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Duchy of Teschen

The Duchy of Teschen (German: Herzogtum Teschen), also Duchy of Cieszyn (Polish: Księstwo Cieszyńskie) or Duchy of Těšín (Czech: Těšínské knížectví), was one of the Duchies of Silesia centered on Cieszyn (Teschen) in Upper Silesia. It was split off the Silesian Duchy of Opole and Racibórz in 1281 during the feudal division of Poland and was ruled by Silesian dukes of the Piast dynasty from 1290 until the line became extinct with the death of Duchess Elizabeth Lucretia in 1653.[1]

Duchy of Teschen
  • Księstwo Cieszyńskie (Polish)
  • Těšínské knížectví (Czech)
  • Herzogtum Teschen (German)
  • Ducatus Tessinensis (Latin)
1290–1918
Silesia duchies in 1290-91:
Teschen under Mieszko I in yellow
StatusSilesian duchy
Fiefdom of Bohemia (from 1327)
Part of the Bohemian Crown (from 1348)
CapitalCieszyn
Common languagesLatin (officially)
Czech and German (later)
Polish (popularly)
Religion
Lutheranism
Roman Catholicism
Dukes 
• 1290–1315
Mieszko I (first duke)
• 1625–1653
Elizabeth Lucretia (last Piast ruler)
• 1895–1918
Archduke Frederick Habsburg (last duke)
History 
• Partitioned from Opole-Racibórz
1281
• Split off Oświęcim
1315
• Vassalized by Bohemia
1327
• Split off Bielsko
1572
• Habsburg rule
1653
• Part of Austrian Silesia
1742/45
• Disestablished
1918
28 July 1920
Population
• 1910
350,000
1 Coat of arms of the Duchy of Teschen and the regional branch of the Piast dynasty

The ducal lands initially comprised former Lesser Polish territories east of the Biała River, which in about 1315 again split off as the Polish Duchy of Oświęcim, while the remaining duchy became a fiefdom of the Bohemian kings in 1327 and was incorporated into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown in 1348. While the bulk of Silesia was conquered by the Prussian king Frederick the Great in the Silesian Wars of 1740–1763, Teschen together with the duchies of Troppau (Opava), Krnov and Nysa remained with the Habsburg monarchy and merged into the Austrian Silesia crown land in 1849. The so-called "commander line" of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty, a cadet branch descending from Archduke Charles, Duke of Teschen, held the title "Duke of Teschen" until 1918.

History edit

The duchy shared the history of the Cieszyn Silesia region, and also in part that of Silesia in general: the Teschen area was the south-easternmost part of the medieval Duchy of Silesia, a Polish province established upon the death of Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth in 1138.[2] According to his testament, the Silesian lands were to be ruled by his eldest son Władysław II, who became the progenitor of the Silesian Piasts. Though he was exiled by his younger half-brothers after he had tried to gain control over Poland as a whole, his sons, backed by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, were able to return and to secure their Silesian inheritance. In 1172 they divided the heritage: the Upper Silesian lands with the Cieszyn area stretching up to the Beskid Mountains fell to the second son Mieszko I Tanglefoot, who ruled as Duke of Racibórz.

 
Piast castle tower in Cieszyn, part of the former ducal residence

Defying the Polish agnatic seniority principle, Mieszko Tanglefoot in 1202 occupied the neighbouring Duchy of Opole from his nephew Henry the Bearded, forming the united Upper Silesian Duchy of Opole and Racibórz. His descendants ruled Upper Silesia until the death of Mieszko's grandson Duke Władysław Opolski in 1281, whereafter Opole-Racibórz was again divided among his four sons. The eldest, Mieszko, initially ruled the Duchy of Racibórz with Cieszyn and Oświęcim, jointly with his minor brother Przemysław. After another partition in 1290, Mieszko took his residence in Cieszyn and became the first Duke of Teschen.

Piast rule edit

Like most of his Silesian Piast relatives, Mieszko approached the mighty kings of Bohemia; during the Polish internal struggles after the death of High Duke Leszek II, in 1291, he and his younger brother Duke Bolko I of Opole signed a support agreement with King Wenceslaus II. Mieszko also had the Teschen lands on the Vistula and Biała rivers and the Beskid foothills settled by German immigrants. He colonised the remote parts of his duchy and vested Cieszyn, Oświęcim, Zator, Skoczów and Karviná with town privileges. His adhered to the alliance with Bohemia even after in 1310 the House of Luxembourg assumed the throne in Prague.

