Stamboom Homs » Kazimierz I Odnowiciel Karol "Odnowiciel" książę (1016-1058)

Persoonlijke gegevens Kazimierz I Odnowiciel Karol "Odnowiciel" książę 

  • Hij is geboren op 25 juli 1016 in Kraków, Małopolskie, PolandKraków, Małopolskie.
  • Hij werd gedoopt in .
  • Gedoopt (op 8-jarige leeftijd of later) door het priesterschapsgezag van de LDS-kerk op 24 april 1877.
  • Alternatief: Gedoopt (op 8-jarige leeftijd of later) door het priesterschapsgezag van de LDS-kerk op 24 april 1877.
  • Alternatief: Gedoopt (op 8-jarige leeftijd of later) door het priesterschapsgezag van de LDS-kerk op 24 april 1877.
  • Beroepen:
    • in King of Poland.
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Roi, de Pologne
    • .
    • .
      {geni:job_title} Książę polski
  • Hij is overleden op 28 november 1058 in Poznań, Wielkopolskie, Poland, hij was toen 42 jaar oudPoznań, Wielkopolskie.
  • Een kind van Mieszko II Lambert Lambert av Polen en Rycheza Lotaryńska of Lotharingia
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 22 mei 2012.

Gezin van Kazimierz I Odnowiciel Karol "Odnowiciel" książę

Hij had een relatie met Dobroniega Maria Мария Добронега.


Kind(eren):



Notities over Kazimierz I Odnowiciel Karol "Odnowiciel" książę

GIVN Kazimierz I Karol
SURN Poland
AFN 6TKK-S5
STAT SUBMITTED
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:31
GIVN Kazimierz I Karol
SURN Poland
AFN 6TKK-S5
STAT SUBMITTED
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:31
Name Prefix: King Name Suffix: I, Of Poland "The Restorer"
Kasimir [Kazimierz] var hertug av Polen ca. 1040 - 1058.
Under Kasimirs første regjeringstid gjorde bønder og treller opprør mot kristendom og fremmed
åk. Hans mor, Richeza, holdt ham derfor skjult i 9 år i det burgundiske kloster Clugny, hvor
han ble oppdratt.
Ved tysk hjelp ble han hertug av Polen i 1040 eller 1041, men han ble aldri kronet til konge.
Som tysksinnet støttet han seg til presteveldet som han på alle vis styrket, især ved å
opprette bispedømmer.
For å styrke sin makt, utnevnte han mange riddere. Krenket av dette trakk gamle odelsslekter
seg tilbake og dannet snart en egen klasse, ?czlachta? (av tysk ?Geschlecht?).
Casimir I, byname CASIMIR THE RESTORER, or THE MONK, Polish KAZIMIERZODNOWICIEL, or MNICH (b. July 25, 1016--d. at latest Nov. 28, 1058), duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia,Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father's reign, and restored the Polish central government.
Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of PalatineLorraine, Casimir I, who had taken monastic orders, received papal dispensation and ascended the throne after his father's death (1034). In1037 he was deposed; maneuvers of the magnates against his supremacy coincided with a popular revolt against the landowners and with an anti-Christian uprising by pagan tribes. Exiled to Germany, he won military aid from the German kings Conrad II and Henry III and by 1040 had regained his throne. He married the Russian princess Dobronega and, supported by her brother, the grand prince Yaroslav the Great of Kiev, regained the provinces of Mazovia and Pomerania in 1047. He took Silesia(1050) from the Bohemians, though he had to pay annual tribute to theBohemian princes as compensation.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped todepose him. As ruler of Poland, however, he was never crowned king, and German suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Casimir I, byname CASIMIR THE RESTORER, or THE MONK, Polish KAZIMIERZODNOWICIEL, or MNICH (b. July 25, 1016--d. at latest Nov. 28, 1058), duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia,Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father's reign, and restored the Polish central government.
Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of PalatineLorraine, Casimir I, who had taken monastic orders, received papal dispensation and ascended the throne after his father's death (1034). In1037 he was deposed; maneuvers of the magnates against his supremacy coincided with a popular revolt against the landowners and with an anti-Christian uprising by pagan tribes. Exiled to Germany, he won military aid from the German kings Conrad II and Henry III and by 1040 had regained his throne. He married the Russian princess Dobronega and, supported by her brother, the grand prince Yaroslav the Great of Kiev, regained the provinces of Mazovia and Pomerania in 1047. He took Silesia(1050) from the Bohemians, though he had to pay annual tribute to theBohemian princes as compensation.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped todepose him. As ruler of Poland, however, he was never crowned king, and German suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Casimir I, byname CASIMIR THE RESTORER, or THE MONK, Polish KAZIMIERZODNOWICIEL, or MNICH (b. July 25, 1016--d. at latest Nov. 28, 1058), duke of Poland who reannexed the formerly Polish provinces of Silesia,Mazovia, and Pomerania (all now in Poland), which had been lost during his father's reign, and restored the Polish central government.
Only surviving son of Duke Mieszko II and Richeza (Ryksa) of PalatineLorraine, Casimir I, who had taken monastic orders, received papal dispensation and ascended the throne after his father's death (1034). In1037 he was deposed; maneuvers of the magnates against his supremacy coincided with a popular revolt against the landowners and with an anti-Christian uprising by pagan tribes. Exiled to Germany, he won military aid from the German kings Conrad II and Henry III and by 1040 had regained his throne. He married the Russian princess Dobronega and, supported by her brother, the grand prince Yaroslav the Great of Kiev, regained the provinces of Mazovia and Pomerania in 1047. He took Silesia(1050) from the Bohemians, though he had to pay annual tribute to theBohemian princes as compensation.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped todepose him. As ruler of Poland, however, he was never crowned king, and German suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman
Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped to depose
him in 1037. As a ruler, however, he was never crowned king, and German
suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Kazimierz I the Restorer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Casimir I the Restorer

