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German–Polish War (1003–1018)

German–Polish War

Map of Poland during the reign of Bolesław I the Brave with marked expeditions and major battles of the German–Polish War
DateEarly 1003–30 January 1018[1]
Location
Result Peace of Bautzen
Territorial
changes
Belligerents
Holy Roman Empire Duchy of Poland
Commanders and leaders
Henry II
Jaromír (1003–1012)[2]
Oldřich[2]
Bolesław I the Brave
Boleslaus III "the Red" (1003)[2]

The German–Polish War consisted of a series of struggles in 1003–1018,[1] between the Ottonian king Henry II of Germany (Holy Roman Emperor from 1014) and the Polish Piast ruler Bolesław I the Brave. The locus of conflict was the control of Lusatia, Upper Lusatia, as well as Bohemia, Moravia and Slovakia.[3][failed verification] The fighting ended with the Peace of Bautzen in 1018, which left Lusatia and Upper Lusatia as a fief of Poland, and Bohemia became a duchy in the Holy Roman Empire.[citation needed]

Background edit

Ottonian–Polish relations edit

 
Marches of Lusatia and Meissen about 1000

Bolesław maintained good relations with Emperor Otto III (r. 983/996–1002): together they fought against the West Slavic Lutici tribes and the Obotrites.[4] The Ottonian emperors had also supported Polish expansion against the Přemyslids, in the Baltic areas and against Kyivan Rus' since the 970s.[4] The Polish ruler also allied with Margrave Eckard of Meissen to contain the influence of the Přemyslid dukes of Bohemia.[citation needed] In 1000 Bolesław and Otto met at the Congress of Gniezno and solemnly celebrated their mutual recognition and friendship, with Bolesław called 'brother and cooperator of the [Holy Roman] Empire, friend and ally of the Roman people'.[4]

German succession crisis (January–October 1002) edit

The circumstances changed significantly, when in January 1002 Emperor Otto III suddenly died at the age of 21, leaving no heirs nor any succession arrangements.[5] The Bavarian duke Henry IV, member of a cadet branch of the Ottonian dynasty, raised claims to become King of the Romans – against rivalling duke Herman II of Swabia and margrave Eckard of Meissen.[5] The latter was attacked and killed by Saxon nobles a few weeks after.[citation needed] Henry was elected and crowned king in Mainz on 6 or 7 June 1002.[5] Henry then launched an indecisive campaign against Herman of Swabia, but was recognised by the Thuringians, Saxons and lower Lotharingians in subsequent months, either by homage or renewed election.[6] Herman of Swabia eventually submitted to king-elect Henry II on 1 October 1002.[7]

Merseburg council (July 1002) edit

Bolesław occupied Lower Lusatia and the Milsko/Milzener land around Budziszyn (now Bautzen) after the death of Eckard, presumably in agreement with the Ekkehardings, and when Bolesław participated in the renewed election of Henry II by the Saxon princes on July 1002 at the Kaiserpfalz in Merseburg, Henry gave Bolesław these lands as fiefs.[4] In return, Bolesław recognised Henry as king.[4]

Bolesław's claims for enfeoffment of Meissen were rejected; these passed on to Eckard's brother Gunzelin, Margrave of Meissen.[8] Bolesław left the royal court with disappointment.[citation needed] Moreover, an attempt was made on Bolesław's life, which he escaped only with the help of Duke Bernard of Saxony, the Nordgau margrave Henry of Schweinfurt and several friendly German nobles.[citation needed] While it is not known for sure if the attack had been ordered by Henry and the contemporary chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg denied any complicity, Bolesław believed this was the case.[citation needed] In any case Henry neither protected him, nor punished the assailants.[citation needed]

Meissen inheritance struggle (1002) edit

Thietmar of Merseburg reported in his Chronicon that Bolesław set Strehla Castle in the Margraviate of Meissen ablaze on his way back to Poland, although it remains unclear why he did so.[9] At the time, the castle town of Strehla (Polish: Strzała) was in the possession of Regelinda, the new wife of Herman I, Margrave of Meissen, the oldest son of Eckard.[9] Although Gunzelin had received his older brother Eckard's inheritance according to the principle of agnatic seniority – then still 'commonly respected among Slavic communities of the period' – Herman at the Merseburg council also seems to have pressed rights to his father's inheritance according to the newly emerging principle of agnatic primogeniture as Eckhard's firstborn son.[10] Thietmar also suggested that Herman was involved in the attempt on Bolesław's life, and that this was the reason why the Piast duke razed Strehla, the castle town owned by Herman's wife.[9] Herman would eventually lose the Meissen inheritance struggle against his uncle Gunzelin, who was supported by Bolesław.[10]

