Wenceslaus III of Bohemia
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Wenceslaus III Premyslid (Czech and Slovak Václav, German: Wenzel III, Hungarian Vencel, Polish Wacław, Serbo-Croatian: V(j)enceslav III/В(j)eнцeслав III or Vaclav III/Вацлав III), (October 6, 1289 – August 4, 1306, Olomouc, Moravia) was the King of Hungary (1301 - 1305) and King of Bohemia (1305 - 1306).
Wenceslaus III was the son of Wenceslaus II, King of Bohemia and Poland, and Judith von Habsburg, the daughter of Rudolf I, King of Germany. He faced the problem of internal quarrels in Hungary and in Poland.
Wenceslaus was the last of the male Premyslid rulers of Bohemia. His sister, Elisabeth (Eliška), heiress of Bohemia, married John "The Blind" of Luxembourg, who assumed the Bohemian throne in his wife's right.
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[edit] Kingdom of Hungary
His father accepted the crown of Hungary on behalf of Wenceslaus III in 1301. On August 27, 1301, Wenceslaus III was crowned in Székesfehérvár as the King of Hungary and as such assumed the name Ladislaus V (Hungarian: László [1], Czech, Slovak and Croatian: Ladislav). At that time the Kingdom of Hungary was split into several de-facto principalities, and Wenceslaus was only accepted as the King of Hungary by the rulers in modern Slovakia (Matthew Csák and the Abas), in Burgenland (the Güssings [Kőszegis]) and on territory around the capital, Buda. But the Abas and Matthew Csák switched sides in 1303 and started to support Wenceslaus' rival Charles Robert of Anjou. Consequently, the young Wenceslaus, in Ofen (Buda), became afraid and wrote to his father in Prague for help. His father took a large army and invaded Buda, but having considered the situation, he took his son and the Hungarian crown and returned to Bohemia. Ivan of Güssing was named to represent Wenceslaus III in Hungary. After his father's death, Wenceslaus III decided to renounce the Hungarian throne, and on December 6, 1305, he relinquished the crown to Otto, Duke of Lower Bavaria. But Otto, supported only by the Güssings, was imprisoned in 1307 and abdicated the throne in 1308, leaving Charles Robert as ruler of Hungary. In Hungarian historiography he is noted as an antiking during the interregnum of 1301-1310.
[edit] Poland
Wenceslaus III, however, wanted to claim his hereditary right to the Polish throne, but was murdered under mysterious circumstances in Olomouc, Moravia on August 4, 1306, while on a campaign to that end.
[edit] Ancestors
Wenceslaus III of Bohemia | Father: Wenceslaus II of Bohemia |
Paternal Grandfather: Ottokar II of Bohemia |
Paternal Great-grandfather: Wenceslaus I of Bohemia |
Paternal Great-grandmother: Kunigunde of Hohenstaufen |
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Paternal Grandmother: Kunigunda of Slavonia |
Paternal Great-grandfather: Rostislav of Slavonia |
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Paternal Great-grandmother: Anna of Hungary |
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Mother: Judith of Habsburg |
Maternal Grandfather: Rudolph I of Germany |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Albrecht IV of Habsburg |
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Maternal Great-grandmother: Hedwig of Kyburg |
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Maternal Grandmother: Gertrude of Hohenburg |
Maternal Great-grandfather: Burchard V, Count of Hohenberg |
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Maternal Great-grandmother: Mechtild of Tübingen |
[edit] See also
[edit] Notes
- ^ This name isn't recognized in contemporary Hungarian historiography; the king is usually named simply Vencel and the fifth ordinal number is allocated to Ladislaus the Posthumous (V. Lázsló)
Preceded by Andrew III |
King of Hungary 1301-1305 |
Succeeded by Béla V |
Preceded by Wenceslaus II |
King of Bohemia 1305-1306 |
Succeeded by Henry of Carinthia |
Preceded by Wenceslaus II |
King of Poland 1305-1306 |
Succeeded by Władysław I the Elbow-high |
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