Fragment of a painting by Jan Matejko.
Born July 26, 1016
in
Died November 28, 1058
in
Buried

Reign ca. 1040
to 1058
Elected
at
Coronation
in

Family or dynasty Piast dynasty
Coat of Arms Piast.
Parents Mieszko II Lambert
Richensa of Lotharingia
Marriage
and children with Maria Dobroniega:
Boleslaus II the Bold
Vladislaus I Herman
Swietoslawa I of Bohemia (aka Svatava Polská in Czech)
Mieszko Kazimierzowic
Otton Kazimierzowic
with :

with :

Kazimierz I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 1015 - 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of Poland after a period of turmoil and permanently attached Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.

Relatively little is known of Casimir's early life. Born to Mieszko II of Poland and Richensa of Lotharingia, he must have spent his childhood at the royal court of Poland in Gniezno. Mieszko II was crowned the king of Poland in 1025 after his father's death. The many landlords, however, feared the single rule of the monarch. This situation led to conflicts in the country, in which Mieszko's brothers turned against him and the Emperor Conrad II's forces attacked the country, seizing Lusatia. Years of chaos and conflict followed, during which Mieszko died (1034) in suspicious circumstances after his forced abdication and a brief restoration.

After the death of her husband, Richensa probably tried to seize the power in the country and secure the crown for her son. However, she failed and Casimir had to flee to Hungary while the central parts of Poland were controlled by Bezprym. The region of Greater Poland revolted against the nobles and clergy and a mass Pagan revival ensued there. Also the land of Mazovia seceded and a local landlord named Mieclaw formed a state of his own there. Similar situation happened in Pomerania, where the power was held by a local dynasty loosely related to the Piasts. The ruler of Bohemia Bretislaus I, observing the period of turmoil in Poland, took advantage of his neighbour's weakness and invaded the country. After a short struggle he conquered Silesia and Lesser Poland, and severely pillaged Greater Poland, burning Gniezno to the ground and looting the relics of Saint Adalbert.

The following year the new Holy Roman Emperor Henry III allied himself with the exiled Polish ruler against the Bohemians. Casimir was given a troop of 1000 heavy footmen and a significant amount of gold to restore his power in the country. Casimir also signed an alliance with Yaroslav I the Wise, the Prince of the Kiev Ruthenia. The alliance was sealed by Casimir's marriage with Yaroslav's sister, Maria Dobronega. With such support Casimir returned to Poland and managed to retake most of his domain. In 1041 defeated Bretislaus signed a treaty of Regensburg, in which he renounced his claims to all Polish lands except for Silesia which was to be incorporated into the Crown of Bohemia. It was Kazimierz's success in strengthening royal power and ending internal strife that earned him the epithet of "the Restorer".

