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Bolesław II the Bold

Bolesław II the Bold (Polish: Bolesław II Śmiały; c. 1042 – 2/3 April 1081 or 1082), also known as the Generous (Szczodry Polish) was Duke of Poland from 1058 to 1076 and third King of Poland from 1076 to 1079. He was the eldest son of Duke Casimir I the Restorer and Maria Dobroniega of Kiev.

Bolesław II the Bold
Denar with Bolesław's effigy
Duke of Poland
Reign1058–1076
PredecessorCasimir I the Restorer
SuccessorWładysław I Herman
King of Poland
Reign1076–1079
Coronation26 December 1076
Gniezno Cathedral, Poland
PredecessorMieszko II Lambert
Bornc. 1042
Kingdom of Poland
Died2 or 3 April 1081/1082[1]
Kingdom of Hungary
Burial
Ossiach Abbey (disputed)
SpouseWyszesława of Kiev
IssueMieszko
DynastyPiast
FatherCasimir I the Restorer
MotherMaria Dobroniega of Kiev
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Bolesław II is considered to have been one of the most capable of the Piast rulers. In 1075 he re-established the Archdiocese of Gniezno (consecrated in 1064) and founded the Diocese of Płock. He established Benedictine monasteries in Mogilno, Lubin and Wrocław. Bolesław II was also the first Polish monarch to produce his own coinage in quantity great enough to replace the foreign coins prevalent in the country during the reigns of the first Piast kings. He established royal mints in Kraków and Wrocław and reformed the coinage, which brought considerable revenue into the royal coffers. All these efforts had an enormous influence on the economic and cultural development of the country.

According to the chronicler Gallus Anonymus, during his reign he was called largus ("the Generous" in English, "Szczodry" in Polish) as he founded many churches and monasteries throughout Poland. The nickname "the Bold" (Śmiały) was only given to Bolesław II for the first time in the later Chronicle of the Polish kings, although it was considered by historiography of the 19th and 20th centuries as a contemporary nickname.

Duke of Poland edit

Following the death of his father Casimir in 1058, Bolesław II, as the eldest son, inherited Greater and Lesser Poland as well as the Mazovian, Pomerelian, and Silesian lands. His younger brothers Władysław Herman and Mieszko became Governors of the remaining provinces. However Mieszko died relatively early, in 1065, at which point his lands came under the authority of Bolesław II.

His father had left him a stabilised country; Bolesław II continued his foreign policy on surrounding his realm with allied kingdoms in order to prevail against the extensive Holy Roman Empire in the west; he aimed to have Poland eventually bordering only allied countries. This is said[by whom?] to be the main reason behind his numerous foreign interventions: in 1060–1063 he intervened in Hungary to aid his uncle King Béla I in the inheritance conflict with his nephew Solomon, who was backed by his brother-in-law King Henry IV of Germany. As a result, Béla, in 1061, with the support of Polish troops, gained power.

 
Bolesław II (on the right) punishing the wives of his knights and nobles for their alleged adultery, 1504, National Museum of Kraków

In Hungary, Bolesław II pursued the policy of cooperation with the anti-Imperial faction, which allowed him to gain political independence from the Empire but put him in conflict with the Duchy of Bohemia, an Imperial ally. Moreover, he escalated the conflict with the Přemyslid duke Vratislaus II by refusing to pay the annual homage for Silesia and spurring the Bohemian nobility to revolt. In 1063, Bolesław II unsuccessfully besieged the then-Moravian town of Hradec nad Moravicí and was forced to retreat. In the end, relations with Vratislaus II were settled to a certain extent when the latter married Princess Świętosława, Bolesław II's sister.[2]

Meanwhile, in 1063, King Béla I of Hungary died. Bolesław II could not defend the cause of his son Géza I against the German troops of Henry IV, who finally installed Solomon on the Hungarian throne. In 1069 Grand Prince Iziaslav I of Kiev and his wife Gertruda, Bolesław's aunt, were overthrown. A Polish military campaign re-established them in power in Kiev.

In 1071 Bolesław II attacked Bohemia again. As he refused any attempt at arbitration by King Henry IV, the question was settled by an armistice between the two belligerents; however, Bolesław II, ignoring the treaty, renewed his attack in 1072 and refused to pay the tributes for Silesia to the Holy Roman Empire. Henry IV prepared for a campaign against Poland, but was hit by the outbreak of the Saxon rebellion in 1073.

