Duke of Bohemia in 1004. (29 He was created King Boleslaw I of Poland in 1025. (1)
Children of Boleslaw I, King of Poland
-1. Mieszko II Lambert, King of Poland+ d. 1034 (1)
-2. unknown daughter (?)+ (3)
Forrás / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p14555.htm#i145541
Boleslaw I
king of Poland
by name Boleslaw the Brave, Polish Boleslaw Chrobry
born 966/967
died June 17, 1025
Main
duke (from 992) and then (from 1024) first king of Poland, who expanded his country’s territory to include Pomerania, Lusatia,
and, for a time, the Bohemian princely lands. He made Poland a major European state and also created a Polish church
independent of German control.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/71995/Boleslaw-I
Boleslaw I Chrobry
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Boleslaw I Chrobry
King of Poland
Portrait by Jan Matejko.
Reign Duke: 992 – April 18, 1025
King: April 18 – June 17, 1025
Coronation April 18, 1025
Gniezno Cathedral, Poland.
Born 967
Birthplace Poznan
Died June 17, 1025[aged 58]
Place of death Kraków?
Buried Cathedral Basilica of St. Peter and St. Paul, Poznan
Predecessor Mieszko I
Successor Mieszko II Lambert
Wives Hunilda (?), daughter of Rikdag
Judith of Hungary
Emnilda of Lusatia
Oda of Meissen
Offspring With Hunilda:
A daughter, Princess of Pomerania
With Judith:
Bezprym
With Enmilda:
A daughter, nun
Regelinda, Margravine of Meissen
Mieszko II Lambert
A daughter, Grand Princess of Kiev
Otto
With Oda:
Matilda
Dynasty Piast dynasty
Father Mieszko I
Mother Dobrawa of Bohemi
Boleslaw I the Brave or the Valiant (Polish: Boleslaw I Chrobry, Czech: Boleslav I (IV) Chrabrý; b. 967 - d. 17 June 1025), in the
past also known as Boleslaw I the Great (Wielki), was a Duke of Poland from 992-1025 and the first King of Poland since 19 April
1025 until his death. He also ruled as Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia during 1002-1003.
He was the firstborn son of Mieszko I by his first wife, Dobrawa, daughter of Boleslav I the Cruel, Duke of Bohemia.[1][2] He was
named after his maternal grandfather.
Boleslaw I was a remarkable politician, strategist and statesman. He was able to turn Poland into one of the largest and most
powerful monarchies in eastern Europe. Boleslaw conducted successful military campaigns to the west, south and east. He
consolidated the Polish lands and conquered territories outside of modern borders of Poland such as Slovakia, Moravia, Red
Ruthenia, Meissen and Lusatia as well as Bohemia. He was a powerful mediator in Central European affairs.
He was an ally of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III who may have crowned him rex, although opinions vary on that point. Following
the death of Otto III in 1002, Boleslaw I conducted a series of successful wars against the Empire and Otto III's cousin and heir
Henry II ending with the Peace of Bautzen in 1018. In the summer of 1018, in one of his most famous expeditions, Boleslaw I
captured Kiev, where, according to legend, he notched his sword when hitting Kiev's Golden Gate. Later, a sword known as
szczerbiec, meaning notched sword, would become the ceremonial sword used in the coronation ceremony of Polish kings.
Boleslaw I also managed to establish a Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno, independent of German
Archbishopric of Magdeburg, which laid claims to the Polish area. During the famous Congress of Gniezno he was able to
officially free himself of tribute to Germany and finally, in his most momentous act, he had himself crowned King, the first Polish
ruler to do so.
He was an able administrator, establishing the so-called “prince’s law”, building numerous forts, churches, monasteries and
bridges. Boleslaw I established the first Polish monetary system, of grzywna divided into 240 denarii,[1] and minted his own coin.
He is widely considered one of the most talented and accomplished of the Piast rulers.
Contents [hide]
1 Life
1.1 Youth
1.2 Accession
1.3 Extent of his domains
1.4 Duke of Poland
1.4.1 First years (992-1000)
1.4.2 Congress of Gniezno and alliance with the Holy Roman Empire (1000-1002)
1.4.3 Occupation of Meissen, Lusatia, Bautzen and the intervention in Bohemia (1002-1003)
1.4.4 Polish-German War (1002-1018)
1.4.5 Intervention in the Kievan Succession (1015-1019)
1.4.6 Coronation and Death (1025)
2 Boleslaw I's Legacy
2.1 Military
2.2 Economy
2.3 Political
3 Marriages and Issue
4 See also
5 References
[edit] Life
[edit] Youth
Boleslaw I Chrobry as imagined by Jan MatejkoBoleslaw I was born in Poznan as the first child of Mieszko I, Duke of Poland and
his wife, the Bohemian princess Dobrawa. At age six he may have been sent to the Imperial court in Germany as a hostage,
according to the agreements of the Imperial Diet of Quedlinburg (although this fact is now disputed among the historians).
Another theory stated that Boleslaw I spent some time during the 980's at the court of his maternal uncle, Duke Boleslav II the
Pious of Bohemia.
In 984 and at the instigation of his father, the eighteen-year-old Boleslaw I married the daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen,
probably named Hunilda or Oda. It is believed that following the wedding he became the ruler of Lesser Poland with his capital at
Kraków. The death of Margrave Rikdag in 985 left the marriage devoid of any political value, and shortly thereafter the union was
dissolved and Hunilda was repudiated.
At the end of 985, probably at the instigation of Boleslav II the Pious, Boleslaw I married an unknown Hungarian princess with
whom he had a son, Bezprym.[3] In older literature, the princess was identified as Judith, daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of
Hungary.[4] Though opinions vary about the identity of Boleslaw I 's second wife, there is a number of researchers who still
support the hypothesis of her being the daughter of Géza.[5] However, this union also came to a quick end, probably because of the
deterioration in political relations between Poland and Hungary, and around 987 the union was dissolved.
By 989,and perhaps as early as 987, Boleslaw I married Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, a Slavic prince of Lusatia. Through this
marriage he had a daughter Regelinda, a son, the future king Mieszko II, another daughter and a son Otton. At this time Boleslaw
I’s rule in Lesser Poland may have been at Bohemian conferment. Presuming that it was, he added this province to Poland only
after Duke Boleslav II the Pious' death in 999. However assuming that Mieszko I took control of Lesser Poland in 990 (which is
likely), than Boleslaw I was bestowed the rule in Lesser Poland by his father but without its territory being included in the Polish
realm. Boleslaw I wasn't included in the document Dagome Iudex, and as such it may be supposed that Lesser Poland was already
known as Boleslaw I’s inheritance, while his two surviving half-brothers Mieszko and Lambert, sons of Mieszko I by his second
wife Oda, were to divide the rest of the realm between each other. Another theory is that Boleslaw I's absence from the document
might be explained by an old Slavic custom whereby children received their inheritance as soon as they reached the age of
majority. Thus Boleslaw I might have received Kraków as his part of his father's legacy before the Dagome iudex had been
written.[6]
[edit] Accession
Boleslaw I being crowned, oil on canvas, by Jan MatejkoThe circumstances in which Boleslaw I took control of the country
following the passing of his father, Mieszko I, forecasted what would later become a prevalent practice among the Piast dynasty. It
consisted of struggle for domination, usually a military one, among the offspring of nearly every deceased monarch of the Piast
dynasty. Boleslaw I was no different, and shortly after the death of Mieszko I (25 May 992), he banished his stepmother Oda and
his two half-brothers, as they had to be considered competitors to the throne, especially in light of the Dagome Iudex. The exact
circumstances of Boleslaw I’s ascension to the Ducal throne are unknown, but it is known that by June, he was the unquestioned
ruler of Poland - as Otto III asked for his military aid in the summer of 992. Also immediately after gaining the full control over
Poland, Boleslaw I quelled the opposition of the Barons by blinding two of their leaders, the magnates Odylen and Przybywoj.[7]
As cruel a sentence as this was, it proved most effective as it triggered such obedience of his subjects that from that point on there
was no mention of any challenge of his position whatsoever.
[edit] Extent of his domains
Poland at the beginning of the reign of Boleslaw I
Statue of Boleslaw I Chrobry at WroclawBoleslaw I inherited from his father a realm that was close in dimensions to modern-day
Poland. It centered on the core of Polanian country, the later Greater Poland (Polish: Wielkopolska). Greater Poland encompassed
the valley of river Warta, stretched to the north to the Notec river and to the south it encompassed Kalisz. Outside of this core the
nascent Poland included the surrounding areas subdued by Boleslaw I's father, Mieszko I which included: parts of Pomerania to the
north, including Kolobrzeg in the west and Gdansk in the east, Mazovia with its capital at Plock to the east and Silesia to the
south-west. It is disputed whether Lesser Poland, centered around Kraków, was incorporated into the Polish realm by Mieszko I
before 992 or whether it was added by Boleslaw I in 999. Either way by the year 1000 Boleslaw I was the lord of a domain larger
than contemporary England, Denmark, León or Burgundy.
[edit] Duke of Poland
[edit] First years (992-1000)
It appears, from the lack of any record of international activity, that Boleslaw I spent the first years as ruler more concerned about
gaining the throne and remaining on it than trying to increase the size of his dominion. It is during this period of consolidation of
power that he allied himself with Otto III, the Emperor of Germany, when in 995 he aided the Holy Roman Emperor in his
expedition against the Lusatians.
Endeavoring to extend his influence to the territory of the Prussians, Boleslaw I encouraged Christianizing missions in the
Prussian lands. Most famous of those was the mission of Vojtech from the Bohemian princely Slavník clan, former bishop of
Prague. Known as Adalbert of Prague upon the death of Adalbert of Magdeburg in 981, Adalbert's mission took place in 997 and
ended in the missionary’s martyrdom at the hands of the pagan Prussians, which occurred in April 997 on the Baltic Sea coast in
the vicinity of Truso (a medieval emporia near modern city of Elblag). The remains of the missionary were held for ransom by the
Prussians and Bohemian Premyslid rulers refused to pay for Adalbert's (Vojtech) body, consequently it was purchased by Duke
Boleslaw I for its weight in gold, and buried in Gniezno. In 999 Bishop Adalbert was canonized as Saint Adalbert by Pope
Sylvester II. He was later made the patron saint of Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, and Prussia. Canonization of Vojtech increased the
prestige of the Polish church in Europe and the prestige of Polish state on the international arena.
[edit] Congress of Gniezno and alliance with the Holy Roman Empire (1000-1002)
Main article: Congress of Gniezno
Boleslaw I as depicted on Gniezno Doors, mid. 12th centuryBy the year 1000, Boleslaw I had consolidated his position as Duke
(Dux) of Poland. Not only did he not meet any internal opposition, but he furthermore had gained the respect of Holy Roman
Emperor Otto III (980-1002).[8] Consequently in the year 1000, Otto III visited Poland under the pretext of a pilgrimage to the
grave of his friend, the recently canonized Bishop Adalbert (Vojtech). In addition to the religious motivation, Otto III’s voyage also
carried a strong political agenda: he had intentions to renew the Holy Roman Empire based on a federal concept he called
"Renovatio Imperii Romanorum".[9] Within the federal framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern
federati of the empire.[9]
The Emperor needed to assess Poland’s strength and establish its status within the Holy Roman Empire. The ensuing Congress of
Gniezno, where Boleslaw I entertained his distinguished guest, is one of the most famous episodes of medieval Polish history.
