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Mieszko I

Mieszko I (Polish pronunciation: [ˈmjɛʂkɔ ˈpjɛrfʂɨ] (listen); c. 930 – 25 May 992)[1] was the first ruler of Poland and the founder of the first independent Polish state, Civitas Schinesghe also known as the Duchy of Poland. His reign stretched from 960 to his death and he was a member of the Piast dynasty, a son of Siemomysł and a grandson of Lestek. He was the father of Bolesław I the Brave (the first crowned king of Poland) and of Gunhild of Wenden.[2] Most sources identify Mieszko I as the father of Sigrid the Haughty, a Scandinavian queen (though one source identifies her father as Skoglar Toste), the grandfather of Canute the Great (Gundhild's son) and the great-grandfather of Gunhilda of Denmark, Canute the Great's daughter and wife of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.

Mieszko I
Duke of Poland
Reign960–992
PredecessorSiemomysł
SuccessorBolesław I the Brave
Bornc. 930
Died25 May 992(992-05-25) (aged 61–62)
Poznań, Poland
SpouseDoubravka of Bohemia
Oda of Haldensleben
Issue
more...
Bolesław I the Brave
Świętosława
Vladivoj, Duke of Bohemia (?)
Mieszko
Świętopełk
Lambert
DynastyPiast
FatherSiemomysł
Religion

He was the first Christian ruler of Poland, but he continued the policies of both his father and grandfather, who initiated the process of creation of the Polish state. Through both alliances and military force, Mieszko extended ongoing Polish conquests and early in his reign subjugated Kuyavia and probably Gdańsk Pomerania and Masovia. For most of his reign, Mieszko I was involved in warfare for the control of Western Pomerania and eventually conquered it up to the vicinity of the lower Oder river. During the last years of his life, he fought the Bohemian state and won Silesia and Lesser Poland. He is sometimes called the "Clovis of Poland" for his role in the founding of Christian Poland.

Mieszko I's alliance with the Czech prince, Boleslaus I the Cruel, strengthened by his marriage in 965 to the Czech Přemyslid princess Dobrawa, and his baptism in 966 put him and his country in the cultural sphere of Western Christianity. Apart from the great conquests accomplished during his reign, which proved to be fundamental for the future of Poland, Mieszko I was renowned for his internal reforms, which were aimed at expanding and improving the so-called war monarchy system.

According to existing sources, Mieszko I was a wise politician, a talented military leader and a charismatic ruler. He successfully used diplomacy by concluding alliances, first with Bohemia, then Sweden and the Holy Roman Empire. In foreign policy, he placed the interests of his country foremost, even entering into agreements with his former enemies. On his death, he left to his sons a country with greatly expanded territories and a well-established position in Europe.

Mieszko I also enigmatically appeared as "Dagome" in a papal document dating to about 1085, called Dagome iudex, which mentions a gift or dedication of Mieszko's land to the Pope (the act took place almost a hundred years earlier).

It is roughly to his borders that Poland was returned in 1945.

Early life

There is no certain information on Mieszko I's life before he took control over his lands. Only the Lesser Poland Chronicle gives the date of his birth as somewhere between the years 920–931 (depending on the version of the manuscript); however, modern researchers do not recognize the chronicle as a reliable source. Several historians on the basis of their investigations postulated the date of Mieszko I's birth to have been between 922–945;[3] the activity of the Duke in his final years of life puts the date of his birth closer to the latter year.[4]

Mieszko's name has traditionally been thought to be a diminutive of Mieczysław but this is refuted by the majority of modern historians. According to a legend first described by Gallus Anonymus,[citation needed] Mieszko was blind during his first seven years of life. This typical medieval allegory referred to his paganism rather than an actual disability. Another name of Mieszko, "Dagome", appears in the Dagome iudex document, though its origin is uncertain.[5]

Reign

Early reign

 
Strongholds under Mieszko's rule

Mieszko I took over the rule after his father's death c. 950–960, probably closer to the latter date.[6] Due to the lack of sources it is not possible to determine exactly which lands he inherited. Certainly among them were the areas inhabited by the Polans and Goplans,[7] as well as the Sieradz-Łęczyca lands and Kuyavia.[8] It is possible that this state included also Masovia[9] and Gdańsk Pomerania.[10] Soon the new ruler faced the task of integrating the relatively large, ethnically and culturally heterogeneous territory. Although the residents of areas controlled by Mieszko spoke mostly one language, had similar beliefs and reached a similar level of economic and general development, they were socially connected primarily by tribal structures. It appears that the elders cooperating with the Duke first felt the need for super-tribal unity, as expansion allowed them to broaden their influence.

Mieszko and his people were described around 966 by Abraham ben Jacob, a Sephardi Jewish traveller, who at that time visited the Prague court of Duke Boleslav I the Cruel.[11] Abraham presented Mieszko I as one of the four Slavic "kings",[12] reigning over a vast "northern" area, with a highly regarded and substantial military force at his disposal. More precise contemporary records regarding Mieszko were compiled by Widukind of Corvey, and, half a century later, by Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg.

By the time Mieszko I took over from his father, the Polans' tribal federation of Greater Poland had for some time been actively expanding. Continuing this process, perhaps in the first years of Mieszko's reign, if it had not been done already by his father, Mieszko I conquered Masovia. Likely also during that period or earlier, at least part of Gdańsk Pomerania was obtained.[8] Mieszko's interests were then concentrated mainly on areas occupied by the eastern (i.e., near the Oder River) branches of the Polabian Slavs.

In 963 Margrave Gero of Meissen conquered territories occupied by the Polabian Lusatian and Słupian tribes, and as a result came into direct contact with the Polish state. At the same time (about 960) Mieszko I began his expansion against the Velunzani and Lutici tribes. The war was recorded by the traveller Abraham ben Jacob. According to him, Mieszko I had fought against the Weltaba tribe, commonly identified with the Veleti. Wichmann the Younger, a Saxon nobleman who was then a leader of a band of Polabian Slavs, defeated Mieszko twice, and around 963 a brother of Mieszko, whose name is unknown, was killed in the fighting. The frontiers at the mouth of the Oder River were also desired by the German margraves. In addition, the Veleti Bohemia, which at that time possessed Silesia and Lesser Poland regions, constituted a danger for the young state of the Polans.

Margrave Gero's war; Mieszko's homage to the Emperor

The chronicle of Thietmar poses some problems of interpretation of the information regarding the attack of Margrave Gero on the Slavic tribes, as a result of which he purportedly "subordinated to the authority of the Emperor Lusatia and the Selpuli [viz., the Słupian tribes] and also Mieszko with his subjects". According to the majority of modern historians,[13] Thietmar made an error summarizing the chronicle of Widukind, placing the Gero raid there instead of the fighting that Mieszko conducted at that time against Wichmann the Younger. Other sources make no mention of such conquest and of putting the Polans state on the same footing with the Polabian Slavs. On the other hand, the supporters of the Gero's invasion theory[14] believe that the Margrave did actually carry out a successful invasion, as a result of which Mieszko I was forced to pay tribute to the Emperor and also was compelled to adopt Catholicism through the German Church. The thesis that proposes the introduction of Catholicism as a result of this war finds no confirmation in German sources.

The homage is then a separate issue, since, according to the chronicle of Thietmar, Mieszko actually paid tribute to the Emperor from the lands usque in Vurta fluvium (up to the Warta River).[15] In all probability Mieszko decided to pay tribute in order to avoid an invasion similar to the one that Lusatia had suffered. This homage would take place in 965, or in 966 at the latest. Very likely the tribute applied only to the Lubusz land, which was in the German sphere of influence.[16] This understanding of the tribute issue explains why already in 967 Mieszko I was described in the Saxon chronicles as the Emperor's friend (or ally, supporter, Latin: amicus imperatoris).

Marriage and conversion to Catholicism

Probably in 964 Mieszko began negotiations with the Bohemian ruler Boleslav I the Cruel. As a result, in 965 Mieszko I married his daughter Dobrawa (also named Dobrava, Doubravka or Dąbrówka).[17] This political Polish-Bohemian alliance is likely to have been initiated by the Polish ruler. It is probable that the marriage was officially arranged in February 965.[18]

 
Denar of either Mieszko I or his grandson Mieszko II featuring a cross

The next step was the baptism of Mieszko. There are different hypotheses concerning this event. Most often it is assumed that it was a political decision, intended to bring Mieszko's state closer to the Czechs and to facilitate his activities in the Polabian Slavs area. At the same time, the baptism decreased the likelihood of future attacks by German margraves and deprived them of the opportunity to attempt Christianization of Mieszko's lands by force. An additional reason could be Mieszko's desire to remove from power the influential pagan priest class, which may have been blocking his efforts to establish a more centralized rule.[19]

A different hypothesis is linked with the above-mentioned acceptance of the veracity of Gero's invasion of Poland. According to it, it was the attack of the Margrave that forced the Catholicization, which was to be an act of subordination to the Emperor, done without the mediation of the Pope.[20]

Still other motives were responsible according to Gallus Anonymus, who claimed that it was Dobrawa who convinced her husband to change his religion. Likewise chronicler Thietmar attributes Mieszko's conversion to Dobrawa's influence. There are no reasons to negate Dobrawa's role in Mieszko's acceptance of Roman Catholicism; however, crediting rulers' wives with positive influence over their husbands' actions was a common convention at that time.