Due to his involvement in Hungarian, Bohemian and Kievan affairs, Bolesław II neglected Poland's interests on the Baltic coast. Therefore, in either 1060 or 1066, Gdańsk Pomerania (Pomerelia) severed its ties to the Polish Kingdom.[3]

King of Poland edit

When Hildebrand of Sovana, an enemy of the German king, became Pope Gregory VII in 1073, Bolesław II saw in him a natural ally; he started to apply the Pope's reforms in the Archbishopric of Gniezno and commenced negotiations to obtain the royal crown. He spurred the ongoing revolt in Saxony, which had forced Henry IV to retreat from that region (he crushed the revolt at the Battle of Langensalza soon thereafter); the Polish king seized the occasion to launch an invasion against Henry IV's vassal, Vratislaus II of Bohemia, alongside an ally from Grand Prince Vladimir II Monomakh of Kiev.

Thanks to his support of the papal cause during the investiture controversy in the Holy Roman Empire, Bolesław II gained the royal crown of Poland: on Christmas Day of 1076 Archbishop Bogumił crowned him in the Gniezno Cathedral in the presence of a papal legate. King Henry's IV act of contrition at the Walk to Canossa in 1077 included also the imperial recognition of Bolesław II's royal title. Bolesław's new authority, along with his pride, however, caused the Polish magnates to rebel, as they feared the monarchy had started to grow too powerful.

Deposition and death edit

 
Martyrdom of Bishop Stanislaus, a medieval polychrome from Bielsko-Biała, in southern Poland

In 1077 Bolesław II's troops helped two pretenders to assume the throne: Ladislaus I of Hungary, another son of Béla I, and again Iziaslav in Kiev. In 1078, while returning from the latter campaign, the Polish troops conquered Red Ruthenia. In 1079, however, the conflict with the Polish nobles culminated into open revolt and Bolesław was deposed and banished from the country. The circumstances that led to the King's banishment hinge on the person of Bishop Stanislaus of Kraków, who had excommunicated the king for his infidelity.

From historical records[4] it appears that Bishop Stanislaus was involved with the barons' opposition movement, plotting to remove the King and to place his brother Władysław Herman on the throne. Bolesław II unilaterally declared Stanislaus guilty of treason – Gallus Anonymus uses the word "traditor" meaning traitor. The historical record was first proposed by Master Wincenty Kadłubek, writing nearly 100 years after Gallus Anonymus and a century and a half after the actual affair.[5] Bolesław II on 11 April 1079 assaulted and then personally wielded the sword that murdered Bishop Stanislaus of Kraków during the celebration of a Mass.[6] Though the bishop had privately and then publicly warned the king to repent of adultery and other vices, Bolesław chose a course of action more characteristic of his nickname, "the Bold".

Bolesław found refuge at the court of King Ladislaus, who also owed his crown to the deposed king.[3] However, according to Gallus Anonymus, Bolesław II's atrocious conduct towards his Hungarian hosts caused his premature death in 1081 or 1082 at the hands of an assassin, probably by poisoning. He was about 40 years old.

Ossiach legend edit

 
Putative tomb of Bolesław at the Ossiach Benedictine Abbey in Austria

A popular legend holds that Bolesław proceeded to Rome to beg forgiveness from Pope Gregory, who imposed on him to wander incognito as a mute repentant. On a summer evening in 1082, he reached the Benedictine Abbey at Ossiach in Carinthia, where he was received and did all kind of hard work until he finally was reconciled in the Sacrament of Penance and died.

At the walls of Ossiach, there exists a tomb bearing the depiction of a horse and the inscription Rex Boleslaus Polonie occisor sancti Stanislai Epi Cracoviensis ("Bolesław, King of Poland, murderer of Saint Stanislaus, Bishop of Kraków"). In 1960, at the direction of Countess Karolina Lanckorońska, the tomb was opened and indeed revealed male bones and the remains of a Polish knight's armor dating from the 11th century.

The legend, however, dates from centuries after the king's death (it was first mentioned by the chronicler Maciej Miechowita in 1499). His burial place actually remains unknown. Another popular hypothesis about the fate of his remains claims that in 1086 they were transferred to the Benedictine abbey of Tyniec near Kraków.

