Family Tree Welborn » Vladislav W≈Çadys≈Çaw II ·ÄúThe Exile·Äù Wygnaniec of Poland (Piast) (1105-1159)

Données personnelles Vladislav W≈Çadys≈Çaw II ·ÄúThe Exile·Äù Wygnaniec of Poland (Piast) 


Famille de Vladislav Władysław II လThe Exileဝ Wygnaniec of Poland (Piast)

Il est marié avec Agnes of Babenberg.

Ils se sont mariés


Enfant(s):

  1. Richeza Poland (Piast)  ± 1135-1185 

  • Le couple a des ancêtres communs.

  • Notes par Vladislav W≈Çadys≈Çaw II ·ÄúThe Exile·Äù Wygnaniec of Poland (Piast)


    Władysław II the Exile, High Duke of Poland is your 25th great grandfather.
    You
    ¬â€  ·Üí Geneva Allene Welborn
    your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, Sr.
    her father ·Üí Edgar Jackson Smith
    his father ·Üí Joseph Perry Smith
    his father ·Üí Mary Polly Burk Burke
    his mother ·Üí John Burk Burke
    her father ·Üí John Taylor Burk
    his father ·Üí Mary Elizabeth Burke
    his mother ·Üí James Taylor, of New Kent
    her father ·Üí John Taylor
    his father ·Üí William Taylor
    his father ·Üí Captain Thomas Taylor
    his father ·Üí Thomas Taylor
    his father ·Üí Margaret Wright
    his mother ·Üí John Tyndale
    her father ·Üí John Tyndale
    his father ·Üí Sir William Tyndal, Kt.
    his father ·Üí Sir Thomas Tyndale. Kt.
    his father ·Üí Helena Tyndale
    his mother ·Üí Margaret Felbrigge
    her mother ᆒ Przemysław I Noszak, Duke of Cieszyn
    her father ·Üí Kazimierz I, Duke of Cieszyn
    his father ·Üí Mieszko I, Duke of Cieszyn
    his father ᆒ Władysław, Duke of Opole
    his father ·Üí Kazimierz I, Duke of Opole
    his father ·Üí Mieszko I Tanglefoot, High Duke of Poland
    his father ᆒ Władysław II the Exile, High Duke of Poland
    his father

    Władysław II the Exile is your 26th great grandfather.
    You
    ¬â€  ·Üí Marvin "Toad" Henry Welborn, Jr.
    your father ·Üí Heny Marvin Welborn, Sr.
    his father ·Üí Calhoun H. Welborn
    his father ·Üí Sarah Elizabeth Dikes
    his mother ·Üí Benjamin Franklin Dykes, II
    her father ·Üí William Dykes, Sr.
    his father ·Üí George Dykes, Sr.
    his father ·Üí Edward George Dykes
    his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
    his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
    his father ·Üí Edward Dykes
    his father ·Üí Thomas Dykes
    his father ·Üí Leonard Dykes
    his father ·Üí Isabelle Dykes
    his mother ·Üí Mary Pennington
    her mother ·Üí Mary Hudleston
    her mother ·Üí Sir Henry Fenwick
    her father ·Üí Margaret de Percy
    his mother ·Üí Sir Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland
    her father ·Üí Mary of Lancaster, Baroness Percy
    his mother ·Üí Henry of Lancaster
    her father ·Üí Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Leicester and Lancaster
    his father ·Üí Eleanor of Provence, Queen Consort of England
    his mother ᆒ Raymond Bérenger IV, comte de Provence
    her father ᆒ Alphonse II Bérenger, comte de Provence
    his father ·Üí Sancha of Castile
    his mother ·Üí House of Piast, Princess, Richeza of Poland, Queen of Castile and León
    her mother ᆒ Władysław II the Exile
    her father