It is generally recognized that the baptism of Mieszko I took place in 966.[21] The place is unknown; it could have had happened in any of the cities of the Empire (possibly Regensburg), but also in one of the Polish towns like Gniezno or Ostrów Lednicki.[22] The belief that the baptism was accomplished through the Czechs in order to avoid the dependence on Germany and the German Church is incorrect[citation needed], because Bohemia would not have its own church organization until 973. At the time of the baptism of Mieszko the existing Bohemian church establishment was a part of the Regensburg diocese. Thus, if the Polish ruler accepted the baptism through Prague's mediation, it had to be sanctioned in Regensburg. However, the religious vocabulary (words like baptism, sermon, prayer, church, apostle, bishop or confirmation) were adopted from the Czech language and had to come from Dobrawa's entourage and the church elements that arrived with her. Perhaps with her also came the first Polish bishop, Jordan. It could be that the reason for the Czech preference of Mieszko was the existence in Bohemia of a mission which followed the precepts of the Byzantine Greek brothers and later saints Cyril and Methodius, who developed and performed the liturgy in the Slavic rite, more readily understood by Mieszko and his subjects. The Slavic rite church branch had survived in Bohemia for another hundred years after Mieszko's baptism.

Conquest of Pomerania

After the normalization of relations with the Holy Roman Empire and Bohemia, Mieszko I returned to his plans to conquer the western part of Pomerania. On 21 September 967 the Polish-Bohemian troops prevailed in the decisive battle against the Wolinians led by Wichmann the Younger, which gave Mieszko control over the mouth of the Odra River.[23] The German margraves had not opposed Mieszko's activities in Pomerania, perhaps even supported them; the death of the rebellious Wichmann, who succumbed to his wounds soon after the battle, may have been in line with their interests. A telling incident took place after the battle, a testimony to Mieszko's high standing among the Empire's dignitaries, just one year after his baptism: Widukind of Corvey reported that the dying Wichmann asked Mieszko to hand over Wichmann's weapons to Emperor Otto I, to whom Wichmann was related. For Mieszko the victory had to be a satisfying experience, especially in light of his past defeats inflicted by Wichmann.

The exact result of Mieszko's fighting in the west of Pomerania is not known. Subsequent loss of the region by Mieszko's son Bolesław suggests that the conquest was difficult and the hold over that territory rather tenuous. In one version of the legend of St. Wojciech it is written that Mieszko I had his daughter married to a Pomeranian prince, who previously voluntarily "was washed with the holy water of the baptism" in Poland. The above information, as well as the fact that Bolesław lost Western Pomerania, suggest that the region was not truly incorporated into the Polish state, but only became a fief. This conjecture seems to be confirmed in the introduction of the first volume of the chronicles of Gallus Anonymus concerning the Pomeranians: "Although often the leaders of the forces defeated by the Polish duke sought salvation in baptism, as soon as they regained their strength, they repudiated the 'Christian' (that is, Roman Catholic) faith and started the war against Christian anew".

War against Margrave Odo I of Ostmark

In 972 Poland was attacked by Odo I, Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark. According to the chronicles of Thietmar, Odo acted unilaterally, without the Emperor's consent: "Meanwhile,[24] the noble Margrave Hodo, having collected his army attacked Mieszko, who has been faithfully paying tribute to the Emperor (for the lands) up the Warta river."[25]

There are different hypotheses concerning the reasons for this invasion. Possibly Margrave Odo wanted to stop the growing power of the Polish state. Very likely Odo wanted to protect the Wolinian state, which he considered his zone of influence, from the Polish take-over.[26] Possibly the Wolinians themselves called the Margrave and asked his help.[27] In any event, Odo's forces moved in and on 24 June 972 twice engaged Mieszko's army at the village of Cidini, commonly identified with Cedynia. At first, the Margrave defeated Mieszko's forces; subsequently the Duke's brother Czcibor defeated the Germans in the decisive stage, inflicting great losses among their troops. It may be that Mieszko intentionally staged the retreat, which was followed by a surprise attack on the flank of the German pursuing troops.[28] After this battle, Mieszko and Odo were called to the Imperial Diet in Quedlinburg in 973 to explain and justify their conduct. The exact judgment of the Emperor is unknown, but it's certain that the sentence wasn't carried out because he died a few weeks after the Diet. It is commonly assumed that the sentence was unfavorable to the Polish ruler. The Annals of Altaich indicates that Mieszko was not present in Quedlinburg during the gathering; instead, he had to send his son Bolesław as a hostage.[29]

Mieszko's conflict with Odo I was a surprising event because, according to Thietmar, Mieszko respected the Margrave highly. Thietmar wrote that "Mieszko would never wear his outdoor garment in a house where Odo was present, or remain seated after Odo had gotten up."

It is believed that in practical terms the victory at Cedynia sealed Western Pomerania's fate as Mieszko's dependency.

Acquisitions in the east

 
Poland under Mieszko's rule

According to archaeological research, during the 970s the Sandomierz region and the Przemyśl area inhabited by the Lendians became incorporated into the Polish state.[30] None of it is certain for the lack of written sources. It is possible that especially the Przemyśl area, also inhabited the White Croats, belonged at that time to Bohemia, which supposedly extended up to the Bug River and Styr River.[31] The Primary Chronicle states that in 981 Vladimir of the Rurik Dynasty "went towards the Lachy and took their towns: Przemyśl, Czerwień and other strongholds (...)". The exact interpretation of this passage is uncertain, because the Ruthenian word "Lachy" meant both the Poles in general and the southeastern Lendians.[32] Mieszko's conquest of Sandomierz could also have taken place later, together with the takeover of the Vistulans (western and central Lesser Poland).[33] However, Widukind in the 10th century mentions Mieszko ruled over the Sclavi tribe of Licicaviki, which is identified with the Lendians.[34][35][36][37][38][39]

Some historians suggest that the regions of Sandomierz, Lublin and Czerwień (western Red Ruthenia) were indeed annexed by Mieszko's state in the 970s, as lands valuable for trade reasons and as a starting point for a future attack against what was to become Lesser Poland, then in the hands of Bohemia. Sandomierz under this scenario was the central hub of the area, with Czerwień, Przemyśl and Chełm assuming the function of defensive borderland strongholds.[40]

Involvement in German internal disputes; Second marriage

 
Emperor Otto II, from Registrum Gregorii, c. 983

After the death of Emperor Otto I in 973 Mieszko, like his brother-in-law, Duke Boleslav II of Bohemia, joined the German opposition in support of the attempted imperial succession of Henry II, Duke of Bavaria. Mieszko may have been motivated by revenge because of the (presumably) negative verdict of the Quedlinburg summit, but, more importantly, he may have wanted more favorable terms for his cooperation with Germany.[41] The participation of Mieszko in the conspiracy against Otto II was documented in only one source, the chronicles of the monastery in Altaich in its entry for the year 974. The Duke of Bavaria was defeated, and Emperor Otto II regained full power. Shortly afterwards, the young emperor waged a retaliatory expedition against Bohemia, in 978 forcing Duke Boleslav into submission.

In 977 Mieszko's wife, Dobrawa, died. At first there were no apparent repercussions, as the Polish ruler had maintained his alliance with Bohemia.

In 979 Otto II supposedly attacked Poland. Mention of this event can be found in the Chronicle of the Bishops of Cambrai from the 11th century. The effects of this expedition are unknown, but it is suspected that the Emperor did not succeed. Due to bad weather, the Emperor was back at the border of Thuringia and Saxony in December of that year. It is uncertain whether the invasion actually took place. The chronicle only stated that it was an expedition "against the Slavs". Archaeological discoveries appear to support the thesis of Otto II's invasion. In the last quarter of the 10th century there had been a radical expansion of the fortifications at Gniezno and Ostrów Lednicki, which may be associated with the Polish-German war, or the expectation of such.[42] The duration of the expedition suggests that it may have reached as far east as the vicinity of Poznań.[43]

The Polish-German agreement was concluded in the spring or possibly summer of 980,[44] because in November of that year Otto II left his country and went to Italy. It appears that during this time Mieszko I married Oda, daughter of Dietrich of Haldensleben, Margrave of the Northern March, after abducting her from the monastery of Kalbe.[45] Chronicler Thietmar described the event as follows:

When Bolesław's mother died his father married, without permission from the Church, a nun from the monastery in Kalbe, daughter of Margrave Dietrich. Oda was her name and her guilt was great. For she scorned her vows to God, and gave preference to the man of war before him (...). But because of the concern for the well-being of the homeland and the necessity to secure its peace, the event caused no break of relations, instead a proper way was found to restore concord. For thanks to Oda the legion of followers of Christ became augmented, many prisoners returned to their country, the shackled had their chains taken off, and the gates of prisons were opened for the trespassers.[46]

Although Thietmar made no mention of warfare that possibly took place on this occasion, the information on the return of the accord, acting for the good of the country and release of prisoners indicate that a conflict actually did occur.[47]

The marriage with Oda considerably affected the position and prestige of Mieszko, who entered the world of Saxon aristocracy. As a son-in-law of Margrave Dietrich, he gained an ally in one of the most influential politicians of the Holy Roman Empire. As the Margrave was a distant relative of the Emperor, Mieszko became a member of the circle connected to the imperial ruling house.

Cooperation with Sweden and the war against Denmark

Probably in the early 980s Mieszko allied his country with Sweden against Denmark. The alliance was sealed with the marriage of Mieszko's daughter Świętosława with the Swedish king Erik. The content of the treaty is known from the traditional account—not entirely reliable, but originating directly from the Danish court—given by Adam of Bremen. In this text, probably as a result of confusion, he gives instead of Mieszko's name the name of his son Bolesław:

The King of the Swedes, Erik, entered into an alliance with the very powerful King of the Polans, Bolesław. Bolesław gave Erik his daughter or sister. Because of this cooperation the Danes were routed by the Slavs and the Swedes.