Marriage, issue and sexuality edit

Before 1069 Bolesław II married Wyszesława (d. aft. 1089), who, according to the Chronicle of Jan Długosz (and supported by some sources), was a daughter of Grand Prince Sviatoslav II of Kiev by his first wife Kilikia, possibly a member of the House of Dithmarschen. They had one son, Mieszko (1069 – 1089).

Modern historians, led by Oswald Balzer (in 1895), refuted the Kievan origin and name of Bolesław II's wife and expounded the theory that his wife was the queen named Agnes whose obituary is recorded in Zwiefalten. She may have belonged to the Přemyslid dynasty.[7]

Bolesław's reluctance to marry, being still single at 25, has led his critics to accuse him of homosexuality, most notably by Jan Długosz for the "sin of sodomy"; this was motivated more likely by politics as a smear campaign and it is more likely that Bolesław was bisexual.[citation needed] [8][9]

References edit

  1. ^ André Vauchez; Richard Barrie Dobson; Michael Lapidge, eds. (2000). "Boleslas II the Bold". Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-57958-282-1. Retrieved 2010-03-25.
  2. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Boleslaus II." . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 159.
  3. ^ a b Poczet Krolow i Książat Polskich, Park, Bielsko-Biała, 2005
  4. ^ Gallus Anonymus Cronicae et gesta ducum sive principum Polonorum
  5. ^ Chronica seu originale regum et principum Poloniae by Wincenty Kadlubek (between 1190 and 1208 CE)
  6. ^ "The Bishop Hacked to Death by His own King" http://www.catholicherald.co.uk/news/2011/04/07/the-bishop-hacked-to-death-by-his-own-king/
  7. ^ T. Jurek, Agnes regina. W poszukiwaniu żony Bolesława Szczodrego, "Roczniki Historyczne" LXXII, 2006, s. 95–104.
  8. ^ B. Bielaszka−Podgórny (2018). Grzech sodomski Bolesława Szczodrego w świetle "Roczników" Jana Długosza. Vol. 61. Studia Historyczne. pp. 21–36.
  9. ^ Olga Steliga-Dykas (26 June 2022), Tych królów podejrzewano, że wolą mężczyzn. Mogli się oddawać rozkoszom pod jednym warunkiem, onet.pl
Bolesław II the Bold
Piast Dynasty
Born: ca. 1043 Died: 2 or 3 April 1081
Preceded by Duke of Poland
King from 1076