Kazimierz I the Restorer. Black and white reproduction of the entire painting by Jan Matejko.The treaty gained Casimir a period of peace at the southern border and the capital of Poland was moved to Kraków, the only major Polish city relatively untouched by the wars. It is probable that the Holy Roman Emperor was happy with the balance of power restored in the region and forced Casimir not to crown himself the king of Poland. In 1046 Emperor Henry held royal and imperial courts at Merseburg and Meissen, at which he ended the strife among the Dux Bomeraniorum (Duke of Pomerania), Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia, and Poland's Casimir I. In 1047 Casimir, aided by his Kievan ally, started a war against Mazovia and seized the land. It is probable that he also defeated Mieclaw's allies from Pomerania and attached Gdansk to Poland. This secured his power in central Poland. Three years later, against the will of the emperor, Casimir seized the Czech-controlled Silesia, thus securing most of his father's domain. In 1054 in Quedlinburg the Emperor ruled that Silesia was to remain in Poland in exchange for a yearly tribute of 117 kilograms of silver and 7 kg of gold.

At that time Casimir focused on internal matters. Conflicted with the Emperor in the Silesian case, he supported the Papacy in the Investiture Controversy and gained the support of the church. To strengthen his rule he re-created the bishopric in Kraków and Wroclaw and erected the new Wawel Cathedral. During Casimir's rule the heraldry was introduced in Poland and, unlike his predecessors, he promoted landed gentry over the druzyna as his base of power. One of his reforms was the introduction, to Poland, of a key element of feudalism: the granting of fiefdoms to his retinue of warriors, thus gradually transforming them into medieval knights.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman
Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped to depose
him in 1037. As a ruler, however, he was never crowned king, and German
suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman
Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped to depose
him in 1037. As a ruler, however, he was never crowned king, and German
suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
Casimir reestablished the Polish central government, revived the Roman
Catholic church, and suppressed the pagan tribes that had helped to depose
him in 1037. As a ruler, however, he was never crowned king, and German
suzerainty over Poland was, in fact, reestablished during his reign.
[From "The Great Dynasties", retrieved 13 Aug 07]
Mieszko II's son, Kazimierz I Odnowiciel (the Restorer) (b. 1015; d. 1058), King 1038 - 1058, was hardly more successful and also had to flee to Hungary when civil war broke out. After regaining the throne in 1040 he made Krakow the capital of Poland (reflecting not only the economic growth of that city but also the level of destruction and disruption elsewhere).
[alfred_descendants10gen_fromrootsweb_bartont.FTW]

m. Dobroneva, dau of Vladimir I, Grand Duke of Kiev. (Weis 147-23)
In 1033, Mieszko recognised the suzerainty of the emperor and resigned from the crown and the royal title. The resignment resulted in the outburst of fighting for the princely throne, the death of Mieszko II, a rebellion of magnates and pagan subjects and destruction of the Church organization. Casimir, the young heir to the throne had to flee the country. Eventually, Casimir returned to Poland with German assistance, rebuilt the state and became known as the Restorer, but he did not attempt to shed the dependence on the Empire.
Stefan:
Furste av Polen.
{geni:occupation} Furste
{geni:about_me} '''Kazimierz I Karol Odnowiciel''' (ur. 25 lipca 1016, zm. 28 listopada 1058[1] w Poznaniu) – '''książę''' z dynastii '''Piastów''', '''władca Polski''' w latach 1034-1058 (z przerwami), syn Mieszka II i Rychezy.
Po śmierci ojca, w 1034 objął władzę w zniszczonym kryzysem lat poprzednich państwie. Próbował wzmocnić władzę monarszą, co spotkało się ze sprzeciwem możnowładztwa. Książę został wygnany na Węgry, skąd wyjechał później do Niemiec. W kraju zapanowała anarchia. Brak centralnej władzy spowodował samowolę, a nawet tworzenie przez możnych własnych państewek wewnątrz granic państwa (Masław na Mazowszu). Doszło do reakcji pogańskiej i powstania ludowego, a w 1038(?) najazdu księcia Czech Brzetysława. Dopiero w 1039, a być może 1040 Kazimierz powrócił do kraju, przystępując do odbudowy zniszczonej organizacji państwowej i kościelnej. W polityce zagranicznej oparł się na sojuszu z Rusią. W 1047 ostatecznie pokonał Masława i przywrócił polskie panowanie na Mazowszu. Przeniósł z Gniezna do Krakowa główny ośrodek władzy państwowej i odnowił tamtejsze biskupstwo. Ufundował opactwo benedyktynów w Tyńcu (1044). Zbrojnie opanował też zagarnięty przez Czechów Śląsk (1050), jednak na zjeździe w Kwedlinburgu w 1054 zgodził się płacić za niego Czechom coroczny trybut. http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazimierz_Odnowiciel