After Mieszko's death in 1315, his son Władysław took the lands east of the Biała river where he established the separate Duchy of Oświęcim, which eventually became a fief of the Polish Crown. His brother Casimir I retained the western part and in 1327 swore homage to King John of Bohemia. After that Teschen became an autonomous fiefdom of the Bohemian kings and part of the Crown of Bohemia.[3] Local Piast rulers often possessed other lands outside the duchy itself, as the Duchy of Siewierz, half of Głogów and some parts of Bytom.

 
Title page of the Constitution of the Duchy of Teschen (printed in Czech), issued by Duke Wenceslaus III Adam in 1573

After the death of Duke Bolesław I in 1431, the rule over the duchy was shared by his wife Euphemia and their four sons.[4] In 1442 the duchy was divided between the brothers who all bore the ducal title; nevertheless, the real control over the duchy passed to Boleslaus II and Przemyslaus II, who after the death of Boleslaus II in 1452 ruled alone. From the late 15th century onwards, the Beskid valleys in the south were settled by Vlach peasants from neighbouring Moravian Wallachia.

While the Lands of the Bohemian Crown passed to the Habsburg dynasty in 1526, the Duchy of Teschen during the reign of Duke Wenceslaus III Adam, from 1528 onwards, shifted to Protestantism. Influenced by the Moravian governor John of Pernstein, his tutor and father-in-law, he turned to the Lutheran faith in 1540 and his subjects had to follow according to the cuius regio, eius religio rule. In 1560, still during his lifetime, he ceded the Duchy of Bielsko with Karviná and Frýdek to his son and heir Frederick Casimir. Nevertheless, Frederick died already in 1571 and his father, struggling with financial problems, had to sell Bielsko as a state country to the Princes of Pless. The remaining duchy passed to the only surviving son Adam Wenceslaus, who in 1610 shifted back to Roman Catholicism for the sake of political advantage and enacted several Counter-Reformation measures. Indeed, Emperor Matthias appointed him Silesian governor in 1617, however, he died a few months later.

The Cieszyn Piast rule continued until 1653, when the male line became extinct with the death of Adam Wenceslaus' son Frederick William amidst the Thirty Years' War in 1625. The intentions of the Habsburg rulers to seize the duchy as a reverted fief were initially thwarted by his surviving sister, Duchess Elizabeth Lucretia, who began a lengthy lawsuit on her heritage. Nevertheless, when she died in 1653, the duchy passed directly to the Bohemian monarchs,[5] at that time the Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III and his son King Ferdinand IV.

Habsburg rule edit

 
Archducal palace in Cieszyn

Ferdinand IV ruled Teschen until his death in 1654, whereafter the duchy fell back to Emperor Ferdinand III. His Habsburg successors continued the re-Catholicization policies. In 1722 Emperor Charles VI separated Teschen from the Bohemian Crown and granted the duchy to Duke Leopold of Lorraine, whose son Francis I was to marry Charles's daughter Maria Theresa. Leopold had unsuccessfully claimed his maternal grandmother's rights to the north Italian Duchy of Montferrat, which Charles had taken and given to the Dukes of Savoy in 1708 as part of their alliance pact. Once Holy Roman Emperor, Francis had to face the attack by the Prussian king Frederick the Great, who after the 1742 Peace of Breslau took the bulk of Silesia, while Teschen remained with the Habsburg Monarchy. In 1766 Teschen passed to Francis' eldest surviving daughter, Archduchess Maria Christina and her husband Prince Albert of Saxony, who thus became known colloquially as the Duke of Saxe-Teschen.

Although most of Silesia had passed to Prussia, Teschen with Bielsko and the duchies of Krnov (Jägerndorf), Opava (Troppau) and southern part of episcopal Nysa (Neisse) remained under Habsburg control and passed to the newly established Austrian Empire in 1804. Archduchess Maria Christina had died in 1798 and as her marriage remained childless, upon the death of the widowed Albert in 1822 the duchy passed to their adopted son, Archduke Charles of Austria, who assumed the title of Herzog von Teschen and became progenitor of the Teschen cadet branch of the Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty. While the Duchy of Teschen finally merged into the crown land of Austrian Silesia after the Revolutions of 1848, the ducal title passed down Charles' line, first to his eldest son, Archduke Albert, and then in 1895 to Albert Frederick's nephew, Archduke Frederick.