During the time the emperor spent in Poland, Boleslaw I did not hide the wealth of his country, in fact he showed off its affluence
at every step as he tried to dazzle the emperor. Among other gifts the Polish ruler presented to Otto III were 300 armored knights,
while the Emperor responded with a gift of a copy of the lance of Saint Maurice.Evidently Otto III was impressed with what he saw
and he decided that Poland should be treated as a kingdom on par with Germany and Italy, not merely as a tributary duchy like
Bohemia[10]. Since Otto III had intentions to renew the Empire based on a federal concept he called "Renovatio Imperii
Romanorum”, and within that federal framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern federati of the
empire it was towards this end that the Emperor placed his Imperial crown on Boleslaw I’s brow and invested him with the titles
frater et cooperator Imperii ("Brother and Partner of the Empire") and populi Romani amicus et socius.[9] He also raised Boleslaw
I to the dignity of patricius or "elder of the Roman nation".[11] This episode has long been a subject of hot debate among
historians. Some historians see this as an act of favor between an Emperor and his vassal, others as a gesture of friendship between
equals. Could placing of the Imperial crown on Boleslaw’s head mean that the Emperor crowned the Polish Duke? . Most modern
historians agree that it could not. Though it was undoubtedly a sign of Otto’s respect for the Polish ruler, it could not truly mean
Boleslaw I was King as only the Pope had the authority to invest a prince with the crown and elevate his realm to a status of a
kingdom.[8] According to one source afterwards Boleslaw I traveled with the Emperor to Aix-la-Chapelle where Otto III had the
tomb of Charlemagne opened. From there Otto III is reputed to have removed the Imperial throne itself and presented it to the
Polish Duke.[10]
Other political talks took place as well. Otto III decided that Poland will no longer be required to pay tribute to the Empire.
Gniezno was confirmed as an Archbishopric and a Metropolitan See for the Polish area. Three new Bishoprics were created and
confirmed with papal consent. They were placed at Krakow, Wroclaw and Kolobrzeg. The Poznan missionary Bishopric was
confirmed as subject directly to the Vatican. Boleslaw I and his heirs gained the right of investiture of bishops. The future marriage
of Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko to Richeza (Polish: Rycheza), niece of Otto III, was also probably agreed upon at this point.[12]
The untimely death of Otto III at age 22 in 1002 upset the ambitious renovatio plans, which were never fully implemented. Henry
II, Otto III's less idealistic successor, and an opponent of Otto's policies, reversed the course of Imperial policy towards the
east.[13]
[edit] Occupation of Meissen, Lusatia, Bautzen and the intervention in Bohemia (1002-1003)
statue of Boleslaw I and Mieszko I in the Golden Chapel, PoznanThe excellent relations of Poland and Germany enjoyed during
the Reign of Otto III, quickly deteriorated following his death. Boleslaw I supported Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen, for the
German throne. When Eckard was assassinated in April, Boleslaw I lent his support to Henry IV, Duke of Bavaria, and helped him
ascend to the German throne as Henry II. Boleslaw I took advantage of internal strife following the Emperor's death and occupied
important areas to the west of the Oder: Margraviate of Meissen and March of Lusatia, including strongholds Budziszyn and
Strzala. Boleslaw I claimed an hereditary right to Meissen as a relative of its former ruler Margrave Rikdag (only through
marriage; he was the former husband of his daughter). Henry II accepted Boleslaw I’s gains and he allowed the Polish Duke to
keep Lusatia as a fief. The one exception was Meissen, which Boleslaw I was not allowed to keep. Though at this point
Polish–German relations were normalized, soon thereafter Henry II organized a failed assassination attempt on Boleslaw I's life
and relations between the two countries were severed.[14]
In the same year (1003) Boleslaw I became entangled in Bohemian affairs when the Duke Vladivoj died earlier in that year.
Following this Boleslaw I aided a pretender, Boleslav III the Red, in gaining the throne. Later Boleslav III undermined his own
position by ordering a massacre of his leading nobles, the Vršovci, at Vyšehrad. Those nobles who survived the massacre secretly
sent messengers to Boleslaw I and entreated him to come to their aid. The Polish Duke willingly agreed, and invited Boleslav III to
visit him at his castle in Kraków. There, Boleslav III was trapped, blinded and imprisoned, probably dying in captivity some thirty
years later. Boleslaw I, claiming the Ducal throne for himself, invaded Bohemia in 1003 and took Prague without any serious
opposition, ruling as Boleslav IV for a little over a year. It is also likely that Polish forces took control of Moravia and Slovakia in
1003 as well.
[edit] Polish-German War (1002-1018)
Statue of Boleslaw I Chrobry at Gniezno, by Jerzy SobocinskiOnce the relations with Henry II soured, Boleslaw I expected
Germany to revert to the policy of constant invasions into Polish territory. Being conscious of the western threat the Polish prince
took a preemptive action and took control of marches of Lusatia, Sorbian Meissen, and the cities of Budziszyn (Bautzen) and
Meissen in 1002, and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the conquered territories.
Henry II answered with an offensive a year later. Though the first attack wasn't successful, already in the autumn of 1004 the
German forces deposed Boleslaw I from the Bohemian throne. Boleslaw I did manage to keep Moravia and Slovakia, however,
over which he exercised control until 1018. During the next part of the offensive Henry II retook Meissen and in 1005 his army
advanced as far into Poland as the city of Poznan where a peace treaty was signed.[15] According to the peace treaty Boleslaw I
lost Lusatia and Meissen and likely gave up his claim to the Bohemian throne. Also in 1005, a pagan rebellion in Pomerania
overturned Boleslaw's rule and resulted in the destruction of the just implemented local bishopric.[16]
In 1007 Henry II denounced the Peace of Poznan, resulting in Boleslaw I’s attack on the Archbishopric of Magdeburg as well as
re-occupation of marches of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen including the city of Bautzen. The German counter-offensive began three
years later, in 1010. It was of no significant consequence, beyond some pillaging in Silesia. In 1012 a five year peace was signed.
Boleslaw I broke the peace however, and once again invaded Lusatia. Boleslaw I’s forces pillaged and burned the city of Lubusz
(Lebus).[15] In 1013 a peace accord was signed at Merseburg. As part of peace Boleslaw I payed homage to Henry II, in exchange
for which he received the marks of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as fiefs. Also, was performed the marriage of his son Mieszko
with Richeza of Lotharingia, daughter of the Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia and granddaughter of Emperor Otto II.
In 1014 Boleslaw I sent his son Mieszko to Bohemia in order to form an alliance with duke Oldrich against Emperor Henry II.
Boleslaw I also refused to aid the Emperor militarily in his Italian expedition. This led to imperial intervention in Poland and so in
1015 a war erupted once again. The war started out well for the Emperor as he was able to defeat the Polish forces at Ciani. Once
the imperial forces crossed the river Oder, Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Moravian knights in a diversionary attack against the
Eastern March of the empire. Soon thereafter the German army retreated from Poland without making any permanent gains.
Following this Boleslaw I’s forces took the initiative. The Margrave of Meissen, Gero II, was defeated and killed during a clash
with the Polish forces late in 1015.
Later that year, Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko was sent to plunder Meissen. His attempt at conquering the city however, failed. [15] In
1017 Boleslaw I defeated Margrave Henry V of Bavaria. In 1017 with Czech and Wendish support Henry II once again invaded
Poland, however, once again to very little effect. He did besiege cities of Glogow and Niemcza, but was unable to take them.
Taking advantage of Czech troops’ involvement, Boleslaw I ordered his son to invade Bohemia, where Mieszko met very little
resistance. On 30 January 1018 the Peace of Bautzen (which made Boleslaw I a clear winner), was signed. The Polish ruler was
able to keep the contested marches of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen not as fiefs, but as part of Polish territory, and also received
military aid in his expedition against Kievan Rus. Also, Boleslaw I (then a widower) reforced his dynastic bonds with the German
nobility through his marriage with Oda, daughter of Margrave Eckard I of Meissen. The wedding took place four days later, on 3
February in the castle (German: Burg) of Cziczani (also Sciciani, at the site of either modern Groß-Seitschen[17] or Zützen[18]).
[edit] Intervention in the Kievan Succession (1015-1019)
Boleslaw I Chrobry entering conquered Kiev. Painting by Jan MatejkoBoleslaw I organized his first expedition against his eastern
neighbor in 1015, but the decisive engagements were to take place in 1018 after the peace of Budziszyn was already signed. At the
request of his son-in-law Sviatopolk I of Kiev, the Polish duke invaded Kievan Rus with an army of between 2,000–5,000 Polish
warriors, in addition to Thietmar's reported 1,000 Pechenegs, 300 German knights, and 500 Hungarian mercenaries[19]. After
collecting his forces during June, Boleslaw led his troops to the border in July and on 23 July at the banks of the Western Bug
River, near Wielen, he defeated the forces of Yaroslav the Wise prince of Kiev, in what became known as the Battle at Bug river.
All primary sources agree that the Polish prince was victorious in battle.[20][21] Yaroslav retreated north to Novgorod, rather than
to Kiev. The victory opened the road to Kiev, already under harassment from Boleslaw’s Pecheneg allies. The city, which suffered
from fires caused by the Pecheneg siege, surrendered upon seeing the main Polish force on 14 August. The entering army, led by
Boleslaw I, was ceremonially welcomed by the local archbishop and the family of Vladimir I of Kiev. Boleslaw I may have
deployed his troops in the capital of Rus for no more than six months (see Kiev Expedition of 1018) but had to recall them
eventually due to popular uprising against the Poles. According to popular legend Boleslaw I notched his sword (Szczerbiec)
hitting the Golden Gate of Kiev. During this campaign Poland re-annexed the Red Strongholds, later called Red Ruthenia, lost by
Boleslaw I's father in 981.
In 1015 Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Polish horsemen to aid his nephew Canute the Great, son of his sister Swietoslawa, in his
conquest of England.[11]
[edit] Coronation and Death (1025)
Poland at the end of the reign of Boleslaw I.After Henry's death in 1024, Boleslaw I took advantage of the interregnum in Germany
and crowned himself king in 1025, thus raising Poland to the rank of a kingdom before its neighbor Bohemia. He was the first
Polish king (rex), his predecessors having been unable to attain the honor, they were therefore considered dukes (dux) by the Holy
Roman Empire as well as the papacy, the usual arbiters in these matters. The exact place and date of the coronation are unknown.
Boleslaw I died not long after the coronation, due most likely to an illness.
The whereabouts of Boleslaw's burial are uncertain. It is believed that recently discovered remains of a double tomb in Poznan
cathedral may be the burial places of the first two Polish Rulers: Boleslaw I and his father Mieszko. Boleslaw I's son, Mieszko II,
crowned himself king immediately after his father died in Poznan.
[edit] Boleslaw I's Legacy
[edit] Military
Boleslaw I the Brave, Painting by Aleksander Lesser.?