    Władysław II the Exile Silesia (Piast), Duke MP
    Polish: W≈Çadys≈Çaw II Wygnaniec Silesia (Piast), ksiƒÖ≈ºÆ’ô, German: W≈Çadys≈Çaw II. Silesia (Piast), Herzog, Czech: Vladislav II. Vyhnanec Silesia (Piast), kn√≠≈æe
    Gender: Male
    Birth: 1105 Kraków, Ma≈Çopolskie, Poland
    Death: May 30, 1159 (54) Altenburg, Thüringen, Germany
    Place of Burial: Chapelle de l'église St Barthélemy ou du château,Altenburg
    Immediate Family:
    Son of Książe Polski Bolesław III Wrymouth Piast, Duke and Zbyslava Svyatopolkovna, Princess of Kiev

    Husband of Agnes of Babenberg

    Father of Boles≈Çaw I the Tall Liegnitz, Duke; Mieszko I Tanglefoot, High Duke of Poland; House of Piast, Princess, Richeza of Poland, Queen of Castile and León; Konrad Spindleshanks, Duke of G≈Çogów and Albert

    Brother of NN; NN and Adelaide of Poland
    Half brother of Leszek Boles≈Çawowic; Richeza of Poland, Queen of Sweden; Zofia Piastówna; Gertruda; Mieszko III the Old, Duke of Greater Poland; Boles≈Çaw IV the Curly, High Duke of Poland; Dobroniega (Luitgard) of Poland; Henry of Sandomierz, Duke of Sandomierz; Judith of Poland; Agnieszka Ks. Piastówna and Casimir II the Just, High Duke of Poland ¬´¬´ less

    https://www.geni.com/people/Władysław-II-the-Exile/6000000000146388320

    Vladislas II King Of Poland

    Birth:¬â€ 1105 Krakow, Malopolskie, Poland
    Death:¬â€ May 30, 1159, Altenburg, Altenburger Landkreis, Th√ºringen, Germany

    Wladyslaw II the Exile (Polish: Wladyslaw II Wygnaniec) (1105 ·Äì 30 May 1159) was a High Duke of Poland and Duke of Silesia from 1138 until his expulsion in 1146. He is the progenitor of the Silesian Piasts.

    He was the eldest son of Duke Boleslaw III Wrymouth, sole ruler of Poland since 1107, by his first wife Zbyslava, a daughter of Sviatopolk II of Kiev. As the firstborn son, Wladyslaw's father decided to involve him actively in the government of the country. Some historians believe that Boleslaw III gave Wladyslaw the district of Silesia before his own death, in order to create an hereditary fief for his eldest descendants.

    Around 1125 Wladyslaw married Agnes of Babenberg, daughter of Margrave Leopold III of Austria; this union gave him a close connection with the Holy Roman Empire and the Kingdom of Germany: Agnes by her mother was a granddaughter of Emperor Henry IV and a half-sister of the Franconian duke Conrad III of Hohenstaufen, the later King of Germany. Thanks to Wladyslaw, Silesia was saved during the wars of 1133-1135 with Bohemia: he stopped the destruction of the major areas of his district after the Bohemian forces crossed the Oder river.

    In 1137, during the Whitsunday meeting with Duke Sobeslaus I of Bohemia at Niemcza (other sources mention Klodzko), in which several disputed matters were decided, Wladyslaw stood as godfather in the baptism of the youngest son of Sobeslaus, the future Duke Wenceslaus II.

    Duke Boleslaw III died on 28 October 1138. In his will, he sought to maintain the unity of the Polish lands as well as to prevent inheritance conflicts among his sons. He therefore determined a kind of mitigated primogeniture principle: As the oldest son, the supreme authority in the country was assigned to Wladyslaw with the title of a High Duke (Princeps). In addition to Silesia, he received the central Seniorate Province, stretching from Lesser Poland at Krakow to eastern Greater Poland and western Kuyavia, as well as the authority over the Pomerelian lands at Gdansk on the Baltic Sea. His younger half-brothers Boleslaw IV the Curly and Mieszko III received the eastern Duchy of Masovia (composed of Masovia with eastern Kuyavia) and the western Duchy of Greater Poland (the remaining parts of Greater Poland with Lubusz Land) respectively, each as hereditary fiefs.