The Piast ruler himself referred to both his former marriage with a daughter of the earlier deceased margrave Rikdag and his present marriage with Emnilda, daughter of a Lutici prince, in order to expand his influence to the Lusatian and Meissen marches.[citation needed] King Henry in turn renewed his Bavarian fellowship with the Přemyslid rulers of Bohemia, old-time enemies of the Polish Piast dynasty.[citation needed]

Bohemian war of succession (since 999) edit

After the death of duke Boleslaus II "the Pious" of Bohemia, a fratricidal war erupted between his three sons Boleslaus III, Jaromír, and Oldřich.[11][12] Boleslaus III initially managed to secure the throne and expel his brothers and mother Emma, who in 1001 took refuge at the court of duke Henry IV of Bavaria (who became the German king Henry II 3 years later), but bishop Thiedag (Thiddag) of Prague and part of the nobility still opposed him.[12] Although Thiedag fled to Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen, the hostile nobles deposed Boleslaus III and instead enthroned Vladivoj[12] in May 1002.[citation needed] Vladivoj paid homage to German king Henry II as Bohemia's overlord, but was unable to re-establish order to Bohemia during his brief reign[12] (he died in January 1003[citation needed]). After his death, the Bohemian nobles invited Jaromír and Oldřich back from exile in Bavaria to take the throne.[13] But then the Polish duke Bolesław I the Brave intervened by militarily invading and occupying Bohemia, and putting Boleslaus III (who had been in his custody) back in power as his vassal.[2] Boleslaus III took bloody revenge on many nobles who had deposed him, especially the Vršovci clan, so that Bohemian opinion turned against him.[2] Then Bolesław of Poland imprisoned and blinded Boleslaus III, and assumed personal rule over Bohemia.[2]

Conflict edit

Müller-Mertens (1995) divided the conflict between Henry II and Bolesław I into three campaigns: 1003–5, 1007–13, and 1015–18.[4]

1003–1005 edit

At the beginning of 1003, Bolesław seized Bohemia; Henry demanded that Bolesław pay homage to him to be invested with the Bohemian dukedom, but Bolesław refused.[14] During Easter 1003 in Quedlinburg, Henry II forged an alliance with the Luitici tribes against Bolesław to drive him out of the Saxon eastern marches and out of Poland.[4] Because the Duchy of Poland had recently officially converted to Christianity, but the Luitici people were still overwhelmingly pagan, the German king's alliance with the Luitici was heavily criticised by the Saxon nobility, and only reluctantly and without enthusiasm participated in Henry's wars against Poland.[4] In turn, Henry had Margrave Gunzelin of Meissen, Eckard's brother, arrested and reached the commitment of several Saxon bishops.[citation needed]

Bolesław could rely on the support by Margrave Henry of Schweinfurt, whose expectations to become Bavarian duke in return for supporting Henry's kingship had been disappointed by Henry.[7] In August 1003, in an episode known as the Schweinfurter Fehde [de], Henry of Schweinfurt rose up against Henry II with the backing of Bolesław, but Henry II crushed this revolt.[7]

After Bolesław had invaded Bohemia to depose Duke Boleslaus III, he was combated both by the Bohemian nobility and Boleslaus' brother Jaromír on the side of the German king. The fighting did not stop until Henry, with Bohemian and Lutici support, launched a campaign to Poznań, where a peace was concluded. As a result, Bolesław, unlike his ally Henry of Schweinfurt, refused to submit to King Henry, but had to give up his earlier conquests in Lusatia and Meissen.[citation needed]