At the time of his death Boleslaw I left Poland larger than he inherited her, adding to its domains the long contested marches of
Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as well as Red Ruthenia and possibly Lesser Poland. Militarily, at the time, Poland was
unquestioningly a considerable power as Boleslaw I was able to fight successful campaigns against both Holy Roman Empire and
the Kievan Rus. On the other hand it must be highlighted that his long-term involvement in the war against Germany allowed
Western Pomerania to gain independence from the Polish aegis. Another negative side of Boleslaw I’s drawn out military
campaigns was a damaging influence on the economy of his kingdom. With the passing of each year, Boleslaw I needed an ever
increasing amounts to finance his wars, especially when fought on two fronts; in Germany and Kiev. Unceasing war had placed
ever increasing fiscal obligations on the shoulders of his subjects, which in turn caused negative sentiment, sentiment that was to
increase throughout his reign, and that would erupt into popular revolt soon after his death.
[edit] Economy
Denar of Boleslaw I.Boleslaw I was a gifted and organized administrator. He was largely responsible for fully implementing the
“Prince’s Law” throughout the Polish lands. The Prince's Law created a sort of nationalized economy, controlled by the state,
whose sole duty it was to finance the prince's spending needs. These needs were considerable, as the Duke was responsible for all
manner of building projects. The foundation of the “Prince's Law” lay in a network of fortified towns called grody, but the ruler
also commissioned the building of churches, monasteries, roads, bridges etc, in short the development of an infrastructure. The
building projects were financed by collecting taxes in money or goods. Also peasants were required to house the monarch or
provide the prince with different manner of goods and services which included communications, hunting, military or others. To
produce necessary goods Boleslaw I organized a network of service settlements that specialized each in manufacturing about 30
different goods, such as: barrels, arches, metal wares, spears, as well as settlements responsible for animal husbandry, i.e., swine,
horses or cattle. Hundreds of villages were thus specialized and named to reflect their particular job. To this day one may find
scores of settlements in Poland with names left over from that era, such as: Szewce, Kuchary or Kobylniki. This quite impressive
system functioned well enough to support Boleslaw I throughout his 33 year reign.
[edit] Political
The Piast White Eagle, circa 13th century.??
Increasing both the internal and external strength of the realm was of paramount importance to Boleslaw I, especially in the face of
increasing pressure from the magnates. The magnates demanded a larger share in the administration of the country while Boleslaw
I sought to strengthen the central authority of the ruler. Boleslaw I’s coronation, sometime in 1025, was aimed precisely to
reinforce his leading position. In general an overall integration of the country took place during his reign.
Boleslaw I was able to establish an independent Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno, with papal and
imperial sanction. His work laid a foundation for the use of designation “Poland” that was to unite all regions of the realm, as well
as for the use of one symbol to represent the supreme authority of the prince. The symbol was a sign of Gniezno’s knightly class:
the white eagle.
[edit] Marriages and Issue
First marriage: 984 - 985
An unknown daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen, probably named Hunilda or Oda. After Rikdag's death in 985, she was
repudiated by her husband and sent away.
Issue:
1.A daughter (b. ca. 985 - d. aft. 997), married ca. 996/97 to an undentified Prince of Pomerania.[22]
Second marriage: 986 - 987/89
An unknown Hungarian princess formerly believed to be Judith, daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of Hungary. Around 987, as a
consequence of the deterioration in the political relations between Poland and Hungary, she was repudiated.
Issue:
1.Bezprym (b. ca. 986 - d. 1032).
Third marriage: 987/89 - 1013
Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, prince of Lusatia.
Issue:
1.A daughter (b. 988 - d. aft 1013), a nun.
2.Regelinda (b. 989 - d. 21 March aft. 1014), married by 30 April 1002 to Herman I, Margrave of Meissen.
3.Mieszko II Lambert (b. 990 - d. 10/11 May 1034).
4.A daughter (b. ca. 991 - d. aft. 14 August 1018), married bef. 15 July 1015 to Sviatopolk I, Grand Prince of Kiev.
5.Otto (b. 1000 - d. 1033).
Fourth marriage: 1018 - 1025
Oda (b. ca. 996 - d. aft. 1025), daughter of Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen.
Issue:
1.Matilda (b. aft. 1018 - d. aft. 1036), betrothed (or married) on 18 May 1035 to Otto of Schweinfurt, since 1048 Duke Otto III of
Swabia.
[edit] See also
History of Poland (966-1385)
Castle Chrobry in Szprotawa
Boleslaw Chrobry Tournament - speedway event named after the King
Forrás / Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boles%C5%82aw_I_Chrobry
I. Boleszláv lengyel király [szerkesztés]
Megtekintett lap (+/-)
Ez az utolsó megtekintett változat (összes); elfogadva: 2009. szeptember 20.
Pontosság megtekintett
A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából.
I. Boleszláv, Vitéz Boleszláv (lengyelül: Boleslaw I Chrobry (Wielki)) (967. – 1025. június 17.) lengyel uralkodó a Piast-házból.
992. május 25-étol 1025 húsvétjáig fejedelemként, élete utolsó hónapjaiban királyként uralkodott. Elsoszülött fia I. Mieszko lengyel
fejedelemnek és Dobrawa Przemysl, a cseh I. Kegyetlen Boleszláv herceg és Adiva, angol hercegno lányának.
Tartalomjegyzék [elrejtés]
1 Boleszláv fiatal évei és trónra kerülése
2 Mieszko halála után
3 A gnieznoi érsekség megalapítása
4 Családfája
5 Irodalom
Boleszláv fiatal évei és trónra kerülése [szerkesztés]
I. Mieszko és I. Boleszláv hasonló szerepet tölt be a lengyel történelemben, mint Géza fejedelem és Szent István a magyaréban.
Mieszko, a Piast-dinasztia elso jelentos tagja egyesítette uralma alatt az Odera és Visztula folyók között és a Warta folyó mentén
lakó törzseket, majd egy katonai vereség hatására Lengyelország késobbi sorsát alapvetoen meghatározó változtatásokra
kényszerült. 965-ben feleségül vette a keresztény Dobrawa hercegnot, maga is megkeresztelkedett és I. Ottó német-római császártól
téríto papokat kért. Elsoszülött fia, Boleszláv nevével a Quedlinburgban tartott birodalmi találkozó kapcsán találkozhatunk a
forrásokban eloször. A 973. húsvétján tartott találkozón az akkor nyolc éves körüli Boleszláv képviselte Lengyelországot, és
bizonytalan, hogy a lengyel herceg ekkor békét szavatoló túsznak, vagy diplomáciai küldetést teljesíto követnek volt-e tekintheto.
Mieszko halála után [szerkesztés]
Mieszko 992. május 25-én halt meg. Az ezt követo eseményekrol a források ellentmondásosak, egyes feltételezések szerint
Mieszkónak szándékában állt elsoszülött fiát kizárni az örökösödésbol, mások szerint felosztotta az országot három fia között. A
jelek arra mutatnak, hogy ezután mintegy három évig trónharcok voltak Lengyelországban. Mieszko második felesége, Oda saját
fiát akarta a lengyel trónra ültetni és e törekvésében élvezte a kijevi nagyfejedelem, Nagy Vlagyimír támogatását is. A kísérlet
végül nem járt sikerrel, Boleszláv mostohaanyját és féltestvéreit kijevi számuzetésbe tudta kényszeríteni. 995-ben már szilárd
hatalma lehetett Lengyelországban, ezt az is mutatja, hogy III. Ottó oldalán részt vett a még meg nem keresztelkedett szláv törzsek
elleni hadjáratokban.
A gnieznoi érsekség megalapítása [szerkesztés]
A következo években a német–lengyel viszony konfliktusmentes volt és ez alkalmat adott Boleszlávnak arra, hogy folytassa apja
megkezdett muvét, a lengyel állami és egyházi szervezet kiépítését. A korabeli fiatal keresztény államok függetlenségének
legjelentosebb eleme az önálló egyházszervezet volt és a jelek szerint Mieszkónak ezen a téren nem sikerült teljes sikert elérnie.
Lengyelország elso püspöke, Jordan – a források egy része szerint vándorpüspökként, más része szerint Poznan székhellyel – a
magdeburgi érseknek volt alárendelve. Ez egyértelmu német befolyást jelentett, ezért 999-ben a gnieznoi érsekség megalapítása az
önálló Lengyelország megteremtésének egyik legjelentosebb eseménye volt. Az érsekség megalapítása a kor egyik Európa-szerte
ismert egyházi személyisége, Szent Adalbert halálával volt kapcsolatos. Boleszláv jó barátságban volt Adalberttel, és mikor a
püspököt 997-ben Gdansk közelében megölték, holttestét – súlyával megegyezo mennyiségu aranyért – kiváltotta, majd
Gnieznoban temettette el. Szent Adalbert tiszteloi és barátai közé számított III. Ottó német–római császár és II. Szilveszter pápa is,
így halála után néhány évvel hozzájárultak ahhoz, hogy a vértanú püspök sírja egy új egyházszervezet központjává váljon.
Lengyelország elso érsekségének élére Szent Adalbert testvére, Radim-Gaudentius került.
Családfája [szerkesztés]
4. (apai nagyapa) Siemomysl †962
2. (apa) I. Mieszko †992 május 25.
5. (apai nagyanya) ismeretlen
1. Vitéz Boleszláv †1025. június 17.
6. (anyai nagyapa) Kegyetlen Boleszláv †972 július 15.
3. (anya) Dobrawa †977
7. (anyai nagyanya) Biagota (?)
Forrás / Source:
http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/I._Boleszl%C3%A1v_lengyel_kir%C3%A1ly
Biografi - Biography
Boleslaus [Boleslaw] «den Tapre» var hertug av Polen 992 - 1025 og ble den fřrste konge av Polen.
Han erobret Lausitz og Meissen i 1002. Břhmen overtok han etter at Boleslav III av Břhmen ble fordrevet, men keiser Henrik II
tvang ham snart til ĺ oppgi dette igjen. Boleslaus var en varm forkjempe for kristendommen. Hans herredřmme strakte seg like til
Řstersjřen.
I de norske sagaer kalles han Burislav. Hans sřster, Gunhild, ble gift med Svend Tjugeskjegg. En av hans dřtre, Geila, skal ha
vćrt gift med Olav Trygvasson i hans ungdom.
Beleslav var gift
1. gang tidligst 987-88 med Hemmilde av Meisen,
2. gang med Judith, datter til hertug Geza i Ungarn,
3. gang med Conilde og
4. gang med Oda, datter til markgreve Eckhard I av Meissen.
Boleslaus tok kongenavn kort tid fřr sin dřd i 1025. 1
1.
Mogens Bugge: Vĺre forfedre, nr. 20. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 80. Columbia
Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition, Copyright (c) 2000.
Marriage (1): Rikdaga in 984
Marriage (2): Thyra Haraldsdatter Queen of Norway
Marriage (3): Judith about 990
Marriage (4): Enmilda about 995
Marriage (5): Oda about 998
Boleslaw I the Brave or the Valiant (Polish: Boleslaw I Chrobry, Czech: Boleslav I (IV) Chrabrý; b. 967 - d. 17 June 1025), in the
past also known as Boleslaw I the Great (Wielki), was a Duke of Poland from 992-1025 and the first King of Poland from 19 April
1025 until his death. He also ruled as Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia during 1002-1003.
He was the firstborn son of Mieszko I by his first wife, Dobrawa, daughter of Boleslav I the Cruel, Duke of Bohemia.[1][2] He was
named after his maternal grandfather.
