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John of Bohemia

John the Blind or John of Luxembourg (Luxembourgish: Jang de Blannen; German: Johann der Blinde; Czech: Jan Lucemburský; 10 August 1296 – 26 August 1346), was the Count of Luxembourg from 1313 and King of Bohemia from 1310 and titular King of Poland.[2] He is well known for having died while fighting in the Battle of Crécy at age 50, after having been blind for a decade. In his home country of Luxembourg he is considered a national hero.[3] Comparatively, in the Czech Republic (anciently the Kingdom of Bohemia), Jan Lucemburský is often recognized for his role as the father of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, one of the more significant Kings of Bohemia and one of the leading Holy Roman Emperors.

John the Blind
14th-century bust of John of Bohemia, St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague with the coat of arms of Bohemia and Luxembourg
King of Bohemia
Reign31 August 1310 – 26 August 1346
Coronation7 February 1311, Prague[1]
PredecessorHenry
SuccessorEmperor Charles IV
Count of Luxembourg, Arlon and Durbuy
Reign24 August 1313 – 26 August 1346
PredecessorEmperor Henry VII
SuccessorEmperor Charles IV
Born10 August 1296
Luxembourg[citation needed]
Died26 August 1346(1346-08-26) (aged 50)
Crécy-en-Ponthieu
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1310; died 1330)
(m. 1334)
Issue
HouseLuxembourg
FatherHenry VII, Holy Roman Emperor
MotherMargaret of Brabant

Early life edit

John was the eldest son of Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor and Margaret of Brabant, who was the daughter of John I, Duke of Brabant and Margaret of Flanders. Born in Luxembourg, raised in Paris, John was French by education, but deeply involved in the politics of Germany.

 
John's wedding to Elisabeth of Bohemia at Speyer

In 1310, his father arranged the marriage of 14-year-old John to Elizabeth of Bohemia.[4] The wedding took place in Speyer, after which the newlyweds made their way to Prague accompanied by a group led by the experienced diplomat and expert on Czech issues, Peter of Aspelt, Archbishop of Mainz. Because the Emperor had imperial Czech regiments accompany and protect the couple from Nuremberg to Prague, John was thus forced to invade Bohemia on behalf of his wife Elizabeth.[5] The Czech forces were able to gain control of Prague and depose the reigning king, Henry of Gorizia, King of Bohemia, on 3 December 1310. The deposed King Henry fled with his wife Anne of Bohemia (the sister of John's wife) to his duchy (the Duchy of Carinthia). The coronation of John and Elizabeth to the Bohemian throne took place on 7 February 1311, making them hence King and Queen of Bohemia.[5] The castle at Prague was uninhabitable so John made residence in one of the houses on the Old Town Square, and with the help of his advisors, he stabilized affairs in the Czech state. He thereby became one of the seven prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire and – in succession of his brother-in-law Wenceslaus III of Bohemia – claimant to the Polish and Hungarian throne. His attempts to follow his father as King of the Romans failed with the election of Louis IV of Bavaria in 1314. Nevertheless, John later would support Louis IV in his rivalry with Frederick the Fair, King of Germany, culminating in the 1322 Battle of Mühldorf in which in return he thus received the Czech region of Egerland as a reward.[citation needed]

Problems with nobility edit

Like his predecessor Henry, he was disliked by much of the Czech nobility. John was considered to be an "alien king" and gave up the administration of Bohemia after a while and embarked on a life of travel. He parted ways with his wife and left the Czech country to be ruled by the barons while spending time in Luxembourg and the French court.[6]

John's travels took him to Silesia, Poland, Lithuania, Tyrol, Northern Italy and Papal Avignon. A rival of King Władysław I the Elbow-high to the Polish crown, John supported the Teutonic Knights in the Polish–Teutonic War from 1326 to 1332. He also made several Silesian dukes swear an oath of allegiance to him. In 1335 in Congress of Visegrád, Władysław's successor King Casimir III the Great of Poland paid a significant amount of money in exchange for John's giving up his claim to the Polish throne.[7]

 
Seal of John of Bohemia. The Latin inscription on the border of the seal reads: iohannes dei grat boemie et pol rex lvcembvrg comes