With Austrian Silesia, the territory of Teschen became part of the Cisleithanian half of the Austro-Hungarian dual monarchy upon the Compromise of 1867. At the end of World War I both the crown land and the ducal title were disestablished with the dissolution of Austria-Hungary. Archduke Frederick, appointed Austrian field marshal in 1914 but soon neutralized by Chief-of-Staff Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, found his vast possessions expropriated and retired to Magyaróvár in Hungary.

Aftermath edit

At the end of the war, local Polish and Czechoslovak self-governments were established in the territory of Cieszyn, which on 5 November 1918 signed an interim agreement under which the territory – including the town of Cieszyn itself – was divided along the Olza (Olše, Olsa) River. However, the preliminary convention failed to settle the border conflict between the newly established state of Czechoslovakia and the Second Polish Republic, which claimed further areas of the former Cieszyn duchy with a predominantly Polish-speaking population. The ongoing conflict escalated when Czechoslovak troops crossed the Olza on 23 January 1919, starting the Polish–Czechoslovak War.

Clashes of arms continued until 31 January, but neither of the belligerents benefited: at the 1920 Spa Conference the division of the former duchy along the Olza was confirmed. The eastern part of Cieszyn Silesia was incorporated into the Polish Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship, while the western part (including the Trans-Olza region) became part of Czechoslovakia. This was confirmed on 5 August 1920 by the Conference of Ambassadors.[6] After World War II the remaining German population was expelled.

Demographics edit

According to the Austrian census taken in 1910, the duchy had about 350,000 inhabitants: 54.8% Polish-speaking, 27.1% Czech-speaking and 18.1% German-speaking.[7] While the Czech population mainly settled in the western areas around Frýdek, the German population was clustered around Bielsko (German: Bielitz).

Dukes of Teschen edit

 
Seal of the first Duke Mieszko I (1288)

Silesian Piasts edit

Following the death of Elizabeth Lucretia, Teschen reverted to the royal domain of Bohemia. In 1722, Emperor Charles VI, as King of Bohemia, vested his cousin Leopold of Lorraine with the ducal title.

House of Habsburg-Lorraine edit

Titular dukes

Old maps edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Panic 2002, 6.
  2. ^ "Teschen | region, Europe". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2018-10-04.
  3. ^ Panic 2002, 7.
  4. ^ Panic 2002, 16.
  5. ^ Žáček 2004, 175
  6. ^ Decree of the Conference of Ambassadors with regard to Teschen, Spisz and Orava, dated Paris, August 5, 1920, League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. 2, pp. 50-58
  7. ^ Nowak 2008, 13.

References edit

  • Biermann, Gottlieb (1894). Geschichte des Herzogthums Teschen (in German) (2nd ed.). Teschen: Verlag und Hofbuchhandlung Karl Prochaska. OCLC 34926439.
  • Nowak, Krzysztof (2008). "Polskość i ruch narodowy". In Krzysztof Nowak (ed.). Pierwsza Niepodległość. Cieszyn: Urząd Miejski Cieszyn. pp. 7–17. ISBN 978-83-89835-40-6.
  • Žáček, Rudolf (2004). Dějiny Slezska v datech. Praha: Libri. ISBN 80-7277-172-8.