Boleslaw I was a remarkable politician, strategist and statesman. He was able to turn Poland into one of the largest and most
powerful monarchies in eastern Europe. Boleslaw conducted successful military campaigns to the west, south and east. He
consolidated the Polish lands and conquered territories outside of modern borders of Poland such as Slovakia, Moravia, Red
Ruthenia, Meissen and Lusatia as well as Bohemia. He was a powerful mediator in Central European affairs.
He was an ally of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III who may have crowned him rex, although opinions vary on that point. Following
the death of Otto III in 1002, Boleslaw I conducted a series of successful wars against the Empire and Otto III's cousin and heir
Henry II ending with the Peace of Bautzen in 1018. In the summer of 1018, in one of his most famous expeditions, Boleslaw I
captured Kiev, where, according to legend, he notched his sword when hitting Kiev's Golden Gate. Later, a sword known as
szczerbiec, meaning notched sword, would become the ceremonial sword used in the coronation ceremony of Polish kings.
Boleslaw I also managed to establish a Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno, independent of German
Archbishopric of Magdeburg, which laid claims to the Polish area. During the famous Congress of Gniezno he was able to
officially free himself of tribute to Germany and finally, in his most momentous act, he had himself crowned King, the first Polish
ruler to do so.
He was an able administrator, establishing the so-called “prince’s law”, building numerous forts, churches, monasteries and
bridges. Boleslaw I established the first Polish monetary system, of grzywna divided into 240 denarii,[1] and minted his own coin.
He is widely considered one of the most talented and accomplished of the Piast rulers.
Contents [hide]
1 Life
1.1 Youth
1.2 Accession
1.3 Extent of his domains
1.4 Duke of Poland
1.4.1 First years (992-1000)
1.4.2 Congress of Gniezno and alliance with the Holy Roman Empire (1000-1002)
1.4.3 Occupation of Meissen, Lusatia, Bautzen and the intervention in Bohemia (1002-1003)
1.4.4 Polish-German War (1002–1018)
1.4.5 Intervention in the Kievan Succession (1015-1019)
1.4.6 Coronation and Death (1025)
2 Boleslaw I's Legacy
2.1 Military
2.2 Economy
2.3 Political
3 Marriages and Issue
4 See also
5 References
5.1 Notes
[edit]Life
[edit]Youth
Boleslaw I Chrobry as imagined by Jan Matejko
Boleslaw I was born in Poznan as the first child of Mieszko I, Duke of Poland and his wife, the Bohemian princess Dobrawa. At
age six he may have been sent to the Imperial court in Germany as a hostage, according to the agreements of the Imperial Diet of
Quedlinburg (although this fact is now disputed among historians). Another theory stated that Boleslaw I spent some time during
the 980's at the court of his maternal uncle, Duke Boleslav II the Pious of Bohemia.
In 984 and at the instigation of his father, the eighteen-year-old Boleslaw I married the daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen,
probably named Hunilda or Oda. It is believed that following the wedding he became the ruler of Lesser Poland with his capital at
Kraków. The death of Margrave Rikdag in 985 left the marriage devoid of any political value, and shortly thereafter the union was
dissolved and Hunilda was repudiated.
At the end of 985, probably at the instigation of Boleslav II the Pious, Boleslaw I married an unknown Hungarian princess with
whom he had a son, Bezprym.[3] In older literature, the princess was identified as Judith, daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of
Hungary.[4] Though opinions vary about the identity of Boleslaw I 's second wife, there are a number of researchers who still
support the hypothesis of her being the daughter of Géza.[5] However, this union also came to a quick end, probably because of the
deterioration in political relations between Poland and Hungary, and around 987 the union was dissolved.
By 989,and perhaps as early as 987, Boleslaw I married Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, a Slavic prince of Lusatia. Through this
marriage he had a daughter Regelinda, a son, the future king Mieszko II, another daughter and a son Otton. At this time Boleslaw
I’s rule in Lesser Poland may have been at Bohemian conferment. Presuming that it was, he added this province to Poland only
after Duke Boleslav II the Pious' death in 999. However assuming that Mieszko I took control of Lesser Poland in 990 (which is
likely), than Boleslaw I was bestowed the rule in Lesser Poland by his father but without its territory being included in the Polish
realm. Boleslaw I wasn't included in the document Dagome Iudex, and as such it may be supposed that Lesser Poland was already
known as Boleslaw I’s inheritance, while his two surviving half-brothers Mieszko and Lambert, sons of Mieszko I by his second
wife Oda, were to divide the rest of the realm between each other. Another theory is that Boleslaw I's absence from the document
might be explained by an old Slavic custom whereby children received their inheritance as soon as they reached the age of
majority. Thus Boleslaw I might have received Kraków as his part of his father's legacy before the Dagome iudex had been
written.[6]
[edit]Accession
Boleslaw I being crowned, oil on canvas, by Jan Matejko
The circumstances in which Boleslaw I took control of the country following the passing of his father, Mieszko I, forecasted what
would later become a prevalent practice among the Piast dynasty. It consisted of struggle for domination, usually a military one,
among the offspring of nearly every deceased monarch of the Piast dynasty. Boleslaw I was no different, and shortly after the death
of Mieszko I (25 May 992), he banished his stepmother Oda and his two half-brothers, as they had to be considered competitors to
the throne, especially in light of the Dagome Iudex. The exact circumstances of Boleslaw I’s ascension to the Ducal throne are
unknown, but it is known that by June, he was the unquestioned ruler of Poland - as Otto III asked for his military aid in the
summer of 992. Also immediately after gaining the full control over Poland, Boleslaw I quelled the opposition of the Barons by
blinding two of their leaders, the magnates Odylen and Przybywoj.[7] As cruel a sentence as this was, it proved most effective as it
triggered such obedience of his subjects that from that point on there was no mention of any challenge of his position whatsoever.
[edit]Extent of his domains
Poland at the beginning of the reign of Boleslaw I
Statue of Boleslaw I Chrobry at Wroclaw
Boleslaw I inherited from his father a realm that was close in dimensions to modern-day Poland. It centered on the core of
Polanian country, the later Greater Poland (Polish: Wielkopolska). Greater Poland encompassed the valley of river Warta, stretched
to the north to the Notec river and to the south it encompassed Kalisz. Outside of this core the nascent Poland included the
surrounding areas subdued by Boleslaw I's father, Mieszko I which included: parts of Pomerania to the north, including Kolobrzeg
in the west and Gdansk in the east, Mazovia with its capital at Plock to the east and Silesia to the south-west. It is disputed whether
Lesser Poland, centered around Kraków, was incorporated into the Polish realm by Mieszko I before 992 or whether it was added
by Boleslaw I in 999. Either way by the year 1000 Boleslaw I was the lord of a domain larger than contemporary England,
Denmark, León or Burgundy.
[edit]Duke of Poland
[edit]First years (992-1000)
It appears, from the lack of any record of international activity, that Boleslaw I spent the first years as ruler more concerned about
gaining the throne and remaining on it than trying to increase the size of his dominion. It is during this period of consolidation of
power that he allied himself with Otto III, the Emperor of Germany, when in 995 he aided the Holy Roman Emperor in his
expedition against the Lusatians.
Endeavoring to extend his influence to the territory of the Prussians, Boleslaw I encouraged Christianizing missions in the
Prussian lands. Most famous of those was the mission of Vojtech from the Bohemian princely Slavník clan, former bishop of
Prague. Known as Adalbert of Prague upon the death of Adalbert of Magdeburg in 981, Adalbert's mission took place in 997 and
ended in the missionary’s martyrdom at the hands of the pagan Prussians, which occurred in April 997 on the Baltic Sea coast in
the vicinity of Truso (a medieval emporia near modern city of Elblag). The remains of the missionary were held for ransom by the
Prussians and Bohemian Premyslid rulers refused to pay for Adalbert's (Vojtech) body, consequently it was purchased by Duke
Boleslaw I for its weight in gold, and buried in Gniezno. In 999 Bishop Adalbert was canonized as Saint Adalbert by Pope
Sylvester II. He was later made the patron saint of Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, and Prussia. Canonization of Vojtech increased the
prestige of the Polish church in Europe and the prestige of Polish state on the international arena.
[edit]Congress of Gniezno and alliance with the Holy Roman Empire (1000-1002)
Main article: Congress of Gniezno
Boleslaw I as depicted on Gniezno Doors, mid. 12th century
By the year 1000, Boleslaw I had consolidated his position as Duke (Dux) of Poland. Not only did he not meet any internal
opposition, but he furthermore had gained the respect of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III (980-1002).[8] Consequently in the year
1000, Otto III visited Poland under the pretext of a pilgrimage to the grave of his friend, the recently canonized Bishop Adalbert
(Vojtech). In addition to the religious motivation, Otto III’s voyage also carried a strong political agenda: he had intentions to
renew the Holy Roman Empire based on a federal concept he called "Renovatio Imperii Romanorum".[9] Within the federal
framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern federati of the empire.[9]
The Emperor needed to assess Poland’s strength and establish its status within the Holy Roman Empire. The ensuing Congress of
Gniezno, where Boleslaw I entertained his distinguished guest, is one of the most famous episodes of medieval Polish history.
During the time the emperor spent in Poland, Boleslaw I did not hide the wealth of his country, in fact he showed off its affluence
at every step as he tried to dazzle the emperor. Among other gifts the Polish ruler presented to Otto III were 300 armored knights,
while the Emperor responded with a gift of a copy of the lance of Saint Maurice.Evidently Otto III was impressed with what he saw
and he decided that Poland should be treated as a kingdom on par with Germany and Italy, not merely as a tributary duchy like
Bohemia[10]. Since Otto III had intentions to renew the Empire based on a federal concept he called "Renovatio Imperii
Romanorum”, and within that federal framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern federati of the
empire it was towards this end that the Emperor placed his Imperial crown on Boleslaw I’s brow and invested him with the titles
frater et cooperator Imperii ("Brother and Partner of the Empire") and populi Romani amicus et socius.[9] He also raised Boleslaw
I to the dignity of patricius or "elder of the Roman nation".[11] This episode has long been a subject of hot debate among
historians. Some historians see this as an act of favor between an Emperor and his vassal, others as a gesture of friendship between
equals. Could placing of the Imperial crown on Boleslaw’s head mean that the Emperor crowned the Polish Duke? . Most modern
historians agree that it could not. Though it was undoubtedly a sign of Otto’s respect for the Polish ruler, it could not truly mean
Boleslaw I was King as only the Pope had the authority to invest a prince with the crown and elevate his realm to a status of a
kingdom.[8] According to one source afterwards Boleslaw I traveled with the Emperor to Aix-la-Chapelle where Otto III had the
tomb of Charlemagne opened. From there Otto III is reputed to have removed the Imperial throne itself and presented it to the
Polish Duke.[10]
Other political talks took place as well. Otto III decided that Poland will no longer be required to pay tribute to the Empire.
Gniezno was confirmed as an Archbishopric and a Metropolitan See for the Polish area. Three new Bishoprics were created and
confirmed with papal consent. They were placed at Krakow, Wroclaw and Kolobrzeg. The Poznan missionary Bishopric was
confirmed as subject directly to the Vatican. Boleslaw I and his heirs gained the right of investiture of bishops. The future marriage
of Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko to Richeza (Polish: Rycheza), niece of Otto III, was also probably agreed upon at this point.[12]
The untimely death of Otto III at age 22 in 1002 upset the ambitious renovatio plans, which were never fully implemented. Henry
II, Otto III's less idealistic successor, and an opponent of Otto's policies, reversed the course of Imperial policy towards the
east.[13]
[edit]Occupation of Meissen, Lusatia, Bautzen and the intervention in Bohemia (1002-1003)
Statues of Boleslaw I and Mieszko I by Christian Daniel Rauch in the Golden Chapel, Poznan
The excellent relations of Poland and Germany enjoyed during the Reign of Otto III, quickly deteriorated following his death.