John's first steps as king was the re-establishment of authority and to secure peace within the country. In 1311 he was able to reach an agreement with the Bohemian and Moravian aristocracy which is referred to as the "inaugural diplomas" with which John restricted the relations of both the ruler and aristocracy. The aristocracy was however allowed to hold the right to elect the king, to decide the matter of extraordinary taxation, the right to their property, and the right to choose freely whether or not to offer military support to the king in foreign wars. Although the aristocracy was encouraged to raise armies when peace within the country was threatened. On the other hand, the king's right to appoint a foreign official to office was abolished. John structured these agreements to provide a basis for the consolidation of the ruler's power within the Bohemian kingdom. The agreements weren't as successful as John intended. The aristocracy did not intend on surrendering its property and the influence it gained after Wenceslas II died.

The growing tensions within the aristocracy along with the lack of communication due to John's consistent absence in Bohemia led to a competition of two factions of the Czech nobility. One party, led by Jindřich of Lipá, gained the trust of John. The other party, led by Vilém Zajíc of Valdek (Latin: Wilhelmus Lepus de Waldek;[8] German: Wilhelm Hase von Waldeck), convinced the Queen that the intent of Lord Lipá was to overthrow John. Consequently, in 1315 John had Jindřich imprisoned.

By 1318 John had reconciled with the nobility and recognised their rights along with taking a further step to establish dualism of the Estates and a division of government between the king and the nobles.

International politics edit

Foreign politics, rather than Czech, appealed to John, as he was gifted at it. With the help of his father Henry, John was able to pressure the Habsburgs in reaching an agreement over Moravia. He was also able to pressure the House of Wettin, princes of Saxony, to give over the territory lying to the northern border of the Czech state. John also decided to reach out to improve the relations with the Silesian principalities, which were close, both in economic and political standings, to Bohemia and Moravia.

 
Lands ruled by John of Bohemia (bold borders) compared to the First Czechoslovak Republic (grey).

The international spectrum was further broadened for John when his father named him Imperial Vicar, his deputy for the governance of the Empire. This allowed for John to reach further and he was able to contribute to the imperial coronation along with helping with the conclusion of the Italian territorial wars. In 1313 Henry died suddenly bringing an end to this collaboration between him and John. However, through Henry's death a spot for the imperial crown opened up making John a possible candidate, the other two candidates being Fredrick of Habsburg and Louis of Bavaria.

In attempts to not support Fredrick, John voted for Louis at the diet of electors. In return for his support, Louis, as the new emperor, promised the support in territorial claims of the Czech state in Silesia and Meissen as well as the region of Cheb and the Upper Palatinate. Later in 1319, after the Brandenburg House of Ascania died out, John regained control over the Bautzen region and then the Görlitz region in 1329.[9]

In 1322/23 King John became unsettled by Louis's growing power and allied with France and Austria against him. The dispute would escalate with his son Charles claiming the Imperial crown in opposition to Louis.[10]

Death edit

 
Portrait from the Recueil d'Arras

John lost his eyesight at age 39 or 40 from ophthalmia in 1336, while crusading in Lithuania. A treatment by the famous physician Guy de Chauliac had no positive effects. At the outbreak of the Hundred Years' War in 1337 he allied with King Philip VI of France and was even appointed governor of Languedoc from 30 November 1338 to November 1340. At the Battle of Crécy in 1346 John controlled Phillip's advanced guard along with controlling the large contingents of Charles II of Alençon and Louis I, Count of Flanders.[11] John was killed at age 50 while fighting against the English during the battle. The medieval chronicler Jean Froissart left the following account of John's last actions:

...for all that he was nigh blind, when he understood the order of the battle, he said to them about him: 'Where is the lord Charles my son?' His men said: 'Sir, we cannot tell; we think he be fighting.' Then he said: 'Sirs, ye are my men, my companions and friends in this journey: I require you bring me so far forward, that I may strike one stroke with my sword.' They said they would do his commandment, and to the intent that they should not lose him in the press, they tied all their reins of their bridles each to other and set the king before to accomplish his desire, and so they went on their enemies. The lord Charles of Bohemia his son, who wrote himself king of Almaine and bare the arms, he came in good order to the battle; but when he saw that the matter went awry on their party, he departed, I cannot tell you which way. The king his father was so far forward that he strake a stroke with his sword, yea and more than four, and fought valiantly and so did his company; and they adventured themselves so forward, that they were there all slain, and the next day they were found in the place about the king, and all their horses tied each to other.