Ka´simir I (po. Kazimierz I), 1016-58, hertig av Polen från 1034, son till Mieszko II. K. avsattes 1037 av upproriska adelsmän men lyckades med tysk och kievrysk hjälp återta både tronen och tidigare förlorade territorier i bl.a. Schlesien, vilket gav honom tillnamnet "Restaurator / Förnyaren" (po. Odnowiciel).
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_I_the_Restorer
Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 25 July 1016 – 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of the Polish Kingdom after a period of turmoil. He reinstated Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania into his realm. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.

Relatively little is known of Casimir's early life. Born to Mieszko II of Poland and Richensa of Lotharingia, the granddaughter of Emperor Otto II, he must have spent his childhood at the royal court of Poland in Gniezno. Casimir seems to have been destined for the cloth as he was sent away to monastery in 1026. He left the church, however, in 1031.

[edit] Circumstances of Casimir's flight from Poland

Casimir's father Mieszko II was crowned the king of Poland in 1025 after the death of Boleslaw I Chrobry. However, powerful magnates feared a strong central government reminiscent of Boleslaw's rule. This situation led to considerable friction between crown and nobility. Taking advantage of the king's precarious situation, Mieszko's brothers Bezprym and Otton turned against him and allied themselves with Emperor Conrad II whose forces attacked the country, regaining Lusatia. Years of chaos and conflict followed, during which Mieszko II died (A.D. 1034) in suspicious circumstances after he was forced to abdicate. Following his fathers death Casimir attempted to seize the throne in 1034. This precipitated a Barons rebellion, which coupled with the so called "Pagan Reaction" of the commoners forced Casimir to flee to Saxony (A.D. 1034). Casimir returned to Poland and in 1038, once again, tried to regain power with the aide of his influential mother. This also failed and Casimir had to flee to the Kingdom of Hungary where he was imprisoned by Stephen I.

[edit] Interregnum

The central parts of Poland were controlled by Bezprym. The central district of Wielkopolska revolted against the nobles and catholic clergy in a mass rebellion.pagan revival ensued there for some years. The district of Masovia seceded and a local landlord named Miecław formed a state of his own there. A similar situation took place in Pomerania. Taking advantage of the chaos and his neighbour's weakness, Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia, invaded and revaged the country. After a short struggle Bretislaus I gained control of Silesia, took Małopolska along with Cracow and severely pillaged Greater Poland, burning Gniezno to the ground and looting the relics of Saint Adalbert. Greater Poland was in fact razed so completely that it ceased to function as a primary power base of the Polish kingdom.

[edit] Restoration

The following year the new Holy Roman Emperor, Henry III, allied himself with the exiled Polish ruler against the Bohemians. Casimir was given a troop of 1,000 heavy footmen and a significant amount of gold to restore his power in the country. Casimir also signed an alliance with Yaroslav I the Wise, the Prince of Kievan Rus'. The alliance was sealed by Casimir's marriage with Yaroslav's sister, Maria Dobronega. With such support Casimir returned to Poland and managed to retake most of his domain. In 1041, the defeated Bretislaus signed a treaty at Regensburg in which he renounced his claims to all Polish lands except for Silesia, which was to be incorporated into the Crown of Bohemia. It was Casimir's success in strengthening royal power and ending internal strife that earned him the epithet of "the Restorer".

The treaty gained Casimir a period of peace at the southern border and the capital of Poland was moved to Kraków, the only major Polish city relatively untouched by the wars. It is probable that the Holy Roman Emperor was happy with the balance of power restored in the region and forced Casimir not to crown himself the king of Poland. In 1046 Emperor Henry held royal and imperial courts at Merseburg and Meissen, at which he ended the strife among the Dux Bomeraniorum (Duke of Pomerania), Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia, and Poland's Casimir I. In 1047 Casimir, aided by his Kievan ally, started a war against Masovia and seized the land. It is probable that he also defeated Miecław's allies from Pomerania and attached Gdańsk to Poland. This secured his power in central Poland. Three years later, against the will of the emperor, Casimir seized Bohemian-controlled Silesia, thus securing most of his father's domain. In 1054 in Quedlinburg the Emperor ruled that Silesia was to remain in Poland in exchange for a yearly tribute of 117 kilograms of silver and 7 kg of gold.