External links edit

    49°44′59″N 18°37′46″E / 49.749767°N 18.629392°E / 49.749767; 18.629392

    duchy, teschen, german, herzogtum, teschen, also, duchy, cieszyn, polish, księstwo, cieszyńskie, duchy, těšín, czech, těšínské, knížectví, duchies, silesia, centered, cieszyn, teschen, upper, silesia, split, silesian, duchy, opole, racibórz, 1281, during, feud. The Duchy of Teschen German Herzogtum Teschen also Duchy of Cieszyn Polish Ksiestwo Cieszynskie or Duchy of Tesin Czech Tesinske knizectvi was one of the Duchies of Silesia centered on Cieszyn Teschen in Upper Silesia It was split off the Silesian Duchy of Opole and Raciborz in 1281 during the feudal division of Poland and was ruled by Silesian dukes of the Piast dynasty from 1290 until the line became extinct with the death of Duchess Elizabeth Lucretia in 1653 1 Duchy of TeschenKsiestwo Cieszynskie Polish Tesinske knizectvi Czech Herzogtum Teschen German Ducatus Tessinensis Latin 1290 1918Flag Coat of arms1Silesia duchies in 1290 91 Teschen under Mieszko I in yellowStatusSilesian duchyFiefdom of Bohemia from 1327 Part of the Bohemian Crown from 1348 CapitalCieszynCommon languagesLatin officially Czech and German later Polish popularly ReligionLutheranismRoman CatholicismDukes 1290 1315Mieszko I first duke 1625 1653Elizabeth Lucretia last Piast ruler 1895 1918Archduke Frederick Habsburg last duke History Partitioned from Opole Raciborz1281 Split off Oswiecim1315 Vassalized by Bohemia1327 Split off Bielsko1572 Habsburg rule1653 Part of Austrian Silesia1742 45 Disestablished1918 Spa Conference28 July 1920Population 1910350 000Preceded by Succeeded byDuchy of Opole and Raciborz First Czechoslovak RepublicSecond Polish Republic1 Coat of arms of the Duchy of Teschen and the regional branch of the Piast dynastyThe ducal lands initially comprised former Lesser Polish territories east of the Biala River which in about 1315 again split off as the Polish Duchy of Oswiecim while the remaining duchy became a fiefdom of the Bohemian kings in 1327 and was incorporated into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown in 1348 While the bulk of Silesia was conquered by the Prussian king Frederick the Great in the Silesian Wars of 1740 1763 Teschen together with the duchies of Troppau Opava Krnov and Nysa remained with the Habsburg monarchy and merged into the Austrian Silesia crown land in 1849 The so called commander line of the Habsburg Lorraine dynasty a cadet branch descending from Archduke Charles Duke of Teschen held the title Duke of Teschen until 1918 Contents 1 History 1 1 Piast rule 1 2 Habsburg rule 1 3 Aftermath 2 Demographics 3 Dukes of Teschen 3 1 Silesian Piasts 3 2 House of Habsburg Lorraine 4 Old maps 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe duchy shared the history of the Cieszyn Silesia region and also in part that of Silesia in general the Teschen area was the south easternmost part of the medieval Duchy of Silesia a Polish province established upon the death of Duke Boleslaw III Wrymouth in 1138 2 According to his testament the Silesian lands were to be ruled by his eldest son Wladyslaw II who became the progenitor of the Silesian Piasts Though he was exiled by his younger half brothers after he had tried to gain control over Poland as a whole his sons backed by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa were able to return and to secure their Silesian inheritance In 1172 they divided the heritage the Upper Silesian lands with the Cieszyn area stretching up to the Beskid Mountains fell to the second son Mieszko I Tanglefoot who ruled as Duke of Raciborz nbsp Piast castle tower in Cieszyn part of the former ducal residenceDefying the Polish agnatic seniority principle Mieszko Tanglefoot in 1202 occupied the neighbouring Duchy of Opole from his nephew Henry the Bearded forming the united Upper Silesian Duchy of Opole and Raciborz His descendants ruled Upper Silesia until the death of Mieszko s grandson Duke Wladyslaw Opolski in 1281 whereafter Opole Raciborz was again divided among his four sons The eldest Mieszko initially ruled the Duchy of Raciborz with Cieszyn and Oswiecim jointly with his minor brother Przemyslaw After another partition in 1290 Mieszko took his residence in Cieszyn and became the first Duke of Teschen Piast rule edit Like most of his Silesian Piast relatives Mieszko approached the mighty kings of Bohemia during the Polish internal struggles after the death of High Duke Leszek II in 1291 he and his younger brother Duke Bolko I of Opole signed a support agreement with King Wenceslaus II Mieszko also had the Teschen lands on the Vistula and Biala rivers and the Beskid foothills settled by German immigrants He colonised the remote parts of his duchy and vested Cieszyn Oswiecim Zator Skoczow and Karvina with town privileges His adhered to the alliance with Bohemia even after in 1310 the