According to the Cronica ecclesiae Pragensis Benesii Krabice de Weitmile,[12] when told by his aides that the battle against the English at Crécy was lost and he better should flee to save his own life, John the Blind replied: "Absit, ut rex Boemie fugeret, sed illuc me ducite, ubi maior strepitus certaminis vigeret, Dominus sit nobiscum, nil timeamus, tantum filium meum diligenter custodite. ("Far be it that the King of Bohemia should run away. Instead, take me to the place where the noise of the battle is the loudest. The Lord will be with us. Nothing to fear. Just take good care of my son.")[13][14]

John was succeeded as King of Bohemia by his eldest son, Charles. In Luxembourg, he was succeeded by Wenceslaus, his son by his second wife.

Burial edit

 
John's tomb in the crypt of the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Luxembourg City

The body of John the Blind was moved to Kloster Altmünster ("Old-Minster Abbey") in Luxembourg. When the abbey was destroyed in 1543 the corpse was moved to Kloster Neumünster ("New-Minster Abbey") in Luxembourg. During the confusion of the French Revolution the mortal remains were salvaged by the Boch industrialist family (founders of Villeroy & Boch, ennobled in 1892) and hidden in an attic room in Mettlach on the Saar River. The legend has it that the monks of the abbey asked Pierre-Joseph Boch for this favour.

His son Jean-François Boch met with the future King Frederick William IV of Prussia on his voyage through the Rhineland in 1833 offering the remains as a gift. As Frederick William counted John the Blind among his ancestors, he ordered Karl Friedrich Schinkel to construct a funeral chapel. The chapel was built in 1834 and 1835 near Kastel-Staadt on a rock above the town. In 1838 on the anniversary of his death John the Blind was laid in a black marble sarcophagus in a public ceremony.

In 1945 the Luxembourg government took the chance to obtain possession of the bones. In a cloak and dagger operation, the remains were moved to the crypt of the Notre-Dame Cathedral, Luxembourg. The inscription on the tomb reads: "D.O.M. Hoc Sub Altari Servatur Ioannes, Rex Bohemiæ, Comes Luxemburgensis, Henrici vii Imperatoris Filius, Caroli iv Imperatoris Pater Wenceslai, Et Sigismundi Imperatorum Avus, Princeps Animo Maximus, obiit mcccxl 30 au."[15]

Family and children edit

 
Coat of Arms of John the Blind, Count of Luxemburg and King of Bohemia.

John was married twice:

First, to Elisabeth of Bohemia, the daughter of King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia.[16] In this marriage he had the following children:

  1. Margaret of Luxembourg, Duchess of Bavaria (8 July 1313 – 11 July 1341, Prague), married in Straubing 12 August 1328 to Henry XIV, Duke of Bavaria[17]
  2. Bonne of Luxembourg, Duchess of Normandy (21 May 1315 – 11 September 1349, Maubuisson, born "Judith"), married in Melun 6 August 1332 to John, Duke of Normandy,[17] who later became King John II of France after her death.
  3. Charles IV of Luxembourg (14 May 1316 – 29 November 1378), who succeeded him as King of Bohemia and later became Holy Roman Emperor[17]
  4. Ottokar ("Otto") (22 November 1318 – 20 April 1320), Prince of Bohemia[17]
  5. John Henry of Luxembourg (Jan Jindřich) (12 February 1322, Mělník – 12 November 1375), Margrave of Moravia[17]
  6. Anna of Luxembourg, Duchess of Austria (1323 – 3 September 1338), twin of Elizabeth, married 16 February 1335 to Otto, Duke of Austria[17]
  7. Elizabeth (1323–1324)[17]

Second (December 1334), to Beatrice of Bourbon,[17] daughter of Louis I, Duke of Bourbon. This marriage produced one son:

  1. Wenceslaus I of Luxembourg (25 February 1337 – 7 December 1383), Duke of Luxembourg and later Brabant through his marriage to the heiress Joanna, Duchess of Brabant.[17]

His illegitimate son Nicolaus was Patriarch of Aquileia from 1350 to 1358.