1058–1079
Succeeded by

bolesław, bold, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Boleslaw II the Bold news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Boleslaw II the Bold Polish Boleslaw II Smialy c 1042 2 3 April 1081 or 1082 also known as the Generous Szczodry Polish was Duke of Poland from 1058 to 1076 and third King of Poland from 1076 to 1079 He was the eldest son of Duke Casimir I the Restorer and Maria Dobroniega of Kiev Boleslaw II the BoldDenar with Boleslaw s effigyDuke of PolandReign1058 1076PredecessorCasimir I the RestorerSuccessorWladyslaw I HermanKing of PolandReign1076 1079Coronation26 December 1076 Gniezno Cathedral PolandPredecessorMieszko II LambertBornc 1042Kingdom of PolandDied2 or 3 April 1081 1082 1 Kingdom of HungaryBurialOssiach Abbey disputed SpouseWyszeslawa of KievIssueMieszkoDynastyPiastFatherCasimir I the RestorerMotherMaria Dobroniega of KievReligionRoman CatholicismBoleslaw II is considered to have been one of the most capable of the Piast rulers In 1075 he re established the Archdiocese of Gniezno consecrated in 1064 and founded the Diocese of Plock He established Benedictine monasteries in Mogilno Lubin and Wroclaw Boleslaw II was also the first Polish monarch to produce his own coinage in quantity great enough to replace the foreign coins prevalent in the country during the reigns of the first Piast kings He established royal mints in Krakow and Wroclaw and reformed the coinage which brought considerable revenue into the royal coffers All these efforts had an enormous influence on the economic and cultural development of the country According to the chronicler Gallus Anonymus during his reign he was called largus the Generous in English Szczodry in Polish as he founded many churches and monasteries throughout Poland The nickname the Bold Smialy was only given to Boleslaw II for the first time in the later Chronicle of the Polish kings although it was considered by historiography of the 19th and 20th centuries as a contemporary nickname Contents 1 Duke of Poland 2 King of Poland 3 Deposition and death 4 Ossiach legend 5 Marriage issue and sexuality 6 ReferencesDuke of Poland editFollowing the death of his father Casimir in 1058 Boleslaw II as the eldest son inherited Greater and Lesser Poland as well as the Mazovian Pomerelian and Silesian lands His younger brothers Wladyslaw Herman and Mieszko became Governors of the remaining provinces However Mieszko died relatively early in 1065 at which point his lands came under the authority of Boleslaw II His father had left him a stabilised country Boleslaw II continued his foreign policy on surrounding his realm with allied kingdoms in order to prevail against the extensive Holy Roman Empire in the west he aimed to have Poland eventually bordering only allied countries This is said by whom to be the main reason behind his numerous foreign interventions in 1060 1063 he intervened in Hungary to aid his uncle King Bela I in the inheritance conflict with his nephew Solomon who was backed by his brother in law King Henry IV of Germany As a result Bela in 1061 with the support of Polish troops gained power nbsp Boleslaw II on the right punishing the wives of his knights and nobles for their alleged adultery 1504 National Museum of KrakowIn Hungary Boleslaw II pursued the policy of cooperation with the anti Imperial faction which allowed him to gain political independence from the Empire but put him in conflict with the Duchy of Bohemia an Imperial ally Moreover he escalated the conflict with the Premyslid duke Vratislaus II by refusing to pay the annual homage for Silesia and spurring the Bohemian nobility to revolt In 1063 Boleslaw II unsuccessfully besieged the then Moravian town of Hradec nad Moravici and was forced to retreat In the end relations with Vratislaus II were settled to a certain extent when the latter married Princess Swietoslawa Boleslaw II s sister 2 Meanwhile in 1063 King Bela I of Hungary died Boleslaw II could not defend the cause of his son Geza I against the German troops of Henry IV who finally installed Solomon on the Hungarian throne In 1069 Grand Prince Iziaslav I of Kiev and his wife Gertruda Boleslaw s aunt were overthrown A Polish military campaign re established them in power in Kiev In 1071 Boleslaw II attacked Bohemia again As he refused any attempt at arbitration by King Henry IV the question was settled by an armistice between the two belligerents however Boleslaw II ignoring the treaty renewed his attack in 1072 and refused to pay the tributes for Silesia to the Holy Roman Empire Henry IV prepared for a campaign against Poland but was hit by the outbreak of the Saxon rebellion in 1073 Due to his involvement in Hungarian Bohemian and Kievan affairs Boleslaw II neglected Poland s interests on the Baltic coast Therefore in either 1060 or 1066 Gdansk Pomerania Pomerelia severed its ties to the Polish Kingdom 3 King of Poland editWhen Hildebrand of Sovana an enemy of the German king became Pope Gregory VII in 1073 Boleslaw II saw in him a natural ally he started to apply the Pope s reforms in the Archbishopric of Gniezno and commenced negotiations to obtain the royal crown He spurred the ongoing revolt in Saxony which had forced Henry IV to retreat from that region he crushed the revolt at the Battle of Langensalza soon thereafter the Polish king seized the occasion to launch an invasion against Henry IV s vassal Vratislaus II of Bohemia alongside an ally from Grand Prince Vladimir II Monomakh of Kiev Thanks to his support of the papal cause during the investiture controversy in the Holy Roman Empire Boleslaw II gained the royal crown