At that time Casimir focused on internal matters. Conflicted with the Emperor in the Silesian case, he supported the Papacy in the Investiture Controversy and gained the support of the church. To strengthen his rule he re-created the bishopric in Kraków and Wrocław and erected the new Wawel Cathedral. During Casimir's rule heraldry was introduced in Poland and, unlike his predecessors, he promoted landed gentry over the drużyna as his base of power. One of his reforms was the introduction, to Poland, of a key element of feudalism: the granting of fiefdoms to his retinue of warriors, thus gradually transforming them into medieval knights.
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Född 1016, död 1058. furste. restaurator

eftertrodde fadern 1034, förjagades av stormonnen 1037 menb
Oterinsattes av tyske kejsaren 1041, förde en kraftfull politik
och erövrade Masovien Ot Polen.

Gift 1041 med
Maria Dobronega av Kiev, född 1010, död 1087.

Barn:
Vladislav I Herman av Polen, född 1043, död 1102

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Another name for Casimir was Kazimierz I.

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Google:aner til storfyrste
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Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 25 July 1016 – 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of the Polish Kingdom after a period of turmoil. He reinstated Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania into his realm. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.
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Casimir I of Poland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 25 July 1016 – 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of Poland after a period of turmoil and attached Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.
[edit]Biography

Relatively little is known of Casimir's early life. Born to Mieszko II of Poland and Richensa of Lotharingia, the granddaughter of Emperor Otto II, he must have spent his childhood at the royal court of Poland in Gniezno. Mieszko II was crowned the king of Poland in 1025 after his father's death. The many landlords, however, feared the single rule of the monarch. This situation led to conflicts in the country, in which Mieszko's brothers turned against him and the Emperor Conrad II's forces attacked the country, regaining Lusatia. Years of chaos and conflict followed, during which Mieszko died (1034) in suspicious circumstances after his forced abdication and a brief restoration.
After the death of her husband, Richensa probably tried to seize the power in the country and secure the crown for her son. However, she failed and Casimir had to flee to the Kingdom of Hungary while the central parts of Poland were controlled by Bezprym. The region of Greater Poland revolted against the nobles and clergy and a mass pagan revival ensued there. Also the land of Masovia seceded and a local landlord named Miecław formed a state of his own there. A similar situation happened in Pomerania, where the power was held by a local independend dynasty loosely related to the Piasts. Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia, observing the period of turmoil in Poland, took advantage of his neighbour's weakness and invaded the country. After a short struggle he regained control of Silesia and Lesser Poland and severely pillaged Greater Poland, burning Gniezno to the ground and looting the relics of Saint Adalbert.
The following year the new Holy Roman Emperor, Henry III, allied himself with the exiled Polish ruler against the Bohemians. Casimir was given a troop of 1,000 heavy footmen and a significant amount of gold to restore his power in the country. Casimir also signed an alliance with Yaroslav I the Wise, the Prince of Kievan Rus'. The alliance was sealed by Casimir's marriage with Yaroslav's sister, Maria Dobronega. With such support Casimir returned to Poland and managed to retake most of his domain. In 1041, the defeated Bretislaus signed a treaty at Regensburg in which he renounced his claims to all Polish lands except for Silesia, which was to be incorporated into the Crown of Bohemia. It was Casimir's success in strengthening royal power and ending internal strife that earned him the epithet of "the Restorer".

The treaty gained Casimir a period of peace at the southern border and the capital of Poland was moved to Kraków, the only major Polish city relatively untouched by the wars. It is probable that the Holy Roman Emperor was happy with the balance of power restored in the region and forced Casimir not to crown himself the king of Poland. In 1046 Emperor Henry held royal and imperial courts at Merseburg and Meissen, at which he ended the strife among the Dux Bomeraniorum (Duke of Pomerania), Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia, and Poland's Casimir I. In 1047 Casimir, aided by his Kievan ally, started a war against Masovia and seized the land. It is probable that he also defeated Miecław's allies from Pomerania and attached Gdańsk to Poland. This secured his power in central Poland. Three years later, against the will of the emperor, Casimir seized Bohemian-controlled Silesia, thus securing most of his father's domain. In 1054 in Quedlinburg the Emperor ruled that Silesia was to remain in Poland in exchange for a yearly tribute of 117 kilograms of silver and 7 kg of gold.
At that time Casimir focused on internal matters. Conflicted with the Emperor in the Silesian case, he supported the Papacy in the Investiture Controversy and gained the support of the church. To strengthen his rule he re-created the bishopric in Kraków and Wrocław and erected the new Wawel Cathedral. During Casimir's rule heraldry was introduced in Poland and, unlike his predecessors, he promoted landed gentry over the drużyna as his base of power. One of his reforms was the introduction, to Poland, of a key element of feudalism: the granting of fiefdoms to his retinue of warriors, thus gradually transforming them into medieval knights.