References edit

  1. ^ . Královská cesta. Archived from the original on 24 September 2019. Retrieved 11 July 2013.
  2. ^ "The Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg" (PDF). Service information et presse. (PDF) from the original on 30 July 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  3. ^ "[Luxemburgensia] Jean l'aveugle". le Quotidien (in French). 19 January 2017.
  4. ^ Holladay 2019, p. 82.
  5. ^ a b Agnew 2004, p. 30.
  6. ^ Teich 1998, p. 53-55.
  7. ^ Middleton 2015, p. 154.
  8. ^ Lepore, Vittorino. "Origini del Cognome Lepore in Boemia e Moravia (Cechia e Slovacchia)" [Origins of the Surname Lepore in Bohemia and Moravia (Czechia and Slovakia)]. Genealogia di Tutti I Lepore: Nati a Gemona del Friuli dal 1300 ad Oggi (in Italian).
  9. ^ Pánek, Jaroslav & Tůma, Oldřich (2009). A History of the Czech Lands. Prague: Karolinum Press. pp. 121–125. ISBN 978-8-024616452.
  10. ^ "Louis IV Holy Roman emperor". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  11. ^ Neillands, Robin (1990). The Hundred Years' War. London: Routledge. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-415071499.
  12. ^ Benessius de Weitmil (ca. 1300–1375) was a Cistercian monk who wrote the Chronicon Ecclesiae Pragensis.Scriptores rerum Bohemicarum. 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Cumque fuisset regi Iohanni, quia Francigene fugissent, relatum et ipse, [ut] presidio fuge suam et suorum vitam conservaret, exhortatus, respondit: Absit, ut rex Boemie fugeret, sed illuc me ducite, ubi maior strepitus certaminis vigeret, Dominus sit nobiscum, nil timeamus, tantum filium meum diligenter custodite. Cumque fuisset ductus in locum pugne, ecce rex Iohannes pluribus telis sagittatus mortem subiit, et multi nobiles regni Boemie cum eodem, in vigilia beati Rufi martiris, XXVI die Augusti." Source: CRONICA ECCLESIAE PRAGENSIS BENESSII KRABICE DE WEITMILE, clavmon.cz
  14. ^ The same quote on page 341 of the Prague edition from 1784: Benessii De Weitmil Chronicon Ecclesiae Pragensis.
  15. ^ Translation: To God, most good, most great. Under this altar is preserved John, King of Bohemia, Count of Luxembourg, son of Emperor Henry VII, father of Emperor Charles IV, grandfather of Emperors Wenceslas and Sigismund, a leader very great in spirit. Died August 30, 1340 [sic].
  16. ^ Lodge 1924, p. 275.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i Boehm & Fajt 2005, p. xvi.

Sources edit

  • Agnew, Hugh L. (2004). The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown. Hoover Institution Press.
  • Boehm, Barbara Drake; Fajt, Jiri, eds. (2005). Prague: The Crown of Bohemia, 1347-1437. Yale University Press.
  • Holladay, Joan A. (2019). Genealogy and the Politics of Representation in the High and Late Middle Ages. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lodge, Eleanor Constance (1924). The End of the Middle Age, 1273-1453. Methuen & Company Limited.
  • "The Chronicles of Froissart (translated by Lord Berners, edited by G.C. Macaulay. The Harvard Classics". www.bartleby.com. 26 August 2022.
  • "CRONICA ECCLESIAE PRAGENSIS BENESSII KRABICE DE WEITMILE". www.clavmon.cz.
  • Teich, Mikuláš (1998). Bohemia in History. Cambridge University Press.
  • Middleton, John (2015). "Casimir III". World Monarchies and Dynasties. Taylor & Francis.

Further reading edit

  • Neillands, Robin. The Hundred Years' War. London: Routledge, 1990.
  • Teich, Mikuláš. Bohemia in History. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998. 53–55. Print.
  • Pánek, Jaroslav, and Oldřich Tůma. A History Of The Czech Lands. Prague: Karolinum Press, 2009. 121–25. Print.