Boleslaw I supported Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen, for the German throne. When Eckard was assassinated in April, Boleslaw I
lent his support to Henry IV, Duke of Bavaria, and helped him ascend to the German throne as Henry II. Boleslaw I took
advantage of internal strife following the Emperor's death and occupied important areas to the west of the Oder: Margraviate of
Meissen and March of Lusatia, including strongholds Budziszyn and Strzala. Boleslaw I claimed an hereditary right to Meissen as
a relative of its former ruler Margrave Rikdag (only through marriage; he was the former husband of his daughter). Henry II
accepted Boleslaw I’s gains and he allowed the Polish Duke to keep Lusatia as a fief. The one exception was Meissen, which
Boleslaw I was not allowed to keep. Though at this point Polish–German relations were normalized, soon thereafter Henry II
organized a failed assassination attempt on Boleslaw I's life and relations between the two countries were severed.[14]
In the same year (1003) Boleslaw I became entangled in Bohemian affairs when the Duke Vladivoj died earlier in that year.
Following this Boleslaw I aided a pretender, Boleslav III the Red, in gaining the throne. Later Boleslav III undermined his own
position by ordering a massacre of his leading nobles, the Vršovci, at Vyšehrad. Those nobles who survived the massacre secretly
sent messengers to Boleslaw I and entreated him to come to their aid. The Polish Duke willingly agreed, and invited Boleslav III to
visit him at his castle in Kraków. There, Boleslav III was trapped, blinded and imprisoned, probably dying in captivity some thirty
years later. Boleslaw I, claiming the Ducal throne for himself, invaded Bohemia in 1003 and took Prague without any serious
opposition, ruling as Boleslav IV for a little over a year. It is also likely that Polish forces took control of Moravia and Slovakia in
1003 as well.
[edit]Polish-German War (1002–1018)
Statue of Boleslaw I Chrobry at Gniezno, by Jerzy Sobocinski
As mentioned above, Boleslaw I had taken control of the marches of Lusatia, Sorbian Meissen, and the cities of Budziszyn
(Bautzen) and Meissen in 1002, and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the conquered territories.
Henry II, allied with the Lutici, answered with an offensive a year later. Though the first attack wasn't successful, already in the
autumn of 1004 the German forces deposed Boleslaw I from the Bohemian throne. Boleslaw I did manage to keep Moravia and
Slovakia, however, over which he exercised control until 1018. During the next part of the offensive Henry II retook Meissen and
in 1005 his army advanced as far into Poland as the city of Poznan where a peace treaty was signed.[15] According to the peace
treaty Boleslaw I lost Lusatia and Meissen and likely gave up his claim to the Bohemian throne. Also in 1005, a pagan rebellion in
Pomerania overturned Boleslaw's rule and resulted in the destruction of the just implemented local bishopric.[16]
In 1007 Henry II denounced the Peace of Poznan, resulting in Boleslaw I’s attack on the Archbishopric of Magdeburg as well as
re-occupation of marches of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen including the city of Bautzen. The German counter-offensive began three
years later, in 1010. It was of no significant consequence, beyond some pillaging in Silesia. In 1012 a five year peace was signed.
Boleslaw I broke the peace however, and once again invaded Lusatia. Boleslaw I’s forces pillaged and burned the city of Lubusz
(Lebus).[15] In 1013 a peace accord was signed at Merseburg. As part of peace Boleslaw I paid homage to Henry II, in exchange
for which he received the March of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as fiefs. Also, was performed the marriage of his son Mieszko
with Richeza of Lotharingia, daughter of the Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia and granddaughter of Emperor Otto II.
In 1014 Boleslaw I sent his son Mieszko to Bohemia in order to form an alliance with duke Oldrich against Emperor Henry II.
Boleslaw I also refused to aid the Emperor militarily in his Italian expedition. This led to imperial intervention in Poland and so in
1015 a war erupted once again. The war started out well for the Emperor as he was able to defeat the Polish forces at Ciani. Once
the imperial forces crossed the river Oder, Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Moravian knights in a diversionary attack against the
Eastern March of the empire. Soon thereafter the German army retreated from Poland without making any permanent gains.
Following this Boleslaw I’s forces took the initiative. The Margrave of Meissen, Gero II, was defeated and killed during a clash
with the Polish forces late in 1015.
Later that year, Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko was sent to plunder Meissen. His attempt at conquering the city however, failed.[15] In
1017 Boleslaw I defeated Margrave Henry V of Bavaria. In 1017 with Czech and Wendish support Henry II once again invaded
Poland, however, once again to very little effect. He did besiege cities of Glogow and Niemcza, but was unable to take them.
Taking advantage of Czech troops' involvement, Boleslaw I ordered his son to invade Bohemia, where Mieszko met very little
resistance. On 30 January 1018, the Peace of Bautzen (which made Boleslaw I a clear winner), was signed. The Polish ruler was
able to keep the contested marches of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen not as fiefs, but as part of Polish territory, and also received
military aid in his expedition against Kievan Rus. Also, Boleslaw I (then a widower) reinforced his dynastic bonds with the
German nobility through his marriage with Oda, daughter of Margrave Eckard I of Meissen. The wedding took place four days
later, on 3 February in the castle (German: Burg) of Cziczani (also Sciciani, at the site of either modern Groß-Seitschen[17] or
Zützen[18]).
[edit]Intervention in the Kievan Succession (1015-1019)
Main article: Boleslaw I's intervention in the Kievan succession crisis, 1018
Boleslaw I Chrobry entering conquered Kiev. Painting by Jan Matejko
Boleslaw I organized his first expedition against his eastern neighbor in 1015, but the decisive engagements were to take place in
1018 after the peace of Budziszyn was already signed. At the request of his son-in-law Sviatopolk I of Kiev, the Polish duke
invaded Kievan Rus with an army of between 2,000–5,000 Polish warriors, in addition to Thietmar's reported 1,000 Pechenegs,
300 German knights, and 500 Hungarian mercenaries[19]. After collecting his forces during June, Boleslaw led his troops to the
border in July and on 23 July at the banks of the Western Bug River, near Wielen, he defeated the forces of Yaroslav the Wise
prince of Kiev, in what became known as the Battle at Bug river. All primary sources agree that the Polish prince was victorious in
battle.[20][21] Yaroslav retreated north to Novgorod, rather than to Kiev. The victory opened the road to Kiev, already under
harassment from Boleslaw’s Pecheneg allies. The city, which suffered from fires caused by the Pecheneg siege, surrendered upon
seeing the main Polish force on 14 August. The entering army, led by Boleslaw I, was ceremonially welcomed by the local
archbishop and the family of Vladimir I of Kiev. Boleslaw I may have deployed his troops in the capital of Rus for no more than
six months (see Kiev Expedition of 1018) but had to recall them eventually due to popular uprising against the Poles. According to
popular legend Boleslaw I notched his sword (Szczerbiec) hitting the Golden Gate of Kiev. During this campaign Poland
re-annexed the Red Strongholds, later called Red Ruthenia, lost by Boleslaw I's father in 981.
In 1015 Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Polish horsemen to aid his nephew Canute the Great, son of his sister Swietoslawa, in his
conquest of England.[11]
[edit]Coronation and Death (1025)
Poland at the end of the reign of Boleslaw I.
After Henry's death in 1024, Boleslaw I took advantage of the interregnum in Germany and crowned himself king in 1025, thus
raising Poland to the rank of a kingdom before its neighbor Bohemia. He was the first Polish king (rex), his predecessors having
been unable to attain the honor, they were therefore considered dukes (dux) by the Holy Roman Empire as well as the papacy, the
usual arbiters in these matters. The exact place and date of the coronation are unknown. Boleslaw I died not long after the
coronation, due most likely to an illness.
The whereabouts of Boleslaw's burial are uncertain. It is believed that recently discovered remains of a double tomb in Poznan
cathedral may be the burial places of the first two Polish Rulers: Boleslaw I and his father Mieszko. Boleslaw I's son, Mieszko II,
crowned himself king immediately after his father died in Poznan.
[edit]Boleslaw I's Legacy
[edit]Military
Boleslaw I the Brave, Painting by Aleksander Lesser.
?
At the time of his death Boleslaw I left Poland larger than he inherited her, adding to its domains the long contested marches of
Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as well as Red Ruthenia and possibly Lesser Poland. Militarily, at the time, Poland was
unquestionably a considerable power as Boleslaw I was able to fight successful campaigns against both Holy Roman Empire and
the Kievan Rus. On the other hand it must be highlighted that his long-term involvement in the war against Germany allowed
Western Pomerania to gain independence from the Polish aegis. Another negative side of Boleslaw I’s drawn out military
campaigns was a damaging influence on the economy of his kingdom. With the passing of each year, Boleslaw I needed an ever
increasing amounts to finance his wars, especially when fought on two fronts; in Germany and Kiev. Unceasing war had placed
ever increasing fiscal obligations on the shoulders of his subjects, which in turn caused negative sentiment, sentiment that was to
increase throughout his reign, and that would erupt into popular revolt soon after his death.
[edit]Economy
Boleslaw I was a gifted and organized administrator. He was largely responsible for fully implementing the “Prince’s Law”
throughout the Polish lands. The Prince's Law created a sort of nationalized economy, controlled by the state, whose sole duty it
was to finance the prince's spending needs. These needs were considerable, as the Duke was responsible for all manner of building
projects. The foundation of the “Prince's Law” lay in a network of fortified towns called grody, but the ruler also commissioned the
building of churches, monasteries, roads, bridges etc., in short the development of an infrastructure. The building projects were
financed by collecting taxes in money or goods. Also peasants were required to house the monarch or provide the prince with
different manner of goods and services which included communications, hunting, military or others. To produce necessary goods
Boleslaw I organized a network of service settlements that specialized each in manufacturing about 30 different goods, such as:
barrels, arches, metal wares, spears, as well as settlements responsible for animal husbandry, i.e., swine, horses or cattle. Hundreds
of villages were thus specialized and named to reflect their particular job. To this day one may find scores of settlements in Poland
with names left over from that era, such as: Szewce, Kuchary or Kobylniki. This quite impressive system functioned well enough to
support Boleslaw I throughout his 33 year reign.
[edit]Political
The Piast White Eagle, circa 13th century.
??
Increasing both the internal and external strength of the realm was of paramount importance to Boleslaw I, especially in the face of
increasing pressure from the magnates. The magnates demanded a larger share in the administration of the country while Boleslaw
I sought to strengthen the central authority of the ruler. Boleslaw I’s coronation, sometime in 1025, was aimed precisely to
reinforce his leading position. In general an overall integration of the country took place during his reign.
Boleslaw I was able to establish an independent Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno, with papal and
imperial sanction. His work laid a foundation for the use of designation “Poland” that was to unite all regions of the realm, as well
as for the use of one symbol to represent the supreme authority of the prince. The symbol was a sign of Gniezno’s knightly class:
the white eagle.