    Upon the death of Boleslaw's widow Salomea of Berg, Wladyslaw would also receive her oprawa wdowia (a kind of usufruct pension) at Leczyca, which had to revert to the Seniorate. On the other hand, he was obliged to provide his youngest half-brother Henry with the lands of Sandomierz when he would come of age (though only for life). The district however was not separated from the Seniorate until 1146. The youngest of his half-brothers, the later High Duke Casimir II the Just was not assigned any province; it is speculated that he was born after Boleslaw III's death.

    At the time of the death of his father, Wladyslaw was already an adult, with many years of marriage and at least one surviving son, Boleslaw I the Tall, born in 1127 (the date of birth of the second son, Mieszko IV Tanglefoot, is still debatable and varies between 1130 and 1146). Following the examples of his predecessors Boleslaw I Chrobry in 992, Mieszko II Lambert in 1032, and his own father in 1106, the High Duke almost immediately tried to restore the unity of the country. Given his life experience and military leadership, it was generally expected that in the end, he would be successful.

    The disputes of Wladyslaw with his stepmother Salomea and his half-brothers began openly in 1141, when the Dowager Duchess, without the knowledge and consent of the High Duke, commenced to divide her Leczyca province between her sons. Also, she tried to resolve the marriage of her youngest daughter Agnieszka and thus to find a suitable ally for her sons. The most appropriate candidate for a son-in-law had to be one of the sons of the Grand Prince Vsevolod II of Kiev. After hearing the news about the events in Leczyca, Wladyslaw decided to make a quick response, as a result of which the Grand Prince of Kiev not only broke all his pacts with the Junior Dukes, but also arranged the betrothal of his daughter Zvenislava to Wladyslaw's eldest son Boleslaw. The wedding took place one year later, in 1142.

    His ties with the Kievan Rus' benefited him during 1142-1143, when Wladyslaw decided to fight against the districts of his brothers. Wladyslaw's victory was beyond dispute, being backed by his alliances with the Rus', Bohemia and the Holy Roman Empire.

    During Wladyslaw's reign, the Silesian voivode (count palatine) Piotr Wlostowic had the greatest and most decisive impact. A firm follower of Duke Boleslaw III, he had soon acquired enormous political significance in the country, covering the most important court offices. In his prerogative as voivode he had the right to appoint officials in local authorities across Poland, including in the areas of the Junior Dukes, which made him the person from whose decisions was determined the fate of the state. In view of the conflict between her sons and Wladyslaw looming ahead, Boleslaw's wife Salomea of Berg intrigued against him, where after Wlostowic had to resign and was replaced by one of her minions. When Wladyslaw succeeded his father, he reinstated the voivode, however the increased power of Wlostowic fostered deep negative relations, especially with his wife Agnes of Babenberg, who - not without reason - considered him a traitor.

    On 27 July 1144 Salomea of Berg, Duke Boleslaw's widow and Wlostowic's bitter enemy, died. As in accordance with the Duke's will, her province of Leczyca had to revert to the Senoriate Province of Wladyslaw, the voivode, in agreement with the Junior Dukes, planned a coup d'état in order to take the contested district, perhaps as emolument for the younger Henry. Again in this case, Wladyslaw appealed for aid to his Kievan allies. Without waiting the arrival of food he sent his troops against the forces of Boleslaw IV the Curly and Mieszko III; unexpectedly, Wladyslaw suffered a defeat. It wasn't until the arrival of the Kievans that the fate of the battle and the war turned to Wladyslaw's side. Immediately, a favorable peace treaty was made, which permitted the High Duke to take full control over Leczyca; however, he had to give to the Kievan cohorts, in exchange for their aid, the Polish castle at Wizna.

    In the meanwhile, the tensions between Wladyslaw and Piotr Wlostowic worsened. The position of the Count Palatine in the civil war was clearly against the High Duke. This attitude clearly did not correspond with Wladyslaw's concept of autocracy, and after this episode he thought about the total removal of his brothers from their lands. By 1145 however, it seemed that a reconciliation between the High Duke and Wlostowic was possible, as evidenced by the invitation to Wladyslaw by the voivode on the occasion of Wlostowic's son wedding. At the beginning of the following year the High Duke, however, decided to bet everything on one gamble: eliminate Wlostowic from his life for good. He ordered one of his knights, Dobek, to capture him. Dobek arrived at Wlostowic's court at Olbin (in present-day Wroclaw), and during the night captured the voivode with his men. High Duchess Agnes demanded Wlostowic's death, but Wladyslaw decided instead to make an example out of him: he was blinded, muted and sentenced to exile.