1007–1013 edit

In 1007, Bolesław, possibly preempting an attack by Henry, once again marched against the Luitici tribes. His campaign took him up to the gates of Magdeburg and he regained control of eastern Lusatia and Meissen. After several unsuccessful campaigns by the German king from 1010 onwards, another peace was agreed to in Merseburg in 1013. This time Bolesław kept eastern Lusatia and the Milceni lands around Bautzen as Imperial fiefs. He also received military aid from Henry for his intervention in the Kievan succession crisis. In return, Bolesław swore an oath of allegiance, promised to support Henry's bid for the crown of Holy Roman Emperor and aid him in his Italian campaigns. To confirm the alliance, Bolesław's son Mieszko II Lambert married the German noblewoman Richeza of Lotharingia, a distant relative of King Henry.[citation needed]

1015–1018 edit

 
Memorial to the successful Polish defense of Niemcza in 1017

After Merseburg, Bolesław got entangled in the Kievan succession crisis backing his son-in-law Sviatopolk I against Henry's candidate Yaroslav the Wise. He thereby failed to support Henry in Italy and also refused to acknowledge Meissen and Lusatia as fiefs; he believed he held them independently of the Empire. To enforce Bolesław's submission, Henry had his son Mieszko II taken hostage and did not release him until 1014 following pressure from Saxon nobles.[citation needed]

Bolesław consistently refused to come before the German king. As a result, in 1015 Henry, supported by his pagan Liutician allies, launched another armed expedition against him. He attempted to cross into Greater Poland but was stopped by Bolesław's troops at Krosno on the Oder River. In 1017 Henry renewed his campaign, while Yaroslav attacked Poland from the eastern side. The emperor's troops besieged Niemcza in Silesia, however, with the help of outside reinforcements the city held out and Henry was eventually forced to retreat. The war spread over to Bohemia, where Mieszko's forces ravaged the lands and, while Bolesław again lost control over Kiev, peace efforts were resumed by the Saxon nobility.[citation needed]

Peace of Bautzen edit

In January 1018 Archbishop Gero of Magdeburg, Bishop Arnulf of Halberstadt, Margrave Herman of Meissen, the Wettin margrave Theodoric II of Lusatia, and Henry's ministeriales declared the Peace of Bautzen, which left eastern Lusatia and the Milceni lands (later Upper Lusatia) with Bolesław.[4] On the other hand, Bohemia remained in Ottonian hands as part of the Holy Roman Empire.[4] The contemporary chronicle by Thietmar of Merseburg does not give details of the treaty.[citation needed] Historians have differed in their interpretation whether these were granted to Bolesław as imperial fiefs,[4] or if he held them with full sovereignty.[citation needed] Emperor Henry II did not renew the campaigns against Bolesław thereafter and the peace was confirmed by Bolesław's marriage with Oda of Meissen, daughter of Margrave Eckard I.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Reuter 1995, p. 262, 549.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Reuter 1995, p. 520.
  3. ^ Reuter 1995, p. 523.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Reuter 1995, p. 262.
  5. ^ a b c Reuter 1995, p. 260.
  6. ^ Reuter 1995, p. 260–261.
  7. ^ a b c Reuter 1995, p. 261.
  8. ^ Pleszczynski 2011, p. 207–208.
  9. ^ a b c Pleszczynski 2011, p. 211.
  10. ^ a b Pleszczynski 2011, p. 208.
  11. ^ Sullivan, H. W. (2010). "The Politics of Bohemia and the Thirty Years' War on the Spanish Baroque Stage". Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 87 (6): 735. doi:10.1080/14753820.2010.513097. S2CID 154386807. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d Reuter 1995, p. 519.
  13. ^ Reuter 1995, p. 519–520.
  14. ^ Reuter 1995, p. 262, 520.

Bibliography edit

  • Jasienica, Pawel (2007). Polska Piastów (in Polish). Proszynski Media. ISBN 978-83-7648-284-2.
  • Pleszczynski, Andrzej (2011). The Birth of a Stereotype: Polish Rulers and Their Country in German Writings C. 1000 A.D. Leiden: Brill. p. 352. ISBN 9789004185548. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  • Rosik, Stanisław; Przemysław, Wiszewski (2006). Księga królów i książat polskich (in Polish). Wydawnictwo Dolnośląskie. ISBN 978-83-7384-604-3.
  • Reuter, Timothy (1995). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, c.900–c.1024. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 891. ISBN 9780521364478. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  • Jan, Lerski; Wrobel, Piotr; Kozicki, Richard (1996). Historical Dictionary of Poland. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-26007-0.