External links edit

  •   Quotations related to John of Bohemia at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to John of Bohemia at Wikimedia Commons
  • History of some of John's 4 resting places as of 1913, when this book was written. He is now in a fifth.
  • Social History in Bohemia during the 13th into the 14th century
John of Bohemia
Born: 10 August 1296  Died: 26 August 1346
Preceded by King of Bohemia
1310–1346
Succeeded by
Preceded by Count of Luxembourg
1313–1346

john, bohemia, john, luxembourg, redirects, here, other, people, john, luxembourg, count, soissons, john, luxembourg, lord, beauvoir, john, blind, redirects, here, producer, songwriter, john, ryan, songwriter, john, blind, john, luxembourg, luxembourgish, jang. John of Luxembourg redirects here For other people see John of Luxembourg Count of Soissons and John of Luxembourg Lord of Beauvoir John the Blind redirects here For the producer and songwriter see John Ryan songwriter John the Blind or John of Luxembourg Luxembourgish Jang de Blannen German Johann der Blinde Czech Jan Lucembursky 10 August 1296 26 August 1346 was the Count of Luxembourg from 1313 and King of Bohemia from 1310 and titular King of Poland 2 He is well known for having died while fighting in the Battle of Crecy at age 50 after having been blind for a decade In his home country of Luxembourg he is considered a national hero 3 Comparatively in the Czech Republic anciently the Kingdom of Bohemia Jan Lucembursky is often recognized for his role as the father of Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor one of the more significant Kings of Bohemia and one of the leading Holy Roman Emperors John the Blind14th century bust of John of Bohemia St Vitus Cathedral in Prague with the coat of arms of Bohemia and LuxembourgKing of BohemiaReign31 August 1310 26 August 1346Coronation7 February 1311 Prague 1 PredecessorHenrySuccessorEmperor Charles IVCount of Luxembourg Arlon and DurbuyReign24 August 1313 26 August 1346PredecessorEmperor Henry VIISuccessorEmperor Charles IVBorn10 August 1296Luxembourg citation needed Died26 August 1346 1346 08 26 aged 50 Crecy en PonthieuBurialAltmunster Abbey LuxembourgSpouseElizabeth of Bohemia m 1310 died 1330 wbr Beatrice of Bourbon m 1334 wbr IssueMargaret Duchess of Bavaria Bonne Duchess of Normandy Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor John Henry Margrave of Moravia Anna Duchess of Austria Wenceslaus I Duke of Luxembourg and Brabant Nicolaus illegitimate HouseLuxembourgFatherHenry VII Holy Roman EmperorMotherMargaret of Brabant Contents 1 Early life 2 Problems with nobility 3 International politics 4 Death 5 Burial 6 Family and children 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editJohn was the eldest son of Henry VII Holy Roman Emperor and Margaret of Brabant who was the daughter of John I Duke of Brabant and Margaret of Flanders Born in Luxembourg raised in Paris John was French by education but deeply involved in the politics of Germany nbsp John s wedding to Elisabeth of Bohemia at SpeyerIn 1310 his father arranged the marriage of 14 year old John to Elizabeth of Bohemia 4 The wedding took place in Speyer after which the newlyweds made their way to Prague accompanied by a group led by the experienced diplomat and expert on Czech issues Peter of Aspelt Archbishop of Mainz Because the Emperor had imperial Czech regiments accompany and protect the couple from Nuremberg to Prague John was thus forced to invade Bohemia on behalf of his wife Elizabeth 5 The Czech forces were able to gain control of Prague and depose the reigning king Henry of Gorizia King of Bohemia on 3 December 1310 The deposed King Henry fled with his wife Anne of Bohemia the sister of John s wife to his duchy the Duchy of Carinthia The coronation of John and Elizabeth to the Bohemian throne took place on 7 February 1311 making them hence King and Queen of Bohemia 5 The castle at Prague was uninhabitable so John made residence in one of the houses on the Old Town Square and with the help of his advisors he stabilized affairs in the Czech state He thereby became one of the seven prince electors of the Holy Roman Empire and in succession of his brother in law Wenceslaus III of Bohemia claimant to the Polish and Hungarian throne His attempts to follow his father as King of the Romans failed with the election of Louis IV of Bavaria in 1314 Nevertheless John later would support Louis IV in his rivalry with Frederick the Fair King of Germany culminating in the 1322 Battle of Muhldorf in which in return he thus received the Czech region of Egerland as a reward citation needed Problems with nobility