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Biografi
Furste, restaurator. Born 1016. Died 1058. Efterträdde fadern 1034, förjagades av stormännen 1037 men återinsattes av tyske kejsaren 1041, förde en kraftfull politik och erövrade Masovien åt Polen.

Källa: http://www.charlamov.com/gen/

Casimir I , c.1015–1058, duke of Poland (c.1040–1058), son of Mieszko II. He succeeded in reuniting the central Polish lands under the hegemony of the Holy Roman Empire, but he was never crowned king. He is also called Casimir the Restorer. His son and successor was Boleslaus II.

Casimir married Dobroniega, Of Kiev, daughter of St. Valdamir I 'the Great' Svyatoslavich, Grand Duke Of Kiev and Malfreda Of Bohemia. (Dobroniega, Of Kiev was born about 1015.)

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Wikipedia:
Kasimir I, född 1016, död 1058, var en polsk regent, son till Mieczislav II.

Kasimir var 1034, vid faderns död, ännu omyndig och måste 1037 fly till främmande land undan följderna av det missnöje hans redan tidigare fördrivna moder och förmynderska, Richeza (Rixa) av Lotharingien, uppväckt genom sin förkärlek för tyskar.

Efter några år vann han med kejsar Henrik III:s understöd herravälde i sitt rike samt förmälde sig 1043 med Dobrogneva (även kallad Maria), en syster till kievske storfursten Jaroslav. Med dennes bistånd återförde han det från riket avfallna Masovien till lydnad.

1054 förskaffade han Polen besittningen av Breslau och andra delar av Schlesien, dock mot en årlig tribut till bömiska kronan. Kasimir, som vinnlade sig om kristendomens befästande i Polen, efterträddes av sin äldste son, Boleslav II.

Small Sketch of Owl.png Denna artikel är helt eller delvis baserad på material från Nordisk familjebok, 1904–1926.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casimir_I_the_Restorer
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Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 25 July 1016 – 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of the Polish Kingdom after a period of turmoil. He reinstated Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania into his realm. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.
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Zakonnik w klasztorze polskim w latach 1026-34.
Książę polski od 1039r.
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http://histfam.familysearch.org/getperson.php?personID=I3957&tree=Nixon

http://www.geneajourney.com/poland.html
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Kazimierz I Odnowiciel

inaczej-Kazimierz Karol Mnich
tytuł- król Polski, zakonnik w klasztorze polskim 1026-34 r., książę polski 1039 r.

urodzony-25.07.1016 r.
zmarł-28.11.1058 r.
dynastia-Piastowie
herb-Orzeł Piastowski

Rodzice :
ojciec- Mieszko II Lambert
matka- Ryksa

Rodzina

1 . żona - Dobronega Maria
od : 1041/42 r. (inne źródła : 1038 r.)
Potomstwo z tego związku
1 . syn - Bolesław II Śmiały
2 . syn - Władysław I Herman
3 . córka - Świętosława
4 . syn - Mieszko
5 . syn - Otto
Karol, Casimer, Mnich
He rebuilt Poland, mostly on a Christian base.
RESEARCH NOTES:
Duke of Poland (1038-1058). Piast Dynasty
SOURCE NOTES:
http://projects.edte.utwnete.nl/masters/spizewsk/pl_kings/casimir1.htm
KING OF POLAND
He came to power with German backing and named many to knighthood, thereby antagonizing the old nobility.
He came to power with German backing and named many to knighthood, thereby antagonizing the old nobility.
KING OF POLAND

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    Over de familienaam Karol "Odnowiciel"


    De publicatie Stamboom Homs is opgesteld door .neem contact op
    Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
    George Homs, "Stamboom Homs", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-homs/I6000000002135079868.php : benaderd 17 mei 2024), "Kazimierz I Odnowiciel Karol "Odnowiciel" książę (1016-1058)".