german, polish, 1003, 1018, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, german, polish, 1003, 1018, news, newspa. 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 German Polish War 1003 1018 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message German Polish WarMap of Poland during the reign of Boleslaw I the Brave with marked expeditions and major battles of the German Polish WarDateEarly 1003 30 January 1018 1 LocationLusatia Meissen Bohemia Greater Poland SilesiaResultPeace of BautzenTerritorialchangesPoland is granted control over Lusatia and Upper Lusatia The Duchy of Bohemia becomes an Imperial State of the Holy Roman EmpireBelligerentsHoly Roman EmpireDuchy of PolandCommanders and leadersHenry II Jaromir 1003 1012 2 Oldrich 2 Boleslaw I the Brave Boleslaus III the Red 1003 2 The German Polish War consisted of a series of struggles in 1003 1018 1 between the Ottonian king Henry II of Germany Holy Roman Emperor from 1014 and the Polish Piast ruler Boleslaw I the Brave The locus of conflict was the control of Lusatia Upper Lusatia as well as Bohemia Moravia and Slovakia 3 failed verification The fighting ended with the Peace of Bautzen in 1018 which left Lusatia and Upper Lusatia as a fief of Poland and Bohemia became a duchy in the Holy Roman Empire citation needed Contents 1 Background 1 1 Ottonian Polish relations 1 2 German succession crisis January October 1002 1 3 Merseburg council July 1002 1 4 Meissen inheritance struggle 1002 1 5 Bohemian war of succession since 999 2 Conflict 2 1 1003 1005 2 2 1007 1013 2 3 1015 1018 3 Peace of Bautzen 4 References 5 BibliographyBackground editOttonian Polish relations edit nbsp Marches of Lusatia and Meissen about 1000 Boleslaw maintained good relations with Emperor Otto III r 983 996 1002 together they fought against the West Slavic Lutici tribes and the Obotrites 4 The Ottonian emperors had also supported Polish expansion against the Premyslids in the Baltic areas and against Kyivan Rus since the 970s 4 The Polish ruler also allied with Margrave Eckard of Meissen to contain the influence of the Premyslid dukes of Bohemia citation needed In 1000 Boleslaw and Otto met at the Congress of Gniezno and solemnly celebrated their mutual recognition and friendship with Boleslaw called brother and cooperator of the Holy Roman Empire friend and ally of the Roman people 4 German succession crisis January October 1002 edit Further information Otto III Holy Roman Emperor Succession crisis and 1002 German royal election The circumstances changed significantly when in January 1002 Emperor Otto III suddenly died at the age of 21 leaving no heirs nor any succession arrangements 5 The Bavarian duke Henry IV member of a cadet branch of the Ottonian dynasty raised claims to become King of the Romans against rivalling duke Herman II of Swabia and margrave Eckard of Meissen 5 The latter was attacked and killed by Saxon nobles a few weeks after citation needed Henry was elected and crowned king in Mainz on 6 or 7 June 1002 5 Henry then launched an indecisive campaign against Herman of Swabia but was recognised by the Thuringians Saxons and lower Lotharingians in subsequent months either by homage or renewed election 6 Herman of Swabia eventually submitted to king elect Henry II on 1 October 1002 7 Merseburg council July 1002 edit Boleslaw occupied Lower Lusatia and the Milsko Milzener land around Budziszyn now Bautzen after the death of Eckard presumably in agreement with the Ekkehardings and when Boleslaw participated in the renewed election of Henry II by the Saxon princes on July 1002 at the Kaiserpfalz in Merseburg Henry gave Boleslaw these lands as fiefs 4 In return Boleslaw recognised Henry as king 4 Boleslaw s claims for enfeoffment of Meissen were rejected these passed on to Eckard s brother Gunzelin Margrave of Meissen 8 Boleslaw left the royal court with disappointment citation needed Moreover an attempt was made on Boleslaw s life which he escaped only with the help of Duke Bernard of Saxony the Nordgau margrave Henry of Schweinfurt and several friendly German nobles citation needed While it is not known for sure if the attack had been ordered by Henry and the contemporary chronicler Thietmar of Merseburg denied any complicity Boleslaw believed this was the case citation needed In any case Henry neither protected him nor punished the assailants citation needed Meissen inheritance struggle 1002 edit Thietmar of Merseburg reported in his Chronicon that Boleslaw set Strehla Castle