editLike his predecessor Henry he was disliked by much of the Czech nobility John was considered to be an alien king and gave up the administration of Bohemia after a while and embarked on a life of travel He parted ways with his wife and left the Czech country to be ruled by the barons while spending time in Luxembourg and the French court 6 John s travels took him to Silesia Poland Lithuania Tyrol Northern Italy and Papal Avignon A rival of King Wladyslaw I the Elbow high to the Polish crown John supported the Teutonic Knights in the Polish Teutonic War from 1326 to 1332 He also made several Silesian dukes swear an oath of allegiance to him In 1335 in Congress of Visegrad Wladyslaw s successor King Casimir III the Great of Poland paid a significant amount of money in exchange for John s giving up his claim to the Polish throne 7 nbsp Seal of John of Bohemia The Latin inscription on the border of the seal reads iohannes dei grat boemie et pol rex lvcembvrg comesJohn s first steps as king was the re establishment of authority and to secure peace within the country In 1311 he was able to reach an agreement with the Bohemian and Moravian aristocracy which is referred to as the inaugural diplomas with which John restricted the relations of both the ruler and aristocracy The aristocracy was however allowed to hold the right to elect the king to decide the matter of extraordinary taxation the right to their property and the right to choose freely whether or not to offer military support to the king in foreign wars Although the aristocracy was encouraged to raise armies when peace within the country was threatened On the other hand the king s right to appoint a foreign official to office was abolished John structured these agreements to provide a basis for the consolidation of the ruler s power within the Bohemian kingdom The agreements weren t as successful as John intended The aristocracy did not intend on surrendering its property and the influence it gained after Wenceslas II died The growing tensions within the aristocracy along with the lack of communication due to John s consistent absence in Bohemia led to a competition of two factions of the Czech nobility One party led by Jindrich of Lipa gained the trust of John The other party led by Vilem Zajic of Valdek Latin Wilhelmus Lepus de Waldek 8 German Wilhelm Hase von Waldeck convinced the Queen that the intent of Lord Lipa was to overthrow John Consequently in 1315 John had Jindrich imprisoned By 1318 John had reconciled with the nobility and recognised their rights along with taking a further step to establish dualism of the Estates and a division of government between the king and the nobles International politics editForeign politics rather than Czech appealed to John as he was gifted at it With the help of his father Henry John was able to pressure the Habsburgs in reaching an agreement over Moravia He was also able to pressure the House of Wettin princes of Saxony to give over the territory lying to the northern border of the Czech state John also decided to reach out to improve the relations with the Silesian principalities which were close both in economic and political standings to Bohemia and Moravia nbsp Lands ruled by John of Bohemia bold borders compared to the First Czechoslovak Republic grey The international spectrum was further broadened for John when his father named him Imperial Vicar his deputy for the governance of the Empire This allowed for John to reach further and he was able to contribute to the imperial coronation along with helping with the conclusion of the Italian territorial wars In 1313 Henry died suddenly bringing an end to this collaboration between him and John However through Henry s death a spot for the imperial crown opened up making John a possible candidate the other two candidates being Fredrick of Habsburg and Louis of Bavaria In attempts to not support Fredrick John voted for Louis at the diet of electors In return for his support Louis as the new emperor promised the support in territorial claims of the Czech state in Silesia and Meissen as well as the region of Cheb and the Upper Palatinate Later in 1319 after the Brandenburg House of Ascania died out John regained control over the Bautzen region and then the Gorlitz region in 1329 9 In 1322 23 King John became unsettled by Louis s growing power and allied with France and Austria against him The dispute would escalate with his son Charles claiming the Imperial crown in opposition to Louis 10 Death edit nbsp Portrait from the Recueil d ArrasJohn lost his eyesight at age 39 or 40 from ophthalmia in 1336 while crusading in Lithuania A