of Poland on Christmas Day of 1076 Archbishop Bogumil crowned him in the Gniezno Cathedral in the presence of a papal legate King Henry s IV act of contrition at the Walk to Canossa in 1077 included also the imperial recognition of Boleslaw II s royal title Boleslaw s new authority along with his pride however caused the Polish magnates to rebel as they feared the monarchy had started to grow too powerful Deposition and death edit nbsp Martyrdom of Bishop Stanislaus a medieval polychrome from Bielsko Biala in southern PolandIn 1077 Boleslaw II s troops helped two pretenders to assume the throne Ladislaus I of Hungary another son of Bela I and again Iziaslav in Kiev In 1078 while returning from the latter campaign the Polish troops conquered Red Ruthenia In 1079 however the conflict with the Polish nobles culminated into open revolt and Boleslaw was deposed and banished from the country The circumstances that led to the King s banishment hinge on the person of Bishop Stanislaus of Krakow who had excommunicated the king for his infidelity From historical records 4 it appears that Bishop Stanislaus was involved with the barons opposition movement plotting to remove the King and to place his brother Wladyslaw Herman on the throne Boleslaw II unilaterally declared Stanislaus guilty of treason Gallus Anonymus uses the word traditor meaning traitor The historical record was first proposed by Master Wincenty Kadlubek writing nearly 100 years after Gallus Anonymus and a century and a half after the actual affair 5 Boleslaw II on 11 April 1079 assaulted and then personally wielded the sword that murdered Bishop Stanislaus of Krakow during the celebration of a Mass 6 Though the bishop had privately and then publicly warned the king to repent of adultery and other vices Boleslaw chose a course of action more characteristic of his nickname the Bold Boleslaw found refuge at the court of King Ladislaus who also owed his crown to the deposed king 3 However according to Gallus Anonymus Boleslaw II s atrocious conduct towards his Hungarian hosts caused his premature death in 1081 or 1082 at the hands of an assassin probably by poisoning He was about 40 years old Ossiach legend edit nbsp Putative tomb of Boleslaw at the Ossiach Benedictine Abbey in AustriaA popular legend holds that Boleslaw proceeded to Rome to beg forgiveness from Pope Gregory who imposed on him to wander incognito as a mute repentant On a summer evening in 1082 he reached the Benedictine Abbey at Ossiach in Carinthia where he was received and did all kind of hard work until he finally was reconciled in the Sacrament of Penance and died At the walls of Ossiach there exists a tomb bearing the depiction of a horse and the inscription Rex Boleslaus Polonie occisor sancti Stanislai Epi Cracoviensis Boleslaw King of Poland murderer of Saint Stanislaus Bishop of Krakow In 1960 at the direction of Countess Karolina Lanckoronska the tomb was opened and indeed revealed male bones and the remains of a Polish knight s armor dating from the 11th century The legend however dates from centuries after the king s death it was first mentioned by the chronicler Maciej Miechowita in 1499 His burial place actually remains unknown Another popular hypothesis about the fate of his remains claims that in 1086 they were transferred to the Benedictine abbey of Tyniec near Krakow Marriage issue and sexuality editBefore 1069 Boleslaw II married Wyszeslawa d aft 1089 who according to the Chronicle of Jan Dlugosz and supported by some sources was a daughter of Grand Prince Sviatoslav II of Kiev by his first wife Kilikia possibly a member of the House of Dithmarschen They had one son Mieszko 1069 1089 Modern historians led by Oswald Balzer in 1895 refuted the Kievan origin and name of Boleslaw II s wife and expounded the theory that his wife was the queen named Agnes whose obituary is recorded in Zwiefalten She may have belonged to the Premyslid dynasty 7 Boleslaw s reluctance to marry being still single at 25 has led his critics to accuse him of homosexuality most notably by Jan Dlugosz for the sin of sodomy this was motivated more likely by politics as a smear campaign and it is more likely that Boleslaw was bisexual citation needed 8 9 References edit Andre Vauchez Richard Barrie Dobson Michael Lapidge eds 2000 Boleslas II the Bold Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages Routledge ISBN 978 1 57958 282 1 Retrieved 2010 03 25 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Boleslaus II Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 159 a b Poczet Krolow i Ksiazat Polskich Park Bielsko Biala 2005 Gallus Anonymus Cronicae et gesta ducum sive principum Polonorum Chronica seu originale regum et principum Poloniae by Wincenty Kadlubek between 1190 and 1208 CE The Bishop Hacked to Death by His own King http www catholicherald co uk news 2011 04 07 the bishop hacked to death by his own king T Jurek Agnes regina W poszukiwaniu zony Boleslawa Szczodrego Roczniki Historyczne LXXII 2006 s 95 104 B Bielaszka Podgorny 2018 Grzech sodomski Boleslawa Szczodrego w swietle Rocznikow Jana Dlugosza Vol 61 Studia Historyczne pp 21 36 Olga Steliga Dykas 26 June 2022 Tych krolow podejrzewano ze wola mezczyzn Mogli sie oddawac rozkoszom pod jednym warunkiem onet pl Boleslaw II the BoldPiast DynastyBorn ca 1043 Died 2 or 3 April 1081Preceded byCasimir I the Restorer Duke of PolandKing from 10761058 1079 Succeeded byWladyslaw I Herman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boleslaw II the Bold amp oldid 1176013216, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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