Mieszko decided on the alliance with Sweden probably in order to help protect his possessions in Pomerania from the Danish King Harald Bluetooth and his son Sweyn. They may have acted in cooperation with the Wolinian autonomous entity. The Danish were defeated c. 991 and their ruler was expelled. The dynastic alliance with Sweden had probably affected the equipment and composition of Mieszko's troops. Perhaps at that time the Varangian warriors were recruited; their presence is indicated by archaeological excavations in the vicinity of Poznań.[48]

Participation in German civil war

In 982 Emperor Otto II suffered a disastrous defeat against the Emirate of Sicily. The resulting weakness of the imperial power was exploited by the Lutici, who initiated a great uprising of the Polabian Slavs in 983. German authority in the area ceased to exist and the Polabian tribes began to threaten the Empire. The death of Otto II at the end of that year contributed further to the unrest. Ultimately the Lutici and the Obotrites were able to liberate themselves from German rule for the next two centuries.

 
Personifications of Sclavinia/Wends, Germania, Gallia, and Roma, bringing offerings to Otto III; from a gospel book dated 990

The Emperor left a minor successor, Otto III. His regency was claimed by Henry II of Bavaria. Like in 973, Mieszko and the Czech duke Boleslav II took the side of the Bavarian duke. This fact is confirmed in the chronicle of Thietmar, which noted that "There arrived [at the Diet of Quedlinburg] also, among many other princes: Mieszko, Mściwoj and Boleslav and promised to support him under oath as the king and ruler".[49]

In 984 the Czechs took over Meissen, but in the same year Henry II gave up his pretension to the German throne.

The role played by Mieszko I in the subsequent struggles is unclear because the contemporary sources are scarce and not in agreement. Probably in 985 the Polish ruler ended his support for the Bavarian duke and moved to the side of the Emperor. It is believed that Mieszko's motivation was the threat posed to his interests by the Polabian Slavs uprising. The upheaval was a problem for both Poland and Germany, but not for Bohemia. In the Chronicle of Hildesheim, in the entry for the year 985 it is noted that Mieszko came to help the Saxons in their fight against some Slavic forces, presumably the Polabians.[50]

One year later, the Polish ruler had a personal meeting with the Emperor, an event mentioned in the Annals of Hersfeld, which reported that "Otto the boy-king ravaged Bohemia, but received Mieszko who arrived with gifts".

According to Thietmar and other contemporary chronicles the gift given by Mieszko to the Emperor was a camel. The meeting cemented the Polish-German alliance, with Mieszko joining Otto's expedition against a Slavic land, which "together they wholly devastated (...) with fire and tremendous depopulation". It is not clear which Slavic territory was invaded. Perhaps another raid against the Polabians took place. However, there are indications that it was an expedition against the Czechs, Mieszko's first against his southern neighbors.[51] Possibly on this occasion the Duke of the Polans accomplished the most significant expansion of his state, the takeover of Lesser Poland.[52]

Thietmar's narrative, however, raises doubts as to whether the joined military operation actually happened. The chronicler claims that a settlement was then concluded between the Emperor and the Bohemian ruler Boleslav II the Pious, which is not mentioned in any other source and is contrary to the realities of the political situation at that time.

Another debatable point is Thietmar's claim that Mieszko "subordinated himself to the King".[53] Most historians believe that it was only a matter of recognition of Otto's royal authority.[54] Some suggest that a fealty relationship could have been involved.[55]

War against Bohemia; incorporation of Silesia and Lesser Poland

Whether or not the German-Polish invasion of Bohemia actually happened, the friendly relations between the Czechs and the Poles came to an end. Bohemia resumed its earlier alliance with the Lutici, which, in 990, resulted in a war with Mieszko, who was supported by Empress Theophanu. Duke Boleslav II was probably the first one to attack.[56] As a result of the conflict Silesia was taken over by Poland. However, the annexation of Silesia possibly took place around 985, because during this year the major Piast strongholds in Wrocław, Opole and Głogów were already being built.[57]

The issue of the incorporation of Lesser Poland is also not completely resolved. Possibly Mieszko took the region before 990, which is indicated by the vague remark of Thietmar, who wrote of a country taken by Mieszko from Boleslav.[58] In light of this theory, the conquest of Lesser Poland could be a reason for the war, or its first stage. Many historians[59] suggested that the Czech rule over Lesser Poland was only nominal and likely limited to the indirect control of Kraków and perhaps a few other important centers. This theory is based on the lack of archaeological discoveries, which would indicate major building investments undertaken by the Bohemian state.

After its incorporation, Lesser Poland supposedly became the part of the country assigned to Mieszko's oldest son, Bolesław, which is indirectly indicated in the chronicle of Thietmar.[60]

Some historians, on the basis of the chronicle of Cosmas of Prague, believe that the conquest of the lands around the lower Vistula River took place after Mieszko's death, specifically in 999.[61] There is also a theory according to which during this transition period Lesser Poland was governed by Bolesław, whose authority was granted to him by the Bohemian duke.[62]

Dagome iudex

 
Dagome iudex

At the end of his life (c. 991–992), Mieszko I, together with his wife Oda and their sons, issued a document called Dagome iudex, where the Polish ruler placed his lands under the protection of the pope and described their borders. Only a later imprecise summary of the document has been preserved.

There are two main theories concerning reasons behind the issuing of Dagome iudex:

  • According to the first theory the document was an effort to transform the existing missionary bishopric into a regular organization of the Catholic Church, that would cover all of Mieszko's state. This understanding implies that the arrangement led to payment by Poland of Peter's Pence.[63]
  • The second theory assumes that the document was created in order to protect the interests of Mieszko's second wife Oda and their sons (who were named in the document) after Mieszko's death. Bolesław, Mieszko's eldest son, whose mother was Dobrawa, was not named in the document.[64] However, one of Mieszko's and Oda's sons, Świętopełk, also was not mentioned.

Dagome iudex is of capital importance for Polish history because it gives a general description of the Polish state's geographical location at the end of Mieszko's reign.

Late reign, death and succession

 
Monumental tomb of Mieszko I and Bolesław I by Christian Daniel Rauch

During his last years of life Mieszko remained loyal to the alliance with the Holy Roman Empire. In 991 he arrived at a gathering in Quedlinburg, where he participated in the customary exchange of gifts with Otto III and Empress Theophanu. In the same year he took part in a joint expedition with the young king to Brandenburg.

Mieszko died on 25 May 992.[65] Sources give no reasons to believe that his death occurred from causes other than natural. According to Thietmar the Polish ruler died "in an old age, overcame with fever". Probably he was buried in the Poznań Cathedral. The remains of the first historical ruler of Poland have never been found and the place of his burial is not known with certainty.[66] In 1836–1837 a cenotaph was built for Mieszko I and his successor Bolesław I the Brave in the Golden Chapel (Polish: Złota Kaplica) at the Poznań Cathedral, where the damaged remains found in the 14th-century tomb of Bolesław were placed.

According to Thietmar Mieszko I divided his state before his death among a number of princes. They were probably his sons: Bolesław I the Brave, Mieszko and Lambert.

In 1999 the archeologist Hanna Kóčka-Krenz located what's left of Mieszko's palace-chapel complex in Poznań.[67]

Legacy

 
Mieszko as imagined by Jan Matejko in the 19th century

Mieszko is chiefly credited with the unification of Polish lands. His state was the first state that could be called Poland. He is often considered the founder, the principal creator and builder of the Polish state.[68] His acceptance of Roman Catholicism led to the inclusion of Poland in the mainstream civilization and political structures of Roman Catholic Europe. He sponsored the erection of churches. The Gniezno Cathedral was constructed during Mieszko's rule. It is very likely the Duke also founded the church at Ostrów Tumski and the Poznań Cathedral.[69] Possibly during Mieszko I's reign Poland began minting its own coin, the denarius, though according to S. Suchodolski, the monetary system was installed by Mieszko I's grandson and namesake, Mieszko II Lambert.

At the end of his rule, Mieszko I left to his sons a territory at least twice as large as what he inherited from his father. The most significant were the additions of Silesia, Western Pomerania, and probably Lesser Poland including Kraków. He was the first ruler to conduct efficient foreign policy, which included agreements with Germany, Bohemia and Sweden, and prudently used his military resources.

Mieszko is featured on the obverse of the 10 Polish złoty banknote.[70]

Marriages and issue

According to Gallus Anonymus, before becoming a Christian Mieszko had seven pagan wives, whom he was required to relinquish, leaving Dobrawa as his only spouse. Nothing is known of the fates of any possible children from these relationships.[71] In 965, before his baptism, Mieszko married Dobrawa (b. 940/45 – d. 977), daughter of Duke Boleslav I the Cruel of Bohemia. They had two children:

  1. Bolesław I the Brave (Chrobry) (b. 967 – d. 17 June 1025).
  2. Świętosława/Sigrid the Haughty (b. 968/72 – d. c. 1016), married first to Eric the Victorious, King of Sweden and later to Sweyn Forkbeard, King of Denmark. From her second marriage, she probably was the mother of Cnut the Great, King of Denmark, Norway and England. Some researchers,[2] comparing Scandinavian, Polish and German sources state it was Gunhild of Wenden who was the daughter of Mieszko I and Oda (not Dobrawa) and who became wife of Sweyn Forkbeard, king of Denmark, England, and parts of Norway, mother of Cnut the Great, king of Denmark, England, Norway and parts of Sweden (the Anglo-Scandinavian or North Sea Empire), as well as Harald II and Świętosława. She was also the grandmother of Gunhild, the wife of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.