House of Luxembourg assumed the throne in Prague After Mieszko s death in 1315 his son Wladyslaw took the lands east of the Biala river where he established the separate Duchy of Oswiecim which eventually became a fief of the Polish Crown His brother Casimir I retained the western part and in 1327 swore homage to King John of Bohemia After that Teschen became an autonomous fiefdom of the Bohemian kings and part of the Crown of Bohemia 3 Local Piast rulers often possessed other lands outside the duchy itself as the Duchy of Siewierz half of Glogow and some parts of Bytom nbsp Title page of the Constitution of the Duchy of Teschen printed in Czech issued by Duke Wenceslaus III Adam in 1573After the death of Duke Boleslaw I in 1431 the rule over the duchy was shared by his wife Euphemia and their four sons 4 In 1442 the duchy was divided between the brothers who all bore the ducal title nevertheless the real control over the duchy passed to Boleslaus II and Przemyslaus II who after the death of Boleslaus II in 1452 ruled alone From the late 15th century onwards the Beskid valleys in the south were settled by Vlach peasants from neighbouring Moravian Wallachia While the Lands of the Bohemian Crown passed to the Habsburg dynasty in 1526 the Duchy of Teschen during the reign of Duke Wenceslaus III Adam from 1528 onwards shifted to Protestantism Influenced by the Moravian governor John of Pernstein his tutor and father in law he turned to the Lutheran faith in 1540 and his subjects had to follow according to the cuius regio eius religio rule In 1560 still during his lifetime he ceded the Duchy of Bielsko with Karvina and Frydek to his son and heir Frederick Casimir Nevertheless Frederick died already in 1571 and his father struggling with financial problems had to sell Bielsko as a state country to the Princes of Pless The remaining duchy passed to the only surviving son Adam Wenceslaus who in 1610 shifted back to Roman Catholicism for the sake of political advantage and enacted several Counter Reformation measures Indeed Emperor Matthias appointed him Silesian governor in 1617 however he died a few months later The Cieszyn Piast rule continued until 1653 when the male line became extinct with the death of Adam Wenceslaus son Frederick William amidst the Thirty Years War in 1625 The intentions of the Habsburg rulers to seize the duchy as a reverted fief were initially thwarted by his surviving sister Duchess Elizabeth Lucretia who began a lengthy lawsuit on her heritage Nevertheless when she died in 1653 the duchy passed directly to the Bohemian monarchs 5 at that time the Habsburg emperor Ferdinand III and his son King Ferdinand IV Habsburg rule edit nbsp Archducal palace in CieszynFerdinand IV ruled Teschen until his death in 1654 whereafter the duchy fell back to Emperor Ferdinand III His Habsburg successors continued the re Catholicization policies In 1722 Emperor Charles VI separated Teschen from the Bohemian Crown and granted the duchy to Duke Leopold of Lorraine whose son Francis I was to marry Charles s daughter Maria Theresa Leopold had unsuccessfully claimed his maternal grandmother s rights to the north Italian Duchy of Montferrat which Charles had taken and given to the Dukes of Savoy in 1708 as part of their alliance pact Once Holy Roman Emperor Francis had to face the attack by the Prussian king Frederick the Great who after the 1742 Peace of Breslau took the bulk of Silesia while Teschen remained with the Habsburg Monarchy In 1766 Teschen passed to Francis eldest surviving daughter Archduchess Maria Christina and her husband Prince Albert of Saxony who thus became known colloquially as the Duke of Saxe Teschen Although most of Silesia had passed to Prussia Teschen with Bielsko and the duchies of Krnov Jagerndorf Opava Troppau and southern part of episcopal Nysa Neisse remained under Habsburg control and passed to the newly established Austrian Empire in 1804 Archduchess Maria Christina had died in 1798 and as her marriage remained childless upon the death of the widowed Albert in 1822 the duchy passed to their adopted son Archduke Charles of Austria who assumed the title of Herzog von Teschen and became progenitor of the Teschen cadet branch of the Habsburg Lorraine dynasty While the Duchy of Teschen finally merged into the crown land of Austrian Silesia after the Revolutions of 1848 the ducal title passed down Charles line first to his eldest son Archduke Albert and then in 1895 to Albert Frederick s nephew Archduke Frederick With Austrian Silesia the territory of Teschen became part of the Cisleithanian half of the Austro Hungarian dual monarchy upon the Compromise of 1867 At the end of World War I both the crown land and the ducal title were disestablished with the dissolution of Austria Hungary Archduke Frederick appointed Austrian field marshal in 1914 but soon neutralized by Chief