treatment by the famous physician Guy de Chauliac had no positive effects At the outbreak of the Hundred Years War in 1337 he allied with King Philip VI of France and was even appointed governor of Languedoc from 30 November 1338 to November 1340 At the Battle of Crecy in 1346 John controlled Phillip s advanced guard along with controlling the large contingents of Charles II of Alencon and Louis I Count of Flanders 11 John was killed at age 50 while fighting against the English during the battle The medieval chronicler Jean Froissart left the following account of John s last actions for all that he was nigh blind when he understood the order of the battle he said to them about him Where is the lord Charles my son His men said Sir we cannot tell we think he be fighting Then he said Sirs ye are my men my companions and friends in this journey I require you bring me so far forward that I may strike one stroke with my sword They said they would do his commandment and to the intent that they should not lose him in the press they tied all their reins of their bridles each to other and set the king before to accomplish his desire and so they went on their enemies The lord Charles of Bohemia his son who wrote himself king of Almaine and bare the arms he came in good order to the battle but when he saw that the matter went awry on their party he departed I cannot tell you which way The king his father was so far forward that he strake a stroke with his sword yea and more than four and fought valiantly and so did his company and they adventured themselves so forward that they were there all slain and the next day they were found in the place about the king and all their horses tied each to other According to the Cronica ecclesiae Pragensis Benesii Krabice de Weitmile 12 when told by his aides that the battle against the English at Crecy was lost and he better should flee to save his own life John the Blind replied Absit ut rex Boemie fugeret sed illuc me ducite ubi maior strepitus certaminis vigeret Dominus sit nobiscum nil timeamus tantum filium meum diligenter custodite Far be it that the King of Bohemia should run away Instead take me to the place where the noise of the battle is the loudest The Lord will be with us Nothing to fear Just take good care of my son 13 14 John was succeeded as King of Bohemia by his eldest son Charles In Luxembourg he was succeeded by Wenceslaus his son by his second wife Burial edit nbsp John s tomb in the crypt of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Luxembourg CityThe body of John the Blind was moved to Kloster Altmunster Old Minster Abbey in Luxembourg When the abbey was destroyed in 1543 the corpse was moved to Kloster Neumunster New Minster Abbey in Luxembourg During the confusion of the French Revolution the mortal remains were salvaged by the Boch industrialist family founders of Villeroy amp Boch ennobled in 1892 and hidden in an attic room in Mettlach on the Saar River The legend has it that the monks of the abbey asked Pierre Joseph Boch for this favour His son Jean Francois Boch met with the future King Frederick William IV of Prussia on his voyage through the Rhineland in 1833 offering the remains as a gift As Frederick William counted John the Blind among his ancestors he ordered Karl Friedrich Schinkel to construct a funeral chapel The chapel was built in 1834 and 1835 near Kastel Staadt on a rock above the town In 1838 on the anniversary of his death John the Blind was laid in a black marble sarcophagus in a public ceremony In 1945 the Luxembourg government took the chance to obtain possession of the bones In a cloak and dagger operation the remains were moved to the crypt of the Notre Dame Cathedral Luxembourg The inscription on the tomb reads D O M Hoc Sub Altari Servatur Ioannes Rex Bohemiae Comes Luxemburgensis Henrici vii Imperatoris Filius Caroli iv Imperatoris Pater Wenceslai Et Sigismundi Imperatorum Avus Princeps Animo Maximus obiit mcccxl 30 au 15 Family and children edit nbsp Coat of Arms of John the Blind Count of Luxemburg and King of Bohemia John was married twice First to Elisabeth of Bohemia the daughter of King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia 16 In this marriage he had the following children Margaret of Luxembourg Duchess of Bavaria 8 July 1313 11 July 1341 Prague married in Straubing 12 August 1328 to Henry XIV Duke of Bavaria 17 Bonne of Luxembourg Duchess of Normandy 21 May 1315 11 September 1349 Maubuisson born Judith married in Melun 6 August 1332 to John Duke of Normandy 17 who later became King John II of France after her death Charles IV of Luxembourg 14 May 1316 29 November 1378 