According to one hypothesis there was another daughter of Mieszko, married to a Pomeranian Slavic prince; she could be a daughter of Dobrawa or of one of the previous pagan wives. According to one theory, this unnamed daughter of Mieszko I and her Pomeranian husband were the parents of Zemuzil, Duke of Pomerania. Also, a theory exists (apparently based on Thietmar and supported by Oswald Balzer in 1895) that Vladivoj, who ruled as Duke of Bohemia in 1002–1003, was a son of Mieszko and Dobrawa.[72] Although most modern historians reject this claim, Bohemian historiography supported the Piast parentage of Vladivoj.[73]

In 978/79, Mieszko married Oda of Haldensleben (b. 955/60 – d. 1023), daughter of Dietrich of Haldensleben, Margrave of the Northern March. She was abducted by her future husband from the monastery of Kalbe. They had three sons:

  1. Mieszko (b. c. 979 – d. aft. 992/95)
  2. Świętopełk (b. ca. 980 – d. bef. 991?)
  3. Lambert (b. c. 981 – d. aft. 992/95).

After a struggle for power between Bolesław I and Oda with her minor sons (Bolesław's half-brothers), the eldest son of Mieszko I took control over all of his father's state and expelled his stepmother and her sons from Poland.

Gallery

Bibliography

  • Jasiński K., Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Warszawa-Wrocław (1992), pp. 54–70.
  • Labuda G., Mieszko I, (in) Polski Słownik Biograficzny, vol. 21, 1976.
  • Labuda G., Mieszko I, Wyd. Ossolineum, Wrocław 2002, ISBN 83-04-04619-9
  • Labuda G., Pierwsze państwo polskie, Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza, Kraków 1989, ISBN 83-03-02969-X
  • Philip Earl Steele Nawrócenie i Chrzest Mieszka I 2005, ISBN 83-922344-8-0; 2nd edition 2016, ISBN 978-83-7730-966-7
  • Philip Earl Steele, Homo religiosus: the phenomenon of Poland’s Mieszko I, [in] The dawning of Christianity in Poland and across Central and Eastern Europe, Peter Lang, 2020, ISBN 978-3-631-78725-0
  • Szczur S., Historia Polski średniowiecze, chap. 2.2.1 Państwo gnieźnieńskie Mieszka I (pp. 47–57) i 2.4.1 Drużyna książęca (pp. 83–84), Wydawnictwo Literackie 2002, ISBN 83-08-03272-9

See also

References

  1. ^ Historical dictionary of Poland. Greenwood Publishing Group. 1996. ISBN 978-0-313-26007-0.
  2. ^ a b Prinke, Rafał T. "Świętosława, Sygryda, Gunhilda. Tożsamość córki Mieszka I i jej skandynawskie związki [Świętosława, Sygryda, Gunhilda. The identity of Mieszko I's daughter and her Scandinavian relationships". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ ca. 922 (O. Balzer), between 930–932 (A.F. Grabski), ca. 935 (K. Jasiński), between 940–945 (S. Kętrzyński).
  4. ^ Jerzy Strzelczyk "Mieszko pierwszy", vol. IV
  5. ^ Buko, Andrzej (2008). The archaeology of early medieval Poland. Boston: Brill. p. 184. ISBN 978-1281936776.
  6. ^ K. Jasiński, Siemomysł, Polski Słownik Biograficzny, vol. 37, 1996, pp. 58–59.
  7. ^ Gerard Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 18–22
  8. ^ a b Początki Polski w nowym świetle (The beginnings of Poland in new perspective) by Tomasz Jasiński, p. 17. The Polish Academy of Sciences, Portal Wiedzy www.portalwiedzy.pan.pl "Nauka", April 2007
  9. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 85; S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, pp. 34–35
  10. ^ S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, p. 34; Henryk Łowmiański, Początki Polski, vol. V, p. 502; G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 121–122
  11. ^ Jerzy Wyrozumski – Dzieje Polski piastowskiej (VIII w. – 1370) (History of Piast Poland (8th century – 1370)), Kraków 1999, p. 76
  12. ^ Jerzy Wyrozumski – Dzieje Polski piastowskiej (VIII w. – 1370) (History of Piast Poland (8th century – 1370)), Kraków 1999, p. 77
  13. ^ see for example G. Labuda, Mieszko I, chap. III.2.
  14. ^ see for example Henryk Łowmianski, Początki Polski, Warsaw, 1973.
  15. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. II chap. 29
  16. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, chap. III.2.; A.F. Grabski, Bolesław Chrobry, p. 25
  17. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 43–45.
  18. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 92
  19. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, chap. IV.3.
  20. ^ H. Łowmiański, Początki Polski, pp. 342–345.
  21. ^ Between 965–967 according to the Monumenta Poloniae Historica ed. by A. Bielowski, vol. II, Lwów 1872; in 966 according to Tadeusz Wojciechowski.
  22. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 92–97.
  23. ^ Probably not the main stronghold of the region – Wolin. G. Labuda, Mieszko I, cap. V.3.
  24. ^ At that time, Emperor Otto I was in Italy.
  25. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. II p. 29
  26. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 122.
  27. ^ J.P. Sobolewski, Niemcy, Polska a Pomorze Zachodnie w latach 971–972, "Kwartalnik Historyczny", Vol. 95, 1988, No. 1. The same argument was also given by S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, p. 51.
  28. ^ According to the reconstruction of the battle by W. Filipiowak.
  29. ^ Weiland, Ludwig (1871). Die grösseren Jahrbücher von Altaich (in German). Berlin: Franz Duncker. p. 5.
  30. ^ Historia Polski średniowiecze, p. 35.
  31. ^ The limits were described in the document issued by the bishop of Prague to Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor. This document is preserved in the Chronicles of Cosmas of Prague and is considered a reliable copy; from G. Labuda Mieszko I pp. 148–151.
  32. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 160, 174.
  33. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, cap. VII.4.
  34. ^ Hensel, Witold (1960). The Beginnings of the Polish State. Polonia Publishing House. p. 47.
  35. ^ Jenkins, Romilly James Heald (1962). Constantine Porphyrogenitus, De Adminstrando Imperio: Volume 2, Commentary. Athlone Press. pp. 139, 216.
  36. ^ Łowmiański, Henryk (1976). "Problematyka początków państwa polskiego w nowszych badaniach historycznych". Slavia Antiqua. 23: 105–106.
  37. ^ Paszkiewicz, Henryk (1977). The Making of the Russian Nation. Greenwood Press. p. 359. ISBN 978-0837187570.
  38. ^ Braun, Jerzy (1985). Poland in Christian Civilization. Veritas Foundation Publication Centre. p. 114. ISBN 978-0901215796.
  39. ^ Kalhous, David (2012). Anatomy of a Duchy: The Political and Ecclesiastical Structures of Early P?emyslid Bohemia. Brill. pp. 94–96. ISBN 978-9004229808.
  40. ^ A. Buko, Małopolska "czeska" i Małopolska "polańska" pp. 153–158.
  41. ^ S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, p. 52.
  42. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, chap. VI.4.
  43. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 158.
  44. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 153.
  45. ^ It is understood that the marriage took place around 979–980 (S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, p. 53).
  46. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. IV cap. 57
  47. ^ G. Labuda, Bolesław Chrobry p. 44.
  48. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 134.
  49. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. IV chap. 2
  50. ^ S. Szczur, Historia Polski średniowiecze, pp. 54–55.
  51. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 168.
  52. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 174.
  53. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol IV, chap. 9; Chronicles of Hildesheim, p. 986.
  54. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 180–185; Marian Jedlicki, Stosunek prawny Polski, Poznań, 1939, p. 33.
  55. ^ Henryk Łowmiański, Początki Polski, vol. V, p. 563.
  56. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 171.
  57. ^ Andrzej Buko, "Archeologia Polski wczesnośredniowiecznej", 2007, Ed. Trio.
  58. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. I p. 33; argument presented by G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 171.
  59. ^ Henryk Łowmiański, Początki Polski, vol. V; A. Buko, Małopolska "czeska" i Małopolska "polańska"
  60. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. IV chap. 58; this theory is presented by G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 176.
  61. ^ In favor: G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 172–173.
  62. ^ Henryk Łowmiański, Początki Polski, vol. V
  63. ^ This theory has been presented in various forms by historians, including Robert Holtzmann, Stanisław Zakrzewski (Najdawniejsza bulla, pp. 21–23) and Henryk Łowmiański (Początki Polski, vol. V, pp. 602–603).
  64. ^ S. Zakrzewski, Najdawniejsza bulla, pp. 11–12; G. Labuda, Mieszko I, pp. 193–195.
  65. ^ Thietmari chronicon, vol. IV chap. 58
  66. ^ In 1951 the historian Helena Zoll-Adamikowa examined the alleged resting place of Mieszko, but found no signs of burial. It's not certain that the Cathedral had already been built before Mieszko's death, and the first mention of this as his burial place comes only from the chronicles of Jan Długosz.
  67. ^ The Warsaw Voice – In brief (30 October 2008)
  68. ^ G. Labuda, Studia nad początkami państwa polskiego, p. 324
  69. ^ G. Labuda, Mieszko I, p. 201.
  70. ^ "Narodowy Bank Polski - Internet Information Service". www.nbp.pl. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
  71. ^ Oswald Balzer (Genealogy of the Piasts, Kraków 1895) stated that Mieszko I had at least one son born from a pagan wife. The theory was based on the allegation that Mieszko's son, who was to be placed by order of Otto I in 973 as a hostage after the Imperial Diet of Quedlinburg, could not be Bolesław I the Brave because he was too young. This argument is refuted by Jan Widajewicz (Czy Bolesław Chrobry był w młodości zakładnikiem u Niemców?, Roczniki Historyczne, vol. XVI, 1947, pp. 243–250). Modern historians have no doubts that the Polish prince who was placed as the imperial hostage was Bolesław I.
  72. ^ Cawley, Charles, Bohemia, Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,[self-published source][better source needed]
  73. ^ J. Žemlička, Čechy v době knižecí, Prague 1997, pp. 72–73.
Mieszko I
Piast Dynasty
Born: 920/945 Died: 25 May 992
Preceded by Duke of the Polans
960 – 25 May 992
Succeeded by