    Wlostowic was respected and had many friends, and his fate caused many nobles to switch their allegiance to the Junior Dukes. Furthermore, the blinded Wlostowic fled to the Kievan Rus', which had so far supported Wladyslaw, and convinced them to break their alliance.

    At the beginning of 1146 Wladyslaw decided to made the final attack on his rivaling half-brothers. Initially, it seemed that victory of the High Duke was only a matter of time, since he managed to take Masovia without obstacles and forced Duke Boleslaw IV the Curly to withdraw to the defense of his brother Mieszko III at Poznan in Greater Poland. There, unexpectedly, began Wladyslaw's disaster. The reason for this was the insecurity of his other districts, where mighty rebellions erupted against Wladyslaw's dictatorial politics. The rebels quickly grew in power thanks to the support of Archbishop Jakub ze Znina of Gniezno, who excommunicated the High Duke - as a punishment for the fate of the voivode Wlostowic - resulting in an additional series of rebellions. The defeat at the end was thanks not only to the combined forces of Duke Boleslaw IV at Poznan with the troops of the other Junior Dukes, but also by Wladyslaw's own subjects, which was a total surprise to him. The High Duke was forced to flee abroad; shortly afterwards his wife Agnes and children joined him, after their unsuccessful attempts to defend Krakow.

    The Junior Dukes had a complete success, and Wladyslaw was now under the mercy of his neighbors. Initially, he and his family stayed in the court of his namesake and ally Duke Vladislaus II of Bohemia at Prague Castle. The title of a High Duke was assumed by Boleslaw IV. Wladyslaw did never return to Poland.

    Soon after his arrival in Bohemia, his brother-in-law King Conrad III of Germany offered him his hospitality. Wladyslaw shortly after moved to Germany and paid tribute to King Conrad and asked for assistance in regaining the throne. As King Conrad also had been able to reinstate Vladislaus of Bohemia shortly before, it initially appeared that Wladyslaw would regain power over Poland very soon. The expedition against the Junior Dukes was launched in 1146, but due to flooding of the Oder river and the pressure on the German king by the margraves Albert the Bear and Conrad of Meissen, who showed no interest in an armed conflict at the German eastern border, the campaign finally failed.

    Wladyslaw of course did not lose hope of changing his fate, but for now he had to accept the postponement of his return, particularly when Conrad III started the Second Crusade with King Louis VII of France to the Holy Land the next year. During this time, the former High Duke administrated the Kaiserpfalz at Altenburg and its dependencies in the Imperial Pleissnerland. Without waiting for German aid, Wladyslaw and his wife Agnes went to the Roman Curia and asked Pope Eugene III for help, but this attempt was also unsuccessful.

    In 1152 King Conrad III died and was succeeded by his nephew Frederick Barbarossa. With this, the hopes of Wladyslaw of returning to Poland were reborn. Following the inducements of Wladyslaw and Frederick's aunt Agnes of Babenberg, the Holy Roman Emperor launched a new expedition to Greater Poland in 1157. The campaign was a success, but unexpectedly Frederick Barbarossa did not restore Wladyslaw to the Polish throne, after Boleslaw IV apprehended at Krzyszkowo had to declare himself a vassal to the Emperor and was compelled to pay tribute to him. In compensation, the Emperor forced Boleslaw IV to promise the restitution of Silesia to Wladyslaw's sons Boleslaw the Tall and Mieszko IV Tanglefoot.

    At this time, it appears, Wladyslaw knew that his battle for supremacy in Poland was finally lost. He remained in exile at Altenburg, where he died two years later. It was not until 1163 that Boleslaw IV finally granted the Silesian province to Wladyslaw's sons.