[edit]Marriages and Issue
First marriage: 984 - 985
An unknown daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen, probably named Hunilda[citation needed] or Oda[citation needed]. After
Rikdag's death in 985, she was repudiated by her husband and sent away.
Issue:
A daughter (b. ca. 985 - d. aft. 997), married ca. 996/97 to an undentified Prince of Pomerania.[22]
Second marriage: 986 - 987/89
An unknown Hungarian princess formerly believed to be Judith, daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of Hungary. Around 987, as a
consequence of the deterioration in the political relations between Poland and Hungary, she was repudiated.
Issue:
Bezprym (b. ca. 986 - d. 1032).
Third marriage: 987/89 - 1013
Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, prince of Lusatia[citation needed].
Issue:
A daughter (b. 988 - d. aft 1013), a nun.
Regelinda (b. 989 - d. 21 March aft. 1014), married by 30 April 1002 to Herman I, Margrave of Meissen.
Mieszko II Lambert (b. 990 - d. 10/11 May 1034).
A daughter (b. ca. 991 - d. aft. 14 August 1018), married bef. 15 July 1015 to Sviatopolk I, Grand Prince of Kiev.
Otto (b. 1000 - d. 1033).
Fourth marriage: 1018 - 1025
Oda (b. ca. 996[citation needed] - d. aft. 1025), daughter of Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen.
Issue:
Matilda (b. aft. 1018 - d. aft. 1036), betrothed (or married) on 18 May 1035 to Otto of Schweinfurt, since 1048 Duke Otto III of
Swabia.
[edit]See also
History of Poland (966-1385)
Castle Chrobry in Szprotawa
Boleslaw Chrobry Tournament - speedway event named after the King
[edit]References
[edit]Notes
^ a b A. Czubinski, J. Topolski, Historia Polski, Ossolineum 1989
^ L. Bielski, M.Traba, Poczet Krolow i Ksazat Polskich. Pp.18-28
^ Kazimierz Jasinski: Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Warsaw 1993
^ Oswald Balzer: Genealogia Piastów, Kraków 1895, pp. 39-41
^ S. A. Sroka, Historia Wegier do 1526 roku w zarysie, p. 19.
^ A.Chwalba, Kalendarium dziejów Polski: od prahistorii do 1998,Wydawnictwo Literackie, Kraków 1999
^ L. Bielski, M.Traba, Poczet Krolów i Ksiazat Polskich. Pp.24
^ a b L. Bielski, M.Traba, Poczet Królów I Ksiazat Polskich. 2005
^ a b c Andreas Lawaty, Hubert Orlowski, Deutsche und Polen: Geschichte, Kultur, Politik, 2003, p.24, ISBN 3406494366,
9783406494369
^ a b A.Zamoyski, The Polish Way, 1987
^ a b N.Davies, God's Playground, a History of Poland, 1982
^ J.Strzelczyk, Boleslaw Chrobry, 2003
^ S.Rosik, Boleslaw Chrobry i jego czasy, 2001
^ K .Jasinski, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, 1992
^ a b c Thietmar of Merseburg, Thietmari merseburgiensis episcopi chronicon, 1018
^ Jan M Piskorski, Pommern im Wandel der Zeit, 1999, p.32, ISBN 839061848
^ Digitales historisches Ortsverzeichnis von Sachsen
^ Elke Mehnert, Sandra Kersten, Manfred Frank Schenke, Spiegelungen: Entwürfe zu Identität und Alterität ; Festschrift für Elke
Mehnert, Frank & Timme GmbH, 2005, p.481, ISBN 3865960154
^ R.Jaworski,Wyprawa Kijowska Chrobrego, 2006
^ Cross, Samuel Hazzard; Sherbowitz-Wetzor, Olgerd, eds. The Russian Primary Chronicle: Laurentian Text, 1953
^ Anonymous Gaul,Cronicae et gesta ducum sive principum Polonorum
^ According to one theory, they were probably parents of Zemuzil, Duke of Pomerania.
Boleslaw I Chrobry
Piast Dynasty
Born: 966 or 967 Died: 17 June 1025
Preceded by
Mieszko I Duke of the Polans
May 25, 992– June 17, 1025
King of Poland (since April 18, 1025) Succeeded by
King
Mieszko II Lambert
Preceded by
Vladivoj Duke of Bohemia
1003–1004 Succeeded by
Jaromir
[hide]
v • d • e
Monarchs of Poland
Legendary and semi-legendary
Lech · Krak · Wanda · Popiel · Piast the Wheelwright
Piast
Siemowit · Lestko · Siemomysl ·
Mieszko I · Boleslaw I the Brave · Mieszko II Lambert · Bezprym · Mieszko II Lambert · Interregnum · Casimir I the Restorer ·
Boleslaw II the Bold · Wladyslaw I Herman · Zbigniew · Boleslaw III Wrymouth
Fragmentation period
(Supreme Princes)
Wladyslaw II the Exile · Boleslaw IV the Curly · Mieszko III the Old · Casimir II the Just · Leszek I the White · Wladyslaw III
Spindleshanks · Wladyslaw Odonic · Mieszko IV Tanglefoot · Konrad I · Henry I the Bearded · Henry II the Pious · Boleslaw V
the Chaste · Leszek II the Black · Henryk IV Probus · Przemysl II
Premyslid
Wenceslaus II · Wenceslaus III
Piast
Wladyslaw I the Elbow-high · Casimir III the Great
Capet-Anjou
Louis I the Hungarian · Jadwiga
Jagiellon
Wladyslaw II Jagiello · Wladyslaw III of Varna · Casimir IV · John I Albert · Alexander · Sigismund I the Old · Sigismund II
August
Elected
Henry of Valois · Anna the Jagiellonian · Stephen Báthory · Sigismund III Vasa · Wladyslaw IV Vasa · John II Casimir Vasa ·
Michael Korybut Wisniowiecki · John III Sobieski · August II the Strong · Stanislaw Leszczynski · August III the Saxon ·
Stanislaw August Poniatowski
Marriage (1): Judith of Hungary in 988
Marriage (2): Hemmilde after 986
Other names for Boleslaw were Boleslaus I Chobry, Boleslaw Chrobry and Boleslaw the Brave.
General Notes:
Duke (from 992) and then (from 1024) first king of Poland, who expanded his country's territory to include Pomerania, Lusatia,
and, for a time, the Bohemian princely lands. He made Poland a major European state and also created a Polish church
independent of German control.
The son of Mieszko I, the first of the Piast dukes, and the Bohemian princess Dobrawa (Dubravka), Boleslaw I inherited the
principality of Great Poland (Wielkopolska, between the Oder and the Warta rivers) upon his father's death in 992. He soon began,
by energetic political and military action, to develop and expand the Polish state. He conquered Pomerania along the Baltic Sea in
996 and seized Kraków (formerly a Bohemian possession) soon afterward. He ransomed the relics of the martyred St. Adalbert,
bishop of Prague, from the pagan Prussians and buried the relics at Gniezno. The Holy Roman emperor Otto III, who had been
Adalbert's student and Boleslaw's ally since 992, attended that ceremony (March 1000) and marked the occasion by personally
acknowledging Boleslaw as the sovereign ruler of Poland. With Pope Sylvester II's approval, the emperor granted Poland its own
archdiocese, with Gniezno as its seat. Boleslaw then reorganized Poland's church structure, making it a national church directly
under papal jurisdiction and independent of German ecclesiastical control.
After Emperor Otto III's death (1002), Boleslaw seized the imperial lands of Lusatia and Misnia (Meissen) and the principality of
Bohemia. These actions started a series of three wars between him and the German king Henry II that lasted until 1018, when, by
the Treaty of Bautzen, Boleslaw retained Lusatia and Misnia and Henry II won Bohemia. Boleslaw's expansionist policy continued.
When he defeated Grand Prince Yaroslav I the Wise of Kiev in battle (July 21, 1018) and placed his own son-in-law (and
Yaroslav's brother), Svyatopolk, on the Kievan throne, his control extended from the western tributaries of the middle Elbe River
to the eastern reaches of the Bug River. Though recognized as a sovereign by Otto III in 1000, Boleslaw sought to strengthen his
position and his independence from imperial control with his papally-sanctioned coronation by the archbishop of Gniezno on Dec.
25, 1024.
I de norske sagaer kalles han Burislav. Hans sřster, Gunhild, ble gift med Svend Tjugeskjegg. En av hans dřtre, Geila, skal ha
vćrt gift med Olav Trygvasson i hans ungdom.
Beleslav var gift
1. gang tidligst 987-88 med Hemmilde av Meisen,
2. gang med Judith, datter til hertug Geza i Ungarn,
3. gang med Conilde og
4. gang med Oda, datter til markgreve Eckhard I av Meissen.
Noted events in his life were:
• Acceded: King of Poland, 1024.
Boleslaw I Chrobry var den förste kungen av Polen. Han regerade frĺn ĺr 992 till 1025. Han var son till Mieszko I av Polen och far
till Mieszko II av Polen, och tillhörde Piast-dynastin (pĺ polska. dynastia piastów).
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bole´slav I (pol. Boles§aw), kallad Chrobry, "den dristige", f. ca 967, d. 1025, hertig i Polen 992 och landets förste kung 1025, son
till Mieszko I. I konkurrens med tyska furstar men även med nordiska vikingar lyckades han erövra ett vidsträckt slaviskt omrĺde
s. om Östersjön och grunda ett självständigt Polen. Genom att pĺ 990-talet underordna sig den tysk-romerske kejsaren lade B.
grunden till en oberoende polsk kyrka. Far till Mieszko II Lambert.
Boleslaw I the Brave (or Valiant) (Polish: Boleslaw I Chrobry; Czech: Boleslav Chrabrý; 967 – June 17, 1025), in the past also
known as Boleslaw I the Great (Polish: Boleslaw Chrobry I (Wielki)), ruled as Duke of Poland from 992-1025 and as the first King
of Poland in 1025. He was a member of the Piast dynasty.
Boleslaw I the Brave or the Valiant (Polish : Boleslaw I Chrobry, Czech : Boleslav I (IV) Chrabrý; b. 967 - d. 17 June 1025 ), in
the past also known as Boleslaw I the Great (Wielki), was a Duke of Poland from 992-1025 and the first King of Poland since 19
April 1025 until his death. He also ruled as Boleslav IV, Duke of Bohemia during 1002-1003.
He was the firstborn son of Mieszko I by his first wife, Dobrawa , daughter of Boleslav I the Cruel , Duke of Bohemia. He was
named after his maternal grandfather.
Boleslaw I was a remarkable politician, strategist and statesman. He was able to turn Poland into one of the largest and most
powerful monarchies in eastern Europe . Boleslaw conducted successful military campaigns to the west, south and east. He
consolidated the Polish lands and conquered territories outside of modern borders of Poland such as Slovakia , Moravia , Red
Ruthenia , Meissen and Lusatia as well as Bohemia . He was a powerful mediator in Central European affairs.
He was an ally of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III who may have crowned him rex, although opinions vary on that point. Following
the death of Otto III in 1002, Boleslaw I conducted a series of successful wars against the Empire and Otto III's cousin and heir
Henry II ending with the Peace of Bautzen in 1018. In the summer of 1018, in one of his most famous expeditions, Boleslaw I
captured Kiev , where, according to legend, he notched his sword when hitting Kiev's Golden Gate . Later, a sword known as
szczerbiec , meaning notched sword, would become the ceremonial sword used in the coronation ceremony of Polish kings.