mieszko, polish, pronunciation, ˈmjɛʂkɔ, ˈpjɛrfʂɨ, listen, first, ruler, poland, founder, first, independent, polish, state, civitas, schinesghe, also, known, duchy, poland, reign, stretched, from, death, member, piast, dynasty, siemomysł, grandson, lestek, fa. Mieszko I Polish pronunciation ˈmjɛʂkɔ ˈpjɛrfʂɨ listen c 930 25 May 992 1 was the first ruler of Poland and the founder of the first independent Polish state Civitas Schinesghe also known as the Duchy of Poland His reign stretched from 960 to his death and he was a member of the Piast dynasty a son of Siemomysl and a grandson of Lestek He was the father of Boleslaw I the Brave the first crowned king of Poland and of Gunhild of Wenden 2 Most sources identify Mieszko I as the father of Sigrid the Haughty a Scandinavian queen though one source identifies her father as Skoglar Toste the grandfather of Canute the Great Gundhild s son and the great grandfather of Gunhilda of Denmark Canute the Great s daughter and wife of Henry III Holy Roman Emperor Mieszko IDuke of PolandReign960 992PredecessorSiemomyslSuccessorBoleslaw I the BraveBornc 930Died25 May 992 992 05 25 aged 61 62 Poznan PolandSpouseDoubravka of BohemiaOda of HaldenslebenIssuemore Boleslaw I the BraveSwietoslawaVladivoj Duke of Bohemia MieszkoSwietopelkLambertDynastyPiastFatherSiemomyslReligionSlavic paganism before 966 Chalcedonian Christianity 966 until his death He was the first Christian ruler of Poland but he continued the policies of both his father and grandfather who initiated the process of creation of the Polish state Through both alliances and military force Mieszko extended ongoing Polish conquests and early in his reign subjugated Kuyavia and probably Gdansk Pomerania and Masovia For most of his reign Mieszko I was involved in warfare for the control of Western Pomerania and eventually conquered it up to the vicinity of the lower Oder river During the last years of his life he fought the Bohemian state and won Silesia and Lesser Poland He is sometimes called the Clovis of Poland for his role in the founding of Christian Poland Mieszko I s alliance with the Czech prince Boleslaus I the Cruel strengthened by his marriage in 965 to the Czech Premyslid princess Dobrawa and his baptism in 966 put him and his country in the cultural sphere of Western Christianity Apart from the great conquests accomplished during his reign which proved to be fundamental for the future of Poland Mieszko I was renowned for his internal reforms which were aimed at expanding and improving the so called war monarchy system According to existing sources Mieszko I was a wise politician a talented military leader and a charismatic ruler He successfully used diplomacy by concluding alliances first with Bohemia then Sweden and the Holy Roman Empire In foreign policy he placed the interests of his country foremost even entering into agreements with his former enemies On his death he left to his sons a country with greatly expanded territories and a well established position in Europe Mieszko I also enigmatically appeared as Dagome in a papal document dating to about 1085 called Dagome iudex which mentions a gift or dedication of Mieszko s land to the Pope the act took place almost a hundred years earlier It is roughly to his borders that Poland was returned in 1945 Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Early reign 2 2 Margrave Gero s war Mieszko s homage to the Emperor 2 3 Marriage and conversion to Catholicism 2 4 Conquest of Pomerania 2 5 War against Margrave Odo I of Ostmark 2 6 Acquisitions in the east 2 7 Involvement in German internal disputes Second marriage 2 8 Cooperation with Sweden and the war against Denmark 2 9 Participation in German civil war 2 10 War against Bohemia incorporation of Silesia and Lesser Poland 2 11 Dagome iudex 2 12 Late reign death and succession 3 Legacy 4 Marriages and issue 5 Gallery 6 Bibliography 7 See also 8 ReferencesEarly life EditThere is no certain information on Mieszko I s life before he took control over his lands Only the Lesser Poland Chronicle gives the date of his birth as somewhere between the years 920 931 depending on the version of the manuscript however modern researchers do not recognize the chronicle as a reliable source Several historians on the basis of their investigations postulated the date of Mieszko I s birth to have been between 922 945 3 the activity of the Duke in his final years of life puts the date of his birth closer to the latter year 4 Mieszko s name has traditionally been thought to be a diminutive of Mieczyslaw but this is refuted by the majority of modern historians According to a legend first described by Gallus Anonymus citation needed Mieszko was blind during his first seven years of life This typical medieval allegory referred to his paganism rather than an actual disability Another name of Mieszko Dagome appears in the Dagome iudex document though its origin is uncertain 5 Reign EditEarly reign Edit Strongholds under Mieszko s rule Mieszko I took over the rule after his father s death c 950 960 probably closer to the latter date 6 Due to the lack of sources it is not possible to determine exactly which lands he inherited Certainly among them were the areas inhabited by the Polans and Goplans 7 as well as the Sieradz Leczyca lands and Kuyavia 8 It is possible that this state included also Masovia 9 and Gdansk Pomerania 10 Soon the new ruler faced the task of integrating the relatively large ethnically and culturally heterogeneous territory Although the residents of areas controlled by Mieszko spoke mostly one language had similar beliefs and reached a similar level of economic and general development they were socially connected primarily by tribal structures It appears that the elders cooperating with the Duke first felt the need for super tribal unity as expansion allowed them to broaden their influence Mieszko and his people were described around 966 by Abraham ben Jacob a Sephardi Jewish traveller who at that time visited the Prague court of Duke Boleslav I the Cruel 11 Abraham presented Mieszko I as one of the four Slavic kings 12 reigning over a vast northern area with a highly regarded and substantial military force at his disposal More precise contemporary records regarding Mieszko were compiled by Widukind of Corvey and half a century later by Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg By the time Mieszko I took over from his father the Polans tribal federation of Greater Poland had for some time been actively expanding Continuing this process perhaps in the first years of Mieszko s reign if it had not been done already by his father Mieszko I conquered Masovia Likely also during that period or earlier at least part of Gdansk Pomerania was obtained 8 Mieszko s interests were then concentrated mainly on areas occupied by the eastern i e near the Oder River branches of the Polabian Slavs In 963 Margrave Gero of Meissen conquered territories occupied by the Polabian Lusatian and Slupian tribes and as a result came into direct contact with the Polish state At the same time about 960 Mieszko I began his expansion against the Velunzani and Lutici tribes The war was recorded by the traveller Abraham ben Jacob According to him Mieszko I had fought against the Weltaba tribe commonly identified with the Veleti Wichmann the Younger a Saxon nobleman who was then a leader of a band of Polabian Slavs defeated Mieszko twice and around 963 a brother of Mieszko whose name is unknown was killed in the fighting The frontiers at the mouth of the Oder River were also desired by the German margraves In addition the Veleti Bohemia which at that time possessed Silesia and Lesser Poland regions constituted a danger for the young state of the Polans Margrave Gero s war Mieszko s homage to the Emperor Edit The chronicle of Thietmar poses some problems of interpretation of the information regarding the attack of Margrave Gero on the Slavic tribes as a result of which he purportedly subordinated to the authority of the Emperor Lusatia and the Selpuli viz the Slupian tribes and also Mieszko with his subjects According to the majority of modern historians 13 Thietmar made an error summarizing the chronicle of Widukind placing the Gero raid there instead of the fighting that Mieszko conducted at that time against Wichmann the Younger Other sources make no mention of such conquest and of putting the Polans state on the same footing with the Polabian Slavs On the other hand the supporters of the Gero s invasion theory 14 believe that the Margrave did actually carry out a successful invasion as a result of which Mieszko I was forced to pay tribute to the Emperor and also was compelled to adopt Catholicism through the German Church The thesis that proposes the introduction of Catholicism as a result of this war finds no confirmation in German sources The homage is then a separate issue since according to the chronicle of Thietmar Mieszko actually paid tribute to the Emperor from the lands usque in Vurta fluvium up to the Warta River 15 In all probability Mieszko decided to pay tribute in order to avoid an invasion similar to the one that Lusatia had suffered This homage would take place in 965 or in 966 at the latest Very likely the tribute applied only to the Lubusz land which was in the German sphere of influence 16 This understanding of the tribute issue explains why already in 967 Mieszko I was described in the Saxon chronicles as the Emperor s friend or ally supporter Latin amicus imperatoris Marriage and conversion to Catholicism Edit See also Baptism of Poland Probably in 964 Mieszko began negotiations with the Bohemian ruler Boleslav I the Cruel As a result in 965 Mieszko I married his daughter Dobrawa also named Dobrava Doubravka or Dabrowka 17 This political Polish Bohemian alliance is likely to have been initiated by the Polish ruler It is probable that the marriage was officially arranged in February 965 18 Denar of either Mieszko I or his grandson Mieszko II featuring a cross The next step was the baptism of Mieszko There are different hypotheses concerning this event Most often it is assumed that it was a political decision intended to bring Mieszko s state closer to the Czechs and to facilitate his activities in the Polabian Slavs area At the same time the baptism decreased the likelihood of future attacks by German margraves and deprived them of the opportunity to attempt Christianization of Mieszko s lands by force An additional reason could be Mieszko s desire to remove from power the influential pagan priest class which may