    Apart from the question of an actual enfeoffment of Wladyslaw's sons by the Emperor, a disruption between them and their Piast cousins had occurred. In the following centuries, Silesia was divided into as many as 17 separate duchies among their descendants and successors, who from the early 14th century onwards gradually became vassals of the Imperial Kingdom of Bohemia. By the 1335 Treaty of Trentschin the Polish king Casimir III the Great renounced all claims to the Silesian lands, which remained under the rule of the Silesian Piasts until the male line of the dynasty finally became extinct with the death of Duke George William of Legnica in 1675.

    His burial place is uncertain.¬â€ 
    ¬â€ 
    Family links:¬â€ 
    ¬â€ Parents:
    ¬â€ ¬â€ Boleslaw III Wrymouth (1086 - 1138)
    ¬â€ 
    ¬â€ Children:
    ¬â€ ¬â€ Richilde of Poland (1134 - 1185)*
    ¬â€ 
    ¬â€ Siblings:
    ¬â€ ¬â€ Casimir of Masovia (____ - 1194)*
    ¬â€ ¬â€ Vladislas II King Of Poland (1105 - 1159)
    ¬â€ ¬â€  Richeza (1116 - 1160)*
    ¬â€ ¬â€ Mieszko III Stary (1126 - 1202)*
    ¬â€ 
    *Calculated relationship
    ¬â€ 
    Burial:
    Pegau Monastery
    Leipzig
    Leipziger Stadtkreis
    Saxony (Sachsen), Germany

    https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=85231862

    {\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\cocoartf1504\cocoasubrtf810{\fonttbl\f0\fswiss\fcharset0 Helvetica;}{\colortbl;\red255\green255\blue255;}{\*\expandedcolortbl;;}\pard\tx560\tx1120\tx1680\tx2240\tx2800\tx3360\tx3920\tx4480\tx5040\tx5600\tx6160\tx6720\pardirnatural\partightenfactor0\f0\fs24 \cf0 W\uc0\u322 adys\u322 aw II the Exile \par \par W\uc0\u322 adys\u322 aw II the Exile Silesia (Piast), Duke \par \par Polish: W\uc0\u322 adys\u322 aw II Wygnaniec Silesia (Piast), ksi\u261 \u380 \u281 , German: W\u322 adys\u322 aw II. Silesia (Piast), Herzog, Czech: Vladislav II. Vyhnanec Silesia (Piast), kn\'ed\'9ee \par Gender: \par Male \par Birth: \par 1105 \par Krak\'f3w, Ma\uc0\u322 opolskie, Poland \par Death: \par May 30, 1159 (54) \par Altenburg, Th\'fcringen, Germany \par Place of Burial: \par Chapelle de l'\'e9glise St Barth\'e9lemy ou du ch\'e2teau,Altenburg \par Immediate Family: \par Son of Ksi\uc0\u261 \u380 e Polski Boles\u322 aw III Wrymouth V Piast, Duke and Zbyslava Svyatopolkovna, Princess of Kiev \par \par Husband of Agnes of Babenberg \par \par Father of Boles\uc0\u322 aw I the Tall Liegnitz, Duke; Mieszko I Tanglefoot, High Duke of Poland; House of Piast, Princess, Richeza of Poland, Queen of Castile and Le\'f3n; Konrad Spindleshanks, Duke of G\u322 og\'f3w and Albert \par \par Brother of NN and NN \par Half brother of Leszek Boles\uc0\u322 awowic; Richeza of Poland, Queen of Sweden; Zofia Piast\'f3wna; Gertruda; Mieszko III the Old, Duke of Greater Poland; Boles\u322 aw IV the Curly, High Duke of Poland; Dobroniega (Luitgard) of Poland; Henry of Sandomierz, Duke of Sandomierz; Judith of Poland; Adelaide of Poland and Casimir II the Just, High Duke of Poland}

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Sur le nom de famille Of Poland (Piast)


La publication Family Tree Welborn a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Marvin Loyd Welborn, "Family Tree Welborn", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/family-tree-welborn/I12637.php : consultée 12 juin 2024), "Vladislav W≈Çadys≈Çaw II ·ÄúThe Exile·Äù Wygnaniec of Poland (Piast) (1105-1159)".