in the Margraviate of Meissen ablaze on his way back to Poland although it remains unclear why he did so 9 At the time the castle town of Strehla Polish Strzala was in the possession of Regelinda the new wife of Herman I Margrave of Meissen the oldest son of Eckard 9 Although Gunzelin had received his older brother Eckard s inheritance according to the principle of agnatic seniority then still commonly respected among Slavic communities of the period Herman at the Merseburg council also seems to have pressed rights to his father s inheritance according to the newly emerging principle of agnatic primogeniture as Eckhard s firstborn son 10 Thietmar also suggested that Herman was involved in the attempt on Boleslaw s life and that this was the reason why the Piast duke razed Strehla the castle town owned by Herman s wife 9 Herman would eventually lose the Meissen inheritance struggle against his uncle Gunzelin who was supported by Boleslaw 10 The Piast ruler himself referred to both his former marriage with a daughter of the earlier deceased margrave Rikdag and his present marriage with Emnilda daughter of a Lutici prince in order to expand his influence to the Lusatian and Meissen marches citation needed King Henry in turn renewed his Bavarian fellowship with the Premyslid rulers of Bohemia old time enemies of the Polish Piast dynasty citation needed Bohemian war of succession since 999 edit After the death of duke Boleslaus II the Pious of Bohemia a fratricidal war erupted between his three sons Boleslaus III Jaromir and Oldrich 11 12 Boleslaus III initially managed to secure the throne and expel his brothers and mother Emma who in 1001 took refuge at the court of duke Henry IV of Bavaria who became the German king Henry II 3 years later but bishop Thiedag Thiddag of Prague and part of the nobility still opposed him 12 Although Thiedag fled to Eckard I Margrave of Meissen the hostile nobles deposed Boleslaus III and instead enthroned Vladivoj 12 in May 1002 citation needed Vladivoj paid homage to German king Henry II as Bohemia s overlord but was unable to re establish order to Bohemia during his brief reign 12 he died in January 1003 citation needed After his death the Bohemian nobles invited Jaromir and Oldrich back from exile in Bavaria to take the throne 13 But then the Polish duke Boleslaw I the Brave intervened by militarily invading and occupying Bohemia and putting Boleslaus III who had been in his custody back in power as his vassal 2 Boleslaus III took bloody revenge on many nobles who had deposed him especially the Vrsovci clan so that Bohemian opinion turned against him 2 Then Boleslaw of Poland imprisoned and blinded Boleslaus III and assumed personal rule over Bohemia 2 Conflict editMuller Mertens 1995 divided the conflict between Henry II and Boleslaw I into three campaigns 1003 5 1007 13 and 1015 18 4 1003 1005 edit At the beginning of 1003 Boleslaw seized Bohemia Henry demanded that Boleslaw pay homage to him to be invested with the Bohemian dukedom but Boleslaw refused 14 During Easter 1003 in Quedlinburg Henry II forged an alliance with the Luitici tribes against Boleslaw to drive him out of the Saxon eastern marches and out of Poland 4 Because the Duchy of Poland had recently officially converted to Christianity but the Luitici people were still overwhelmingly pagan the German king s alliance with the Luitici was heavily criticised by the Saxon nobility and only reluctantly and without enthusiasm participated in Henry s wars against Poland 4 In turn Henry had Margrave Gunzelin of Meissen Eckard s brother arrested and reached the commitment of several Saxon bishops citation needed Boleslaw could rely on the support by Margrave Henry of Schweinfurt whose expectations to become Bavarian duke in return for supporting Henry s kingship had been disappointed by Henry 7 In August 1003 in an episode known as the Schweinfurter Fehde de Henry of Schweinfurt rose up against Henry II with the backing of Boleslaw but Henry II crushed this revolt 7 After Boleslaw had invaded Bohemia to depose Duke Boleslaus III he was combated both by the Bohemian nobility and Boleslaus brother Jaromir on the side of the German king The fighting did not stop until Henry with Bohemian and Lutici support launched a campaign to Poznan where a peace was concluded As a result Boleslaw unlike his ally Henry of Schweinfurt refused to submit to King Henry but had to give up his earlier conquests in Lusatia and Meissen citation needed 1007 1013 edit In 