have been blocking his efforts to establish a more centralized rule 19 A different hypothesis is linked with the above mentioned acceptance of the veracity of Gero s invasion of Poland According to it it was the attack of the Margrave that forced the Catholicization which was to be an act of subordination to the Emperor done without the mediation of the Pope 20 Still other motives were responsible according to Gallus Anonymus who claimed that it was Dobrawa who convinced her husband to change his religion Likewise chronicler Thietmar attributes Mieszko s conversion to Dobrawa s influence There are no reasons to negate Dobrawa s role in Mieszko s acceptance of Roman Catholicism however crediting rulers wives with positive influence over their husbands actions was a common convention at that time It is generally recognized that the baptism of Mieszko I took place in 966 21 The place is unknown it could have had happened in any of the cities of the Empire possibly Regensburg but also in one of the Polish towns like Gniezno or Ostrow Lednicki 22 The belief that the baptism was accomplished through the Czechs in order to avoid the dependence on Germany and the German Church is incorrect citation needed because Bohemia would not have its own church organization until 973 At the time of the baptism of Mieszko the existing Bohemian church establishment was a part of the Regensburg diocese Thus if the Polish ruler accepted the baptism through Prague s mediation it had to be sanctioned in Regensburg However the religious vocabulary words like baptism sermon prayer church apostle bishop or confirmation were adopted from the Czech language and had to come from Dobrawa s entourage and the church elements that arrived with her Perhaps with her also came the first Polish bishop Jordan It could be that the reason for the Czech preference of Mieszko was the existence in Bohemia of a mission which followed the precepts of the Byzantine Greek brothers and later saints Cyril and Methodius who developed and performed the liturgy in the Slavic rite more readily understood by Mieszko and his subjects The Slavic rite church branch had survived in Bohemia for another hundred years after Mieszko s baptism Conquest of Pomerania Edit After the normalization of relations with the Holy Roman Empire and Bohemia Mieszko I returned to his plans to conquer the western part of Pomerania On 21 September 967 the Polish Bohemian troops prevailed in the decisive battle against the Wolinians led by Wichmann the Younger which gave Mieszko control over the mouth of the Odra River 23 The German margraves had not opposed Mieszko s activities in Pomerania perhaps even supported them the death of the rebellious Wichmann who succumbed to his wounds soon after the battle may have been in line with their interests A telling incident took place after the battle a testimony to Mieszko s high standing among the Empire s dignitaries just one year after his baptism Widukind of Corvey reported that the dying Wichmann asked Mieszko to hand over Wichmann s weapons to Emperor Otto I to whom Wichmann was related For Mieszko the victory had to be a satisfying experience especially in light of his past defeats inflicted by Wichmann The exact result of Mieszko s fighting in the west of Pomerania is not known Subsequent loss of the region by Mieszko s son Boleslaw suggests that the conquest was difficult and the hold over that territory rather tenuous In one version of the legend of St Wojciech it is written that Mieszko I had his daughter married to a Pomeranian prince who previously voluntarily was washed with the holy water of the baptism in Poland The above information as well as the fact that Boleslaw lost Western Pomerania suggest that the region was not truly incorporated into the Polish state but only became a fief This conjecture seems to be confirmed in the introduction of the first volume of the chronicles of Gallus Anonymus concerning the Pomeranians Although often the leaders of the forces defeated by the Polish duke sought salvation in baptism as soon as they regained their strength they repudiated the Christian that is Roman Catholic faith and started the war against Christian anew War against Margrave Odo I of Ostmark Edit In 972 Poland was attacked by Odo I Margrave of the Saxon Ostmark According to the chronicles of Thietmar Odo acted unilaterally without the Emperor s consent Meanwhile 24 the noble Margrave Hodo having collected his army attacked Mieszko who has been faithfully paying tribute to the Emperor for the lands up the Warta river 25 See also Battle of Cedynia There are different hypotheses concerning the reasons for this invasion Possibly Margrave Odo wanted to stop the growing power of the Polish state Very likely Odo wanted to protect the Wolinian state which he considered his zone of influence from the Polish take over 26 Possibly the Wolinians themselves called the Margrave and asked his help 27 In any event Odo s forces moved in and on 24 June 972 twice engaged Mieszko s army at the village of Cidini commonly identified with Cedynia At first the Margrave defeated Mieszko s forces subsequently the Duke s brother Czcibor defeated the Germans in the decisive stage inflicting great losses among their troops It may be that Mieszko intentionally staged the retreat which was followed by a surprise attack on the flank of the German pursuing troops 28 After this battle Mieszko and Odo were called to the Imperial Diet in Quedlinburg in 973 to explain and justify their conduct The exact judgment of the Emperor is unknown but it s certain that the sentence wasn t carried out because he died a few weeks after the Diet It is commonly assumed that the sentence was unfavorable to the Polish ruler The Annals of Altaich indicates that Mieszko was not present in Quedlinburg during the gathering instead he had to send his son Boleslaw as a hostage 29 Mieszko s conflict with Odo I was a surprising event because according to Thietmar Mieszko respected the Margrave highly Thietmar wrote that Mieszko would never wear his outdoor garment in a house where Odo was present or remain seated after Odo had gotten up It is believed that in practical terms the victory at Cedynia sealed Western Pomerania s fate as Mieszko s dependency Acquisitions in the east Edit Poland under Mieszko s rule According to archaeological research during the 970s the Sandomierz region and the Przemysl area inhabited by the Lendians became incorporated into the Polish state 30 None of it is certain for the lack of written sources It is possible that especially the Przemysl area also inhabited the White Croats belonged at that time to Bohemia which supposedly extended up to the Bug River and Styr River 31 The Primary Chronicle states that in 981 Vladimir of the Rurik Dynasty went towards the Lachy and took their towns Przemysl Czerwien and other strongholds The exact interpretation of this passage is uncertain because the Ruthenian word Lachy meant both the Poles in general and the southeastern Lendians 32 Mieszko s conquest of Sandomierz could also have taken place later together with the takeover of the Vistulans western and central Lesser Poland 33 However Widukind in the 10th century mentions Mieszko ruled over the Sclavi tribe of Licicaviki which is identified with the Lendians 34 35 36 37 38 39 Some historians suggest that the regions of Sandomierz Lublin and Czerwien western Red Ruthenia were indeed annexed by Mieszko s state in the 970s as lands valuable for trade reasons and as a starting point for a future attack against what was to become Lesser Poland then in the hands of Bohemia Sandomierz under this scenario was the central hub of the area with Czerwien Przemysl and Chelm assuming the function of defensive borderland strongholds 40 Involvement in German internal disputes Second marriage Edit Emperor Otto II from Registrum Gregorii c 983 After the death of Emperor Otto I in 973 Mieszko like his brother in law Duke Boleslav II of Bohemia joined the German opposition in support of the attempted imperial succession of Henry II Duke of Bavaria Mieszko may have been motivated by revenge because of the presumably negative verdict of the Quedlinburg summit but more importantly he may have wanted more favorable terms for his cooperation with Germany 41 The participation of Mieszko in the conspiracy against Otto II was documented in only one source the chronicles of the monastery in Altaich in its entry for the year 974 The Duke of Bavaria was defeated and Emperor Otto II regained full power Shortly afterwards the young emperor waged a retaliatory expedition against Bohemia in 978 forcing Duke Boleslav into submission In 977 Mieszko s wife Dobrawa died At first there were no apparent repercussions as the Polish ruler had maintained his alliance with Bohemia In 979 Otto II supposedly attacked Poland Mention of this event can be found in the Chronicle of the Bishops of Cambrai from the 11th century The effects of this expedition are unknown but it is suspected that the Emperor did not succeed Due to bad weather the Emperor was back at the border of Thuringia and Saxony in December of that year It is uncertain whether the invasion actually took place The chronicle only stated that it was an expedition against the Slavs Archaeological discoveries appear to support the thesis of Otto II s invasion In the last quarter of the 10th century there had been a radical expansion of the fortifications at Gniezno and Ostrow Lednicki which may be associated with the Polish German war or the expectation of such 42 The duration of the expedition suggests that it may have reached as far east as the vicinity of Poznan 43 The Polish German agreement was concluded in the spring or possibly summer of 980 44 because in November of that year Otto II left his country and went to Italy It appears that during this time Mieszko I married Oda daughter of Dietrich of Haldensleben Margrave of the Northern March after abducting her from the monastery of Kalbe 45 Chronicler Thietmar described the event as follows When Boleslaw s mother died his father married without permission from the Church a nun from the monastery in Kalbe daughter of Margrave Dietrich Oda was her name and her guilt was great For she scorned her vows to God and gave preference to the man of war before him But because of the concern for the well being of the homeland and the necessity to secure its peace the event caused no break of relations instead a proper way was found to restore concord For thanks to Oda the legion of followers of Christ became