Boleslaw I also managed to establish a Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno , independent of German
Archbishopric of Magdeburg , which laid claims to the Polish area. During the famous Congress of Gniezno he was able to
officially free himself of tribute to Germany and finally, in his most momentous act, he had himself crowned King , the first Polish
ruler to do so.
He was an able administrator, establishing the so-called “prince’s law”, building numerous forts, churches, monasteries and
bridges. Boleslaw I established the first Polish monetary system , of grzywna divided into 240 denarii, and minted his own coin. He
is widely considered one of the most talented and accomplished of the Piast rulers.
Boleslaw I was born in Poznan as the first child of Mieszko I, Duke of Poland and his wife, the Bohemian princess Dobrawa . At
age six he may have been sent to the Imperial court in Germany as a hostage, according to the agreements of the Imperial Diet of
Quedlinburg (although this fact is now disputed among the historians). Another theory stated that Boleslaw I spent some time
during the 980's at the court of his maternal uncle, Duke Boleslav II the Pious of Bohemia.
In 984 and at the instigation of his father, the eighteen-year-old Boleslaw I married the daughter of Rikdag , Margrave of Meissen ,
probably named Hunilda or Oda. It is believed that following the wedding he became the ruler of Lesser Poland with his capital at
Kraków . The death of Margrave Rikdag in 985 left the marriage devoid of any political value, and shortly thereafter the union was
dissolved and Hunilda was repudiated.
At the end of 985, probably at the instigation of Boleslav II the Pious, Boleslaw I married an unknown Hungarian princess with
whom he had a son, Bezprym. In older literature, the princess was identified as Judith , daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of Hungary.
Though opinions vary about the identity of Boleslaw I 's second wife, there is a number of researchers who still support the
hypothesis of her being the daughter of Géza. However, this union also came to a quick end, probably because of the deterioration
in political relations between Poland and Hungary, and around 987 the union was dissolved.
By 989,and perhaps as early as 987, Boleslaw I married Emnilda , daughter of Dobromir , a Slavic prince of Lusatia . Through this
marriage he had a daughter Regelinda, a son, the future king Mieszko II , another daughter and a son Otton. At this time Boleslaw
I’s rule in Lesser Poland may have been at Bohemian conferment. Presuming that it was, he added this province to Poland only
after Duke Boleslav II the Pious ' death in 999. However assuming that Mieszko I took control of Lesser Poland in 990 (which is
likely), than Boleslaw I was bestowed the rule in Lesser Poland by his father but without its territory being included in the Polish
realm. Boleslaw I wasn't included in the document Dagome Iudex , and as such it may be supposed that Lesser Poland was already
known as Boleslaw I’s inheritance, while his two surviving half-brothers Mieszko and Lambert , sons of Mieszko I by his second
wife Oda , were to divide the rest of the realm between each other. Another theory is that Boleslaw I's absence from the document
might be explained by an old Slavic custom whereby children received their inheritance as soon as they reached the age of majority
. Thus Boleslaw I might have received Kraków as his part of his father's legacy before the Dagome iudex had been written.
Accession
The circumstances in which Boleslaw I took control of the country following the passing of his father, Mieszko I, forecasted what
would later become a prevalent practice among the Piast dynasty. It consisted of struggle for domination, usually a military one,
among the offspring of nearly every deceased monarch of the Piast dynasty. Boleslaw I was no different, and shortly after the death
of Mieszko I (25 May 992 ), he banished his stepmother Oda and his two half-brothers, as they had to be considered competitors to
the throne, especially in light of the Dagome Iudex. The exact circumstances of Boleslaw I’s ascension to the Ducal throne are
unknown, but it is known that by June, he was the unquestioned ruler of Poland - as Otto III asked for his military aid in the
summer of 992. Also immediately after gaining the full control over Poland, Boleslaw I quelled the opposition of the Barons by
blinding two of their leaders, the magnates Odylen and Przybywoj. As cruel a sentence as this was, it proved most effective as it
triggered such obedience of his subjects that from that point on there was no mention of any challenge of his position whatsoever.
Extent of his domains
Boleslaw I inherited from his father a realm that was close in dimensions to modern-day Poland. It centered on the core of
Polanian country, the later Greater Poland (Polish : Wielkopolska). Greater Poland encompassed the valley of river Warta ,
stretched to the north to the Notec river and to the south it encompassed Kalisz . Outside of this core the nascent Poland included
the surrounding areas subdued by Boleslaw I's father, Mieszko I which included: parts of Pomerania to the north, including
Kolobrzeg in the west and Gdansk in the east, Mazovia with its capital at Plock to the east and Silesia to the south-west. It is
disputed whether Lesser Poland , centered around Kraków , was incorporated into the Polish realm by Mieszko I before 992 or
whether it was added by Boleslaw I in 999. Either way by the year 1000 Boleslaw I was the lord of a domain larger than
contemporary England , Denmark , León or Burgundy .
Duke of Poland
First years (992-1000)
It appears, from the lack of any record of international activity, that Boleslaw I spent the first years as ruler more concerned about
gaining the throne and remaining on it than trying to increase the size of his dominion. It is during this period of consolidation of
power that he allied himself with Otto III , the Emperor of Germany, when in 995 he aided the Holy Roman Emperor in his
expedition against the Lusatians.
Endeavoring to extend his influence to the territory of the Prussians , Boleslaw I encouraged Christianizing missions in the
Prussian lands. Most famous of those was the mission of Vojtech from the Bohemian princely Slavník clan, former bishop of
Prague . Known as Adalbert of Prague upon the death of Adalbert of Magdeburg in 981, Adalbert's mission took place in 997 and
ended in the missionary’s martyrdom at the hands of the pagan Prussians , which occurred in April 997 on the Baltic Sea coast in
the vicinity of Truso (a medieval emporia near modern city of Elblag ). The remains of the missionary were held for ransom by the
Prussians and Bohemian Premyslid rulers refused to pay for Adalbert's (Vojtech) body, consequently it was purchased by Duke
Boleslaw I for its weight in gold , and buried in Gniezno . In 999 Bishop Adalbert was canonized as Saint Adalbert by Pope
Sylvester II . He was later made the patron saint of Bohemia , Poland , Hungary , and Prussia . Canonization of Vojtech increased
the prestige of the Polish church in Europe and the prestige of Polish state on the international arena.
Congress of Gniezno and alliance with the Holy Roman Empire (1000-1002)
By the year 1000, Boleslaw I had consolidated his position as Duke (Dux ) of Poland. Not only did he not meet any internal
opposition, but he furthermore had gained the respect of Holy Roman Emperor Otto III (980-1002). Consequently in the year 1000,
Otto III visited Poland under the pretext of a pilgrimage to the grave of his friend, the recently canonized Bishop Adalbert
(Vojtech). In addition to the religious motivation, Otto III’s voyage also carried a strong political agenda : he had intentions to
renew the Holy Roman Empire based on a federal concept he called "Renovatio Imperii Romanorum". Within the federal
framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern federati of the empire.
The Emperor needed to assess Poland’s strength and establish its status within the Holy Roman Empire . The ensuing Congress of
Gniezno where Boleslaw I entertained his distinguished guest, is one of the most famous episodes of medieval Polish history .
During the time the emperor spent in Poland, Boleslaw I did not hide the wealth of his country, in fact he showed off its affluence
at every step as he tried to dazzle the emperor. Among other gifts the Polish ruler presented to Otto III were 300 armored knights,
while the Emperor responded with a gift of a copy of the lance of Saint Maurice .Evidently Otto III was impressed with what he
saw and he decided that Poland should be treated as a kingdom on par with Germany and Italy, not merely as a tributary duchy like
Bohemia. Since Otto III had intentions to renew the Empire based on a federal concept he called "Renovatio Imperii Romanorum”,
and within that federal framework, Polish and Hungarian duchies were to be upgraded to eastern federati of the empire it was
towards this end that the Emperor placed his Imperial crown on Boleslaw I’s brow and invested him with the titles frater et
cooperator Imperii ("Brother and Partner of the Empire") and populi Romani amicus et socius.[9] He also raised Boleslaw I to the
dignity of patricius or "elder of the Roman nation". This episode has long been a subject of hot debate among historians. Some
historians see this as an act of favor between an Emperor and his vassal, others as a gesture of friendship between equals. Could
placing of the Imperial crown on Boleslaw’s head mean that the Emperor crowned the Polish Duke? . Most modern historians
agree that it could not. Though it was undoubtedly a sign of Otto’s respect for the Polish ruler, it could not truly mean Boleslaw I
was King as only the Pope had the authority to invest a prince with the crown and elevate his realm to a status of a kingdom .
According to one source afterwards Boleslaw I traveled with the Emperor to Aix-la-Chapelle where Otto III had the tomb of
Charlemagne opened. From there Otto III is reputed to have removed the Imperial throne itself and presented it to the Polish Duke.
Other political talks took place as well. Otto III decided that Poland will no longer be required to pay tribute to the Empire.
Gniezno was confirmed as an Archbishopric and a Metropolitan See for the Polish area. Three new Bishoprics were created and
confirmed with papal consent. They were placed at Krakow , Wroclaw and Kolobrzeg . The Poznan missionary Bishopric was
confirmed as subject directly to the Vatican . Boleslaw I and his heirs gained the right of investiture of bishops . The future
marriage of Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko to Richeza (Polish : Rycheza), niece of Otto III , was also probably agreed upon at this point.
The untimely death of Otto III at age 22 in 1002 upset the ambitious renovatio plans, which were never fully implemented. Henry
II , Otto III's less idealistic successor, and an opponent of Otto's policies, reversed the course of Imperial policy towards the east.
Occupation of Meissen, Lusatia, Bautzen and the intervention in Bohemia (1002-1003)
The excellent relations of Poland and Germany enjoyed during the Reign of Otto III, quickly deteriorated following his death.
Boleslaw I supported Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen , for the German throne. When Eckard was assassinated in April, Boleslaw I
lent his support to Henry IV, Duke of Bavaria , and helped him ascend to the German throne as Henry II. Boleslaw I took
advantage of internal strife following the Emperor's death and occupied important areas to the west of the Oder : Margraviate of
Meissen and March of Lusatia , including strongholds Budziszyn and Strzala. Boleslaw I claimed an hereditary right to Meissen
as a relative of its former ruler Margrave Rikdag (only through marriage; he was the former husband of his
daughter). Henry II accepted Boleslaw I’s gains and he allowed the Polish Duke to keep Lusatia as a fief . The one exception was
Meissen, which Boleslaw I was not allowed to keep. Though at this point Polish–German relations were normalized, soon
thereafter Henry II organized a failed assassination attempt on Boleslaw I's life and relations between the
two countries were severed.
In the same year (1003) Boleslaw I became entangled in Bohemian affairs when the Duke Vladivoj died earlier in that year.