of Staff Franz Conrad von Hotzendorf found his vast possessions expropriated and retired to Magyarovar in Hungary Aftermath edit At the end of the war local Polish and Czechoslovak self governments were established in the territory of Cieszyn which on 5 November 1918 signed an interim agreement under which the territory including the town of Cieszyn itself was divided along the Olza Olse Olsa River However the preliminary convention failed to settle the border conflict between the newly established state of Czechoslovakia and the Second Polish Republic which claimed further areas of the former Cieszyn duchy with a predominantly Polish speaking population The ongoing conflict escalated when Czechoslovak troops crossed the Olza on 23 January 1919 starting the Polish Czechoslovak War Clashes of arms continued until 31 January but neither of the belligerents benefited at the 1920 Spa Conference the division of the former duchy along the Olza was confirmed The eastern part of Cieszyn Silesia was incorporated into the Polish Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship while the western part including the Trans Olza region became part of Czechoslovakia This was confirmed on 5 August 1920 by the Conference of Ambassadors 6 After World War II the remaining German population was expelled Demographics edit nbsp Languages of sermons in Roman Catholic parishes in the 17th century red Polish yellow Czech blue German striped Polish and German nbsp 1910 Austrian census percentage of Polish speaking population nbsp 1910 Austrian census percentage of Czech speaking population nbsp 1910 Austrian census percentage of German speaking populationAccording to the Austrian census taken in 1910 the duchy had about 350 000 inhabitants 54 8 Polish speaking 27 1 Czech speaking and 18 1 German speaking 7 While the Czech population mainly settled in the western areas around Frydek the German population was clustered around Bielsko German Bielitz Dukes of Teschen editSee also Duchess of Teschen nbsp Seal of the first Duke Mieszko I 1288 Silesian Piasts edit 1290 1315 Mieszko I 1315 1358 Casimir I son swore homage to King John of Bohemia in 1327 1358 1410 Przemyslaus I Noszak son 1410 1431 Boleslaus I son 1431 1442 Wenceslaus I became Duke of Siewierz and Bielsko 1431 1442 Wladislaus Duke of Glogow 1431 1452 Boleslaus II 1431 1477 Przemyslaus II 1477 1528 Casimir II 1518 1524 Wenceslaus II son co ruler with his father 1528 1579 Wenceslaus III Adam son of Wenceslaus II 1579 1617 Adam Wenceslaus son 1617 1625 Frederick William son left no male heirs 1625 1653 Elizabeth Lucretia sister Following the death of Elizabeth Lucretia Teschen reverted to the royal domain of Bohemia In 1722 Emperor Charles VI as King of Bohemia vested his cousin Leopold of Lorraine with the ducal title House of Habsburg Lorraine edit 1722 1729 Leopold 1729 1765 Francis I Stephen son husband of Maria Theresa Holy Roman Emperor from 1745 1765 1766 Emperor Joseph II son 1766 1797 Archduchess Maria Christina 1766 1822 Prince Albert Casimir husband 1822 1847 Charles nephew and adoptive son 1847 1849 Albert sonTitular dukes1849 1895 Albert 1895 1918 Frederick nephew title abolished in Austrian law in 1918 Archduke Albrecht Franz Duke of Teschen 1897 1955 continued to use the title after the death of his father Old maps edit nbsp The Duchy of Teschen 17th 18th century map by Matthaus Seutter nbsp The Duchy of Teschen in 1724 by Jonas Nigrinus nbsp The Duchy of Teschen in 1736 by Matthaeus Schubarth nbsp The Duchy of Teschen 1746 map by Johann Homann nbsp 17th 18th century map of the Duchy of Teschen by Joh David Schleuen nbsp Polish map of the Duchy of Cieszyn 20th centuryFootnotes edit Panic 2002 6 Teschen region Europe Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2018 10 04 Panic 2002 7 Panic 2002 16 Zacek 2004 175 Decree of the Conference of Ambassadors with regard to Teschen Spisz and Orava dated Paris August 5 1920 League of Nations Treaty Series vol 2 pp 50 58 Nowak 2008 13 References editBiermann Gottlieb 1894 Geschichte des Herzogthums Teschen in German 2nd ed Teschen Verlag und Hofbuchhandlung Karl Prochaska OCLC 34926439 Nowak Krzysztof 2008 Polskosc i ruch narodowy In Krzysztof Nowak ed Pierwsza Niepodleglosc Cieszyn Urzad Miejski Cieszyn pp 7 17 ISBN 978 83 89835 40 6 Panic Idzi 2002 Poczet Piastow i Piastowien cieszynskich in Polish Cieszyn Urzad Miejski ISBN 83 917095 4 X OCLC 55650394 Zacek Rudolf 2004 Dejiny Slezska v datech Praha Libri ISBN 80 7277 172 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duchy of Teschen 1600s Map of German lands with the Duchy of Teschen 49 44 59 N 18 37 46 E 49 749767 N 18 629392 E 49 749767 18 629392 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duchy of Teschen amp oldid 1186860855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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