augmented many prisoners returned to their country the shackled had their chains taken off and the gates of prisons were opened for the trespassers 46 dd Although Thietmar made no mention of warfare that possibly took place on this occasion the information on the return of the accord acting for the good of the country and release of prisoners indicate that a conflict actually did occur 47 The marriage with Oda considerably affected the position and prestige of Mieszko who entered the world of Saxon aristocracy As a son in law of Margrave Dietrich he gained an ally in one of the most influential politicians of the Holy Roman Empire As the Margrave was a distant relative of the Emperor Mieszko became a member of the circle connected to the imperial ruling house Cooperation with Sweden and the war against Denmark Edit Probably in the early 980s Mieszko allied his country with Sweden against Denmark The alliance was sealed with the marriage of Mieszko s daughter Swietoslawa with the Swedish king Erik The content of the treaty is known from the traditional account not entirely reliable but originating directly from the Danish court given by Adam of Bremen In this text probably as a result of confusion he gives instead of Mieszko s name the name of his son Boleslaw The King of the Swedes Erik entered into an alliance with the very powerful King of the Polans Boleslaw Boleslaw gave Erik his daughter or sister Because of this cooperation the Danes were routed by the Slavs and the Swedes dd Mieszko decided on the alliance with Sweden probably in order to help protect his possessions in Pomerania from the Danish King Harald Bluetooth and his son Sweyn They may have acted in cooperation with the Wolinian autonomous entity The Danish were defeated c 991 and their ruler was expelled The dynastic alliance with Sweden had probably affected the equipment and composition of Mieszko s troops Perhaps at that time the Varangian warriors were recruited their presence is indicated by archaeological excavations in the vicinity of Poznan 48 Participation in German civil war Edit In 982 Emperor Otto II suffered a disastrous defeat against the Emirate of Sicily The resulting weakness of the imperial power was exploited by the Lutici who initiated a great uprising of the Polabian Slavs in 983 German authority in the area ceased to exist and the Polabian tribes began to threaten the Empire The death of Otto II at the end of that year contributed further to the unrest Ultimately the Lutici and the Obotrites were able to liberate themselves from German rule for the next two centuries Personifications of Sclavinia Wends Germania Gallia and Roma bringing offerings to Otto III from a gospel book dated 990 The Emperor left a minor successor Otto III His regency was claimed by Henry II of Bavaria Like in 973 Mieszko and the Czech duke Boleslav II took the side of the Bavarian duke This fact is confirmed in the chronicle of Thietmar which noted that There arrived at the Diet of Quedlinburg also among many other princes Mieszko Msciwoj and Boleslav and promised to support him under oath as the king and ruler 49 In 984 the Czechs took over Meissen but in the same year Henry II gave up his pretension to the German throne The role played by Mieszko I in the subsequent struggles is unclear because the contemporary sources are scarce and not in agreement Probably in 985 the Polish ruler ended his support for the Bavarian duke and moved to the side of the Emperor It is believed that Mieszko s motivation was the threat posed to his interests by the Polabian Slavs uprising The upheaval was a problem for both Poland and Germany but not for Bohemia In the Chronicle of Hildesheim in the entry for the year 985 it is noted that Mieszko came to help the Saxons in their fight against some Slavic forces presumably the Polabians 50 One year later the Polish ruler had a personal meeting with the Emperor an event mentioned in the Annals of Hersfeld which reported that Otto the boy king ravaged Bohemia but received Mieszko who arrived with gifts According to Thietmar and other contemporary chronicles the gift given by Mieszko to the Emperor was a camel The meeting cemented the Polish German alliance with Mieszko joining Otto s expedition against a Slavic land which together they wholly devastated with fire and tremendous depopulation It is not clear which Slavic territory was invaded Perhaps another raid against the Polabians took place However there are indications that it was an expedition against the Czechs Mieszko s first against his southern neighbors 51 Possibly on this occasion the Duke of the Polans accomplished the most significant expansion of his state the takeover of Lesser Poland 52 Thietmar s narrative however raises doubts as to whether the joined military operation actually happened The chronicler claims that a settlement was then concluded between the Emperor and the Bohemian ruler Boleslav II the Pious which is not mentioned in any other source and is contrary to the realities of the political situation at that time Another debatable point is Thietmar s claim that Mieszko subordinated himself to the King 53 Most historians believe that it was only a matter of recognition of Otto s royal authority 54 Some suggest that a fealty relationship could have been involved 55 War against Bohemia incorporation of Silesia and Lesser Poland Edit See also Polish Bohemian War 990 Whether or not the German Polish invasion of Bohemia actually happened the friendly relations between the Czechs and the Poles came to an end Bohemia resumed its earlier alliance with the Lutici which in 990 resulted in a war with Mieszko who was supported by Empress Theophanu Duke Boleslav II was probably the first one to attack 56 As a result of the conflict Silesia was taken over by Poland However the annexation of Silesia possibly took place around 985 because during this year the major Piast strongholds in Wroclaw Opole and Glogow were already being built 57 The issue of the incorporation of Lesser Poland is also not completely resolved Possibly Mieszko took the region before 990 which is indicated by the vague remark of Thietmar who wrote of a country taken by Mieszko from Boleslav 58 In light of this theory the conquest of Lesser Poland could be a reason for the war or its first stage Many historians 59 suggested that the Czech rule over Lesser Poland was only nominal and likely limited to the indirect control of Krakow and perhaps a few other important centers This theory is based on the lack of archaeological discoveries which would indicate major building investments undertaken by the Bohemian state After its incorporation Lesser Poland supposedly became the part of the country assigned to Mieszko s oldest son Boleslaw which is indirectly indicated in the chronicle of Thietmar 60 Some historians on the basis of the chronicle of Cosmas of Prague believe that the conquest of the lands around the lower Vistula River took place after Mieszko s death specifically in 999 61 There is also a theory according to which during this transition period Lesser Poland was governed by Boleslaw whose authority was granted to him by the Bohemian duke 62 Dagome iudex Edit Dagome iudex At the end of his life c 991 992 Mieszko I together with his wife Oda and their sons issued a document called Dagome iudex where the Polish ruler placed his lands under the protection of the pope and described their borders Only a later imprecise summary of the document has been preserved There are two main theories concerning reasons behind the issuing of Dagome iudex According to the first theory the document was an effort to transform the existing missionary bishopric into a regular organization of the Catholic Church that would cover all of Mieszko s state This understanding implies that the arrangement led to payment by Poland of Peter s Pence 63 The second theory assumes that the document was created in order to protect the interests of Mieszko s second wife Oda and their sons who were named in the document after Mieszko s death Boleslaw Mieszko s eldest son whose mother was Dobrawa was not named in the document 64 However one of Mieszko s and Oda s sons Swietopelk also was not mentioned Dagome iudex is of capital importance for Polish history because it gives a general description of the Polish state s geographical location at the end of Mieszko s reign Late reign death and succession Edit Monumental tomb of Mieszko I and Boleslaw I by Christian Daniel Rauch During his last years of life Mieszko remained loyal to the alliance with the Holy Roman Empire In 991 he arrived at a gathering in Quedlinburg where he participated in the customary exchange of gifts with Otto III and Empress Theophanu In the same year he took part in a joint expedition with the young king to Brandenburg Mieszko died on 25 May 992 65 Sources give no reasons to believe that his death occurred from causes other than natural According to Thietmar the Polish ruler died in an old age overcame with fever Probably he was buried in the Poznan Cathedral The remains of the first historical ruler of Poland have never been found and the place of his burial is not known with certainty 66 In 1836 1837 a cenotaph was built for Mieszko I and his successor Boleslaw I the Brave in the Golden Chapel Polish Zlota Kaplica at the Poznan Cathedral where the damaged remains found in the 14th century tomb of Boleslaw were placed According to Thietmar Mieszko I divided his state before his death among a number of princes They were probably his sons Boleslaw I the Brave Mieszko and Lambert In 1999 the archeologist Hanna Kocka Krenz located what s left of Mieszko s palace chapel complex in Poznan 67 Legacy Edit Mieszko as imagined by Jan Matejko in the 19th century Mieszko is chiefly credited with the unification of Polish lands His state was the first state that could be called Poland He is often considered the founder the principal creator and builder of the Polish state 68 His acceptance of Roman Catholicism led to the inclusion of Poland in the mainstream civilization and political structures of Roman Catholic Europe He sponsored the erection of churches The Gniezno Cathedral was constructed during Mieszko s rule It is very likely the Duke also founded the church at Ostrow Tumski and the Poznan Cathedral 69 Possibly during Mieszko I s reign Poland began minting its own coin the denarius though according to S Suchodolski the monetary system was installed by Mieszko I s grandson and namesake Mieszko II Lambert At the end of his rule Mieszko I left to his sons a territory