Following this Boleslaw I aided a pretender, Boleslav III the Red , in gaining the throne. Later Boleslav III undermined his own
position by ordering a massacre of his leading nobles, the Vršovci, at Vyšehrad . Those nobles who survived the massacre secretly
sent messengers to Boleslaw I and entreated him to come to their aid. The Polish Duke willingly agreed, and invited Boleslav III to
visit him at his castle in Kraków. There, Boleslav III was trapped, blinded and imprisoned, probably dying in captivity some thirty
years later. Boleslaw I, claiming the Ducal throne for himself, invaded Bohemia in 1003 and took Prague without any serious
opposition, ruling as Boleslav IV for a little over a year. It is also likely that Polish forces took control of Moravia and Slovakia in
1003 as well.
Polish-German War (1002-1018)
Once the relations with Henry II soured, Boleslaw I expected Germany to revert to the policy of constant invasions into Polish
territory. Being conscious of the western threat the Polish prince took a preemptive action and took control of marches of Lusatia ,
Sorbian Meissen , and the cities of Budziszyn (Bautzen) and Meissen in 1002, and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the
conquered territories.
Henry II answered with an offensive a year later. Though the first attack wasn't successful, already in the autumn of 1004 the
German forces deposed Boleslaw I from the Bohemian throne. Boleslaw I did manage to keep Moravia and Slovakia , however,
over which he exercised control until 1018. During the next part of the offensive Henry II retook Meissen and in 1005 his army
advanced as far into Poland as the city of Poznan where a peace treaty was signed. According to the peace treaty Boleslaw I lost
Lusatia and Meissen and likely gave up his claim to the Bohemian throne . Also in 1005, a pagan rebellion in Pomerania
overturned Boleslaw's rule and resulted in the destruction of the just implemented local bishopric . In 1007 Henry II denounced the
Peace of Poznan, resulting in Boleslaw I’s attack on the Archbishopric of Magdeburg as well as re-occupation of marches of
Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen including the city of Bautzen . The German counter-offensive began three years later, in 1010. It was
of no significant consequence, beyond some pillaging in Silesia . In 1012 a five year peace was signed.
Boleslaw I broke the peace however, and once again invaded Lusatia . Boleslaw I’s forces pillaged and burned the city of Lubusz
(Lebus). In 1013 a peace accord was signed at Merseburg . As part of peace Boleslaw I payed homage to Henry II , in exchange for
which he received the marks of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as fiefs . Also, was performed the marriage of his son Mieszko with
Richeza of Lotharingia , daughter of the Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia and
granddaughter of Emperor Otto II .
In 1014 Boleslaw I sent his son Mieszko to Bohemia in order to form an alliance with duke Oldrich against
Emperor Henry II . Boleslaw I also refused to aid the Emperor militarily in his Italian expedition. This led to imperial intervention
in Poland and so in 1015 a war erupted once again. The war started out well for the Emperor as he was able to defeat the Polish
forces at Ciani. Once the imperial forces crossed the river Oder , Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Moravian knights in a
diversionary < attack against the Eastern March of the empire. Soon thereafter the German army retreated from Poland without
making any permanent gains. Following this Boleslaw I’s forces took the initiative. The Margrave of Meissen , Gero II , was
defeated and killed during a clash with the Polish forces late in 1015.
Later that year, Boleslaw I’s son Mieszko was sent to plunder Meissen . His attempt at conquering the city however, failed. In 1017
Boleslaw I defeated Margrave Henry V of Bavaria . In 1017 with Czech and Wendish support Henry II once again invaded Poland,
however, once again to very little effect. He did besiege cities of Glogow and Niemcza , but was unable to take them. Taking
advantage of Czech troops’ involvement, Boleslaw I ordered his son to invade Bohemia , where Mieszko met very little resistance.
On 30 January 1018 the Peace of Bautzen (which made Boleslaw I a clear winner), was signed. The Polish ruler was able to keep
the contested marches of Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen not as fiefs, but as part of Polish territory, and also received military aid in
his expedition against Kievan Rus . Also, Boleslaw I (then a widower) reforced his dynastic bonds with the German nobility
through his marriage with Oda , daughter of Margrave Eckard I of Meissen. The wedding took place four
days later, on 3 February in the castle (German : Burg) of Cziczani (also Sciciani, at the site of either modern Groß-Seitschen or
Zützen.
Intervention in the Kievan Succession (1015-1019)
Boleslaw I organized his first expedition against his eastern neighbor in 1015, but the decisive engagements were to take place in
1018 after the peace of Budziszyn was already signed. At the request of his son-in-law Sviatopolk I of Kiev, the Polish duke
invaded Kievan Rus with an army of between 2,000–5,000 Polish warriors, in addition to Thietmar 's reported 1,000 Pechenegs ,
300 German knights, and 500 Hungarian mercenaries . After collecting his forces during June, Boleslaw led his troops to the
border in July and on 23 July at the banks of the Western Bug River , near Wielen , he defeated the forces of Yaroslav the Wise
prince of Kiev , in what became known as the Battle at Bug river . All primary sources agree that the Polish prince was victorious
in battle. Yaroslav retreated north to Novgorod , rather than to Kiev . The victory opened the road to Kiev, already under
harassment from Boleslaw’s Pecheneg allies. The city, which suffered from fires caused by the Pecheneg siege, surrendered upon
seeing the main Polish force on 14 August . The entering army, led by Boleslaw I, was ceremonially welcomed by the local
archbishop and the family of Vladimir I of Kiev. Boleslaw I may have deployed his troops in the capital of Rus for no more than
six months (see Kiev Expedition of 1018) but had to recall them eventually due to popular uprising against the Poles. According to
popular legend Boleslaw I notched his sword (Szczerbiec) hitting the Golden Gate of Kiev. During this campaign Poland
re-annexed the Red Strongholds , later called Red Ruthenia , lost by Boleslaw I's father in 981.
In 1015 Boleslaw I sent a detachment of Polish horsemen to aid his nephew Canute the Great , son of his sister Swietoslawa , in
his conquest of England.
Coronation and Death (1025)
After Henry's death in 1024, Boleslaw I took advantage of the interregnum in Germany and crowned himself king in 1025, thus
raising Poland to the rank of a kingdom before its neighbor Bohemia. He was the first Polish king (rex ), his predecessors having
been unable to attain the honor, they were therefore considered dukes (dux ) by the Holy Roman Empire as well as the papacy, the
usual arbiters in these matters. The exact place and date of the coronation are unknown. Boleslaw I died not long after the
coronation, due most likely to an illness.
The whereabouts of Boleslaw's burial are uncertain. It is believed that recently discovered remains of a double tomb in Poznan
cathedral may be the burial places of the first two Polish Rulers: Boleslaw I and his father Mieszko. Boleslaw I's son, Mieszko II ,
crowned himself king immediately after his father died in Poznan .
Boleslaw I's Legacy
Military
At the time of his death Boleslaw I left Poland larger than he inherited her, adding to its domains the long contested marches of
Lusatia and Sorbian Meissen as well as Red Ruthenia and possibly Lesser Poland . Militarily, at the time, Poland was
unquestioningly a considerable power as Boleslaw I was able to fight successful campaigns against both Holy Roman Empire and
the Kievan Rus . On the other hand it must be highlighted that his long-term involvement in the war against Germany allowed
Western Pomerania to gain independence from the Polish aegis . Another negative side of Boleslaw I’s drawn out military
campaigns was a damaging influence on the economy of his kingdom . With the passing of each year, Boleslaw I needed an ever
increasing amounts to finance his wars, especially when fought on two fronts; in Germany and Kiev . Unceasing war had placed
ever increasing fiscal obligations on the shoulders of his subjects, which in turn caused negative sentiment, sentiment that was to
increase throughout his reign, and that would erupt into popular revolt soon after his death.
Economy
Boleslaw I was a gifted and organized administrator. He was largely responsible for fully implementing the “Prince’s Law”
throughout the Polish lands. The Prince's Law created a sort of nationalized economy , controlled by the state, whose sole duty it
was to finance the prince's spending needs. These needs were considerable, as the Duke was responsible for all manner of building
projects. The foundation of the “Prince's Law” lay in a network of fortified towns called grody (Slavic_settlement), but the ruler
also commissioned the building of churches , monasteries , roads , bridges, etc, in short the development of an infrastructure . The
building projects were financed by collecting taxes in money or goods . Also peasants were required to house the
monarch or provide the prince with different manner of goods and services which included communications, hunting, military or
others. To produce necessary goods Boleslaw I organized a network of service settlements that specialized each in manufacturing
about 30 different goods, such as: barrels, arches, metal wares, spears, as well as settlements responsible for animal husbandry ,
i.e., swine, horses or cattle. Hundreds of villages were thus specialized and named to reflect their particular job. To this day one
may find scores of settlements in Poland with names left over from that era, such as: Szewce, Kuchary or Kobylniki. This quite
impressive system functioned well enough to support Boleslaw I throughout his 33 year reign.
Political
Increasing both the internal and external strength of the realm was of paramount importance to Boleslaw I, especially in the face of
increasing pressure from the magnates . The magnates demanded a larger share in the administration of the country while
Boleslaw I sought to strengthen the central authority of the ruler. Boleslaw I’s coronation, sometime in 1025, was aimed precisely
to reinforce his leading position. In general an overall integration of the country took place during his reign.
Boleslaw I was able to establish an independent Polish church structure with a Metropolitan See at Gniezno , with papal and
imperial sanction. His work laid a foundation for the use of designation “Poland ” that was to unite all regions of the realm, as well
as for the use of one symbol to represent the supreme authority of the prince. The symbol was a sign of Gniezno’s knightly class:
the white eagle.
Marriages and Issue
First marriage: 984 - 985
An unknown daughter of Rikdag , Margrave of Meissen , probably named Hunilda or Oda. After Rikdag's death in 985, she was
repudiated by her husband and sent away.
Issue:
A daughter (b. ca. 985 - d. aft. 997), married ca. 996/97 to an undentified Prince of Pomerania.[22]
Second marriage: 986 - 987/89
An unknown Hungarian princess formerly believed to be Judith , daughter of Géza, Grand Duke of Hungary . Around 987, as a
consequence of the deterioration in the political relations between Poland and Hungary, she was repudiated.
Issue:
Bezprym (b. ca. 986 - d. 1032).
Third marriage: 987/89 - 1013
Emnilda , daughter of Dobromir , prince of Lusatia
Issue:
A daughter (b. 988 - d. aft 1013), a nun.
Regelinda (b. 989 - d. 21 March aft. 1014 ), married by 30 April 1002 to Herman I, Margrave of Meissen
Mieszko II Lambert (b. 990 - d. 10/11 May 1034 ).
A daughter (b. ca. 991 - d. aft. 14 August 1018 ), married bef. 15 July 1015 to Sviatopolk I, Grand Prince of Kiev .
Otto (b. 1000 - d. 1033).
Fourth marriage: 1018 - 1025
Oda (b. ca. 996 - d. aft. 1025), daughter of Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen .
Issue:
Matilda (b. aft. 1018 - d. aft. 1036), betrothed (or married) on 18 May < 1035 to Otto of Schweinfurt , since 1048
Duke Otto III of Swabia
Snorre names "Geira, Gunhild and Astrid" as the three daughters of "in Vindland…a king called Burizleif". In Skandinavian :
Burizleif kongen av Vendland
Jarl Vendland is not a name but a title as he is mention in Norwegian historic books. Jarl
Gift med
Emnilda, född 970-975 i Slovenien,
död cirka 1017 i Krakow, Malopolskie, Polen.
Barn:
Mieszko II Lambert, född cirka 990, död 1034-05-10
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