1007 Boleslaw possibly preempting an attack by Henry once again marched against the Luitici tribes His campaign took him up to the gates of Magdeburg and he regained control of eastern Lusatia and Meissen After several unsuccessful campaigns by the German king from 1010 onwards another peace was agreed to in Merseburg in 1013 This time Boleslaw kept eastern Lusatia and the Milceni lands around Bautzen as Imperial fiefs He also received military aid from Henry for his intervention in the Kievan succession crisis In return Boleslaw swore an oath of allegiance promised to support Henry s bid for the crown of Holy Roman Emperor and aid him in his Italian campaigns To confirm the alliance Boleslaw s son Mieszko II Lambert married the German noblewoman Richeza of Lotharingia a distant relative of King Henry citation needed 1015 1018 edit nbsp Memorial to the successful Polish defense of Niemcza in 1017 After Merseburg Boleslaw got entangled in the Kievan succession crisis backing his son in law Sviatopolk I against Henry s candidate Yaroslav the Wise He thereby failed to support Henry in Italy and also refused to acknowledge Meissen and Lusatia as fiefs he believed he held them independently of the Empire To enforce Boleslaw s submission Henry had his son Mieszko II taken hostage and did not release him until 1014 following pressure from Saxon nobles citation needed Boleslaw consistently refused to come before the German king As a result in 1015 Henry supported by his pagan Liutician allies launched another armed expedition against him He attempted to cross into Greater Poland but was stopped by Boleslaw s troops at Krosno on the Oder River In 1017 Henry renewed his campaign while Yaroslav attacked Poland from the eastern side The emperor s troops besieged Niemcza in Silesia however with the help of outside reinforcements the city held out and Henry was eventually forced to retreat The war spread over to Bohemia where Mieszko s forces ravaged the lands and while Boleslaw again lost control over Kiev peace efforts were resumed by the Saxon nobility citation needed Peace of Bautzen editIn January 1018 Archbishop Gero of Magdeburg Bishop Arnulf of Halberstadt Margrave Herman of Meissen the Wettin margrave Theodoric II of Lusatia and Henry s ministeriales declared the Peace of Bautzen which left eastern Lusatia and the Milceni lands later Upper Lusatia with Boleslaw 4 On the other hand Bohemia remained in Ottonian hands as part of the Holy Roman Empire 4 The contemporary chronicle by Thietmar of Merseburg does not give details of the treaty citation needed Historians have differed in their interpretation whether these were granted to Boleslaw as imperial fiefs 4 or if he held them with full sovereignty citation needed Emperor Henry II did not renew the campaigns against Boleslaw thereafter and the peace was confirmed by Boleslaw s marriage with Oda of Meissen daughter of Margrave Eckard I citation needed References edit a b Reuter 1995 p 262 549 a b c d e f Reuter 1995 p 520 Reuter 1995 p 523 a b c d e f g h i j k Reuter 1995 p 262 a b c Reuter 1995 p 260 Reuter 1995 p 260 261 a b c Reuter 1995 p 261 Pleszczynski 2011 p 207 208 a b c Pleszczynski 2011 p 211 a b Pleszczynski 2011 p 208 Sullivan H W 2010 The Politics of Bohemia and the Thirty Years War on the Spanish Baroque Stage Bulletin of Spanish Studies 87 6 735 doi 10 1080 14753820 2010 513097 S2CID 154386807 Retrieved 25 August 2022 a b c d Reuter 1995 p 519 Reuter 1995 p 519 520 Reuter 1995 p 262 520 Bibliography editJasienica Pawel 2007 Polska Piastow in Polish Proszynski Media ISBN 978 83 7648 284 2 Pleszczynski Andrzej 2011 The Birth of a Stereotype Polish Rulers and Their Country in German Writings C 1000 A D Leiden Brill p 352 ISBN 9789004185548 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Rosik Stanislaw Przemyslaw Wiszewski 2006 Ksiega krolow i ksiazat polskich in Polish Wydawnictwo Dolnoslaskie ISBN 978 83 7384 604 3 Reuter Timothy 1995 The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 3 c 900 c 1024 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 891 ISBN 9780521364478 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Jan Lerski Wrobel Piotr Kozicki Richard 1996 Historical Dictionary of Poland Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 26007 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German Polish War 1003 1018 amp oldid 1215470602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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