at least twice as large as what he inherited from his father The most significant were the additions of Silesia Western Pomerania and probably Lesser Poland including Krakow He was the first ruler to conduct efficient foreign policy which included agreements with Germany Bohemia and Sweden and prudently used his military resources Mieszko is featured on the obverse of the 10 Polish zloty banknote 70 Marriages and issue EditAccording to Gallus Anonymus before becoming a Christian Mieszko had seven pagan wives whom he was required to relinquish leaving Dobrawa as his only spouse Nothing is known of the fates of any possible children from these relationships 71 In 965 before his baptism Mieszko married Dobrawa b 940 45 d 977 daughter of Duke Boleslav I the Cruel of Bohemia They had two children Boleslaw I the Brave Chrobry b 967 d 17 June 1025 Swietoslawa Sigrid the Haughty b 968 72 d c 1016 married first to Eric the Victorious King of Sweden and later to Sweyn Forkbeard King of Denmark From her second marriage she probably was the mother of Cnut the Great King of Denmark Norway and England Some researchers 2 comparing Scandinavian Polish and German sources state it was Gunhild of Wenden who was the daughter of Mieszko I and Oda not Dobrawa and who became wife of Sweyn Forkbeard king of Denmark England and parts of Norway mother of Cnut the Great king of Denmark England Norway and parts of Sweden the Anglo Scandinavian or North Sea Empire as well as Harald II and Swietoslawa She was also the grandmother of Gunhild the wife of Henry III Holy Roman Emperor According to one hypothesis there was another daughter of Mieszko married to a Pomeranian Slavic prince she could be a daughter of Dobrawa or of one of the previous pagan wives According to one theory this unnamed daughter of Mieszko I and her Pomeranian husband were the parents of Zemuzil Duke of Pomerania Also a theory exists apparently based on Thietmar and supported by Oswald Balzer in 1895 that Vladivoj who ruled as Duke of Bohemia in 1002 1003 was a son of Mieszko and Dobrawa 72 Although most modern historians reject this claim Bohemian historiography supported the Piast parentage of Vladivoj 73 In 978 79 Mieszko married Oda of Haldensleben b 955 60 d 1023 daughter of Dietrich of Haldensleben Margrave of the Northern March She was abducted by her future husband from the monastery of Kalbe They had three sons Mieszko b c 979 d aft 992 95 Swietopelk b ca 980 d bef 991 Lambert b c 981 d aft 992 95 After a struggle for power between Boleslaw I and Oda with her minor sons Boleslaw s half brothers the eldest son of Mieszko I took control over all of his father s state and expelled his stepmother and her sons from Poland Gallery Edit A depiction of Mieszko I in Jan Gluchowski s 1605 Icones of the Princes and Kings of Poland Statue of Mieszko I of Poland in the Poznan Cathedral s Golden Chapel Wichmann the Younger Surrenders to the Polish Prince Mieszko by Franciszek Smuglewicz early 19th c Mieszko I statue in Mieszkowice A relief of Mieszko I in Brzeg Castle top row first on the left Bibliography EditJasinski K Rodowod pierwszych Piastow Warszawa Wroclaw 1992 pp 54 70 Labuda G Mieszko I in Polski Slownik Biograficzny vol 21 1976 Labuda G Mieszko I Wyd Ossolineum Wroclaw 2002 ISBN 83 04 04619 9 Labuda G Pierwsze panstwo polskie Krajowa Agencja Wydawnicza Krakow 1989 ISBN 83 03 02969 X Philip Earl Steele Nawrocenie i Chrzest Mieszka I 2005 ISBN 83 922344 8 0 2nd edition 2016 ISBN 978 83 7730 966 7 Philip Earl Steele Homo religiosus the phenomenon of Poland s Mieszko I in The dawning of Christianity in Poland and across Central and Eastern Europe Peter Lang 2020 ISBN 978 3 631 78725 0 Szczur S Historia Polski sredniowiecze chap 2 2 1 Panstwo gnieznienskie Mieszka I pp 47 57 i 2 4 1 Druzyna ksiazeca pp 83 84 Wydawnictwo Literackie 2002 ISBN 83 08 03272 9See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mieszko I of Poland Prehistory and protohistory of Poland Poland in the Early Middle Ages History of Poland 966 1385 List of PolesReferences Edit Historical dictionary of Poland Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 ISBN 978 0 313 26007 0 a b Prinke Rafal T Swietoslawa Sygryda Gunhilda Tozsamosc corki Mieszka I i jej skandynawskie zwiazki Swietoslawa Sygryda Gunhilda The identity of Mieszko I s daughter and her Scandinavian relationships a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help ca 922 O Balzer between 930 932 A F Grabski ca 935 K Jasinski between 940 945 S Ketrzynski Jerzy Strzelczyk Mieszko pierwszy vol IV Buko Andrzej 2008 The archaeology of early medieval Poland Boston Brill p 184 ISBN 978 1281936776 K Jasinski Siemomysl Polski Slownik Biograficzny vol 37 1996 pp 58 59 Gerard Labuda Mieszko I pp 18 22 a b Poczatki Polski w nowym swietle The beginnings of Poland in new perspective by Tomasz Jasinski p 17 The Polish Academy of Sciences Portal Wiedzy www portalwiedzy pan pl Nauka April 2007 G Labuda Mieszko I p 85 S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze pp 34 35 S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze p 34 Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski vol V p 502 G Labuda Mieszko I pp 121 122 Jerzy Wyrozumski Dzieje Polski piastowskiej VIII w 1370 History of Piast Poland 8th century 1370 Krakow 1999 p 76 Jerzy Wyrozumski Dzieje Polski piastowskiej VIII w 1370 History of Piast Poland 8th century 1370 Krakow 1999 p 77 see for example G Labuda Mieszko I chap III 2 see for example Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski Warsaw 1973 Thietmari chronicon vol II chap 29 G Labuda Mieszko I chap III 2 A F Grabski Boleslaw Chrobry p 25 G Labuda Mieszko I pp 43 45 G Labuda Mieszko I p 92 G Labuda Mieszko I chap IV 3 H Lowmianski Poczatki Polski pp 342 345 Between 965 967 according to the Monumenta Poloniae Historica ed by A Bielowski vol II Lwow 1872 in 966 according to Tadeusz Wojciechowski G Labuda Mieszko I pp 92 97 Probably not the main stronghold of the region Wolin G Labuda Mieszko I cap V 3 At that time Emperor Otto I was in Italy Thietmari chronicon vol II p 29 G Labuda Mieszko I p 122 J P Sobolewski Niemcy Polska a Pomorze Zachodnie w latach 971 972 Kwartalnik Historyczny Vol 95 1988 No 1 The same argument was also given by S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze p 51 According to the reconstruction of the battle by W Filipiowak Weiland Ludwig 1871 Die grosseren Jahrbucher von Altaich in German Berlin Franz Duncker p 5 Historia Polski sredniowiecze p 35 The limits were described in the document issued by the bishop of Prague to Henry IV Holy Roman Emperor This document is preserved in the Chronicles of Cosmas of Prague and is considered a reliable copy from G Labuda Mieszko I pp 148 151 G Labuda Mieszko I pp 160 174 G Labuda Mieszko I cap VII 4 Hensel Witold 1960 The Beginnings of the Polish State Polonia Publishing House p 47 Jenkins Romilly James Heald 1962 Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Adminstrando Imperio Volume 2 Commentary Athlone Press pp 139 216 Lowmianski Henryk 1976 Problematyka poczatkow panstwa polskiego w nowszych badaniach historycznych Slavia Antiqua 23 105 106 Paszkiewicz Henryk 1977 The Making of the Russian Nation Greenwood Press p 359 ISBN 978 0837187570 Braun Jerzy 1985 Poland in Christian Civilization Veritas Foundation Publication Centre p 114 ISBN 978 0901215796 Kalhous David 2012 Anatomy of a Duchy The Political and Ecclesiastical Structures of Early P emyslid Bohemia Brill pp 94 96 ISBN 978 9004229808 A Buko Malopolska czeska i Malopolska polanska pp 153 158 S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze p 52 G Labuda Mieszko I chap VI 4 G Labuda Mieszko I p 158 G Labuda Mieszko I p 153 It is understood that the marriage took place around 979 980 S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze p 53 Thietmari chronicon vol IV cap 57 G Labuda Boleslaw Chrobry p 44 G Labuda Mieszko I p 134 Thietmari chronicon vol IV chap 2 S Szczur Historia Polski sredniowiecze pp 54 55 G Labuda Mieszko I p 168 G Labuda Mieszko I p 174 Thietmari chronicon vol IV chap 9 Chronicles of Hildesheim p 986 G Labuda Mieszko I pp 180 185 Marian Jedlicki Stosunek prawny Polski Poznan 1939 p 33 Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski vol V p 563 G Labuda Mieszko I p 171 Andrzej Buko Archeologia Polski wczesnosredniowiecznej 2007 Ed Trio Thietmari chronicon vol I p 33 argument presented by G Labuda Mieszko I p 171 Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski vol V A Buko Malopolska czeska i Malopolska polanska Thietmari chronicon vol IV chap 58 this theory is presented by G Labuda Mieszko I p 176 In favor G Labuda Mieszko I pp 172 173 Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski vol V This theory has been presented in various forms by historians including Robert Holtzmann Stanislaw Zakrzewski Najdawniejsza bulla pp 21 23 and Henryk Lowmianski Poczatki Polski vol V pp 602 603 S Zakrzewski Najdawniejsza bulla pp 11 12 G Labuda Mieszko I pp 193 195 Thietmari chronicon vol IV chap 58 In 1951 the historian Helena Zoll Adamikowa examined the alleged resting place of Mieszko but found no signs of burial It s not certain that the Cathedral had already been built before Mieszko s death and the first mention of this as his burial place comes only from the chronicles of Jan Dlugosz The Warsaw Voice In brief 30 October 2008 G Labuda Studia nad poczatkami panstwa polskiego p 324 G Labuda Mieszko I p 201 Narodowy Bank Polski Internet Information Service www nbp pl Retrieved 17 September 2022 Oswald Balzer Genealogy of the Piasts Krakow 1895 stated that Mieszko I had at least one son born from a pagan wife The theory was based on the allegation that Mieszko s son who was to be placed by order of Otto I in 973 as a hostage after the Imperial Diet of Quedlinburg could not be Boleslaw I the Brave because he was too young This argument is refuted by Jan Widajewicz Czy Boleslaw Chrobry byl w mlodosci zakladnikiem u Niemcow Roczniki Historyczne vol XVI 1947 pp 243 250 Modern historians have no doubts that the Polish prince who was placed as the imperial hostage was Boleslaw I Cawley Charles Bohemia Medieval Lands database Foundation for Medieval Genealogy self published source better source needed J Zemlicka Cechy v dobe knizeci Prague 1997 pp 72 73 Mieszko IPiast DynastyBorn 920 945 Died 25 May 992Preceded bySiemomysl Duke of the Polans960 25 May 992 Succeeded byBoleslaw I the Brave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mieszko I amp 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