who succeeded him as King of Bohemia and later became Holy Roman Emperor 17 Ottokar Otto 22 November 1318 20 April 1320 Prince of Bohemia 17 John Henry of Luxembourg Jan Jindrich 12 February 1322 Melnik 12 November 1375 Margrave of Moravia 17 Anna of Luxembourg Duchess of Austria 1323 3 September 1338 twin of Elizabeth married 16 February 1335 to Otto Duke of Austria 17 Elizabeth 1323 1324 17 Second December 1334 to Beatrice of Bourbon 17 daughter of Louis I Duke of Bourbon This marriage produced one son Wenceslaus I of Luxembourg 25 February 1337 7 December 1383 Duke of Luxembourg and later Brabant through his marriage to the heiress Joanna Duchess of Brabant 17 His illegitimate son Nicolaus was Patriarch of Aquileia from 1350 to 1358 References edit The Royal Route Kralovska cesta Archived from the original on 24 September 2019 Retrieved 11 July 2013 The Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg PDF Service information et presse Archived PDF from the original on 30 July 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2019 Luxemburgensia Jean l aveugle le Quotidien in French 19 January 2017 Holladay 2019 p 82 a b Agnew 2004 p 30 Teich 1998 p 53 55 Middleton 2015 p 154 Lepore Vittorino Origini del Cognome Lepore in Boemia e Moravia Cechia e Slovacchia Origins of the Surname Lepore in Bohemia and Moravia Czechia and Slovakia Genealogia di Tutti I Lepore Nati a Gemona del Friuli dal 1300 ad Oggi in Italian Panek Jaroslav amp Tuma Oldrich 2009 A History of the Czech Lands Prague Karolinum Press pp 121 125 ISBN 978 8 024616452 Louis IV Holy Roman emperor Encyclopedia Britannica Neillands Robin 1990 The Hundred Years War London Routledge p 100 ISBN 978 0 415071499 Benessius de Weitmil ca 1300 1375 was a Cistercian monk who wrote the Chronicon Ecclesiae Pragensis Scriptores rerum Bohemicarum Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Cumque fuisset regi Iohanni quia Francigene fugissent relatum et ipse ut presidio fuge suam et suorum vitam conservaret exhortatus respondit Absit ut rex Boemie fugeret sed illuc me ducite ubi maior strepitus certaminis vigeret Dominus sit nobiscum nil timeamus tantum filium meum diligenter custodite Cumque fuisset ductus in locum pugne ecce rex Iohannes pluribus telis sagittatus mortem subiit et multi nobiles regni Boemie cum eodem in vigilia beati Rufi martiris XXVI die Augusti Source CRONICA ECCLESIAE PRAGENSIS BENESSII KRABICE DE WEITMILE clavmon cz The same quote on page 341 of the Prague edition from 1784 Benessii De Weitmil Chronicon Ecclesiae Pragensis Translation To God most good most great Under this altar is preserved John King of Bohemia Count of Luxembourg son of Emperor Henry VII father of Emperor Charles IV grandfather of Emperors Wenceslas and Sigismund a leader very great in spirit Died August 30 1340 sic Lodge 1924 p 275 a b c d e f g h i Boehm amp Fajt 2005 p xvi Sources editAgnew Hugh L 2004 The Czechs and the Lands of the Bohemian Crown Hoover Institution Press Boehm Barbara Drake Fajt Jiri eds 2005 Prague The Crown of Bohemia 1347 1437 Yale University Press Holladay Joan A 2019 Genealogy and the Politics of Representation in the High and Late Middle Ages Cambridge University Press Lodge Eleanor Constance 1924 The End of the Middle Age 1273 1453 Methuen amp Company Limited The Chronicles of Froissart translated by Lord Berners edited by G C Macaulay The Harvard Classics www bartleby com 26 August 2022 CRONICA ECCLESIAE PRAGENSIS BENESSII KRABICE DE WEITMILE www clavmon cz Teich Mikulas 1998 Bohemia in History Cambridge University Press Middleton John 2015 Casimir III World Monarchies and Dynasties Taylor amp Francis Further reading editNeillands Robin The Hundred Years War London Routledge 1990 Teich Mikulas Bohemia in History New York Cambridge University Press 1998 53 55 Print Panek Jaroslav and Oldrich Tuma A History Of The Czech Lands Prague Karolinum Press 2009 121 25 Print External links edit nbsp Quotations related to John of Bohemia at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to John of Bohemia at Wikimedia Commons History of some of John s 4 resting places as of 1913 when this book was written He is now in a fifth Brief history of Czech lands Social History in Bohemia during the 13th into the 14th centuryJohn of BohemiaHouse of LuxembourgBorn 10 August 1296 Died 26 August 1346Preceded byHenry King of Bohemia1310 1346 Succeeded byCharles IV amp IPreceded byHenry VII Count of Luxembourg1313 1346 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John of Bohemia amp oldid 1183859918, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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