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Władysław III of Poland

Władysław III (31 October 1424 – 10 November 1444), also known as Ladislaus of Varna, was King of Poland and the Supreme Duke (Supremus Dux) of Grand Duchy of Lithuania[1][2] from 1434 as well as King of Hungary and Croatia from 1440 until his death at the Battle of Varna.[3] He was the eldest son of Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, and the Lithuanian noblewoman Sophia of Halshany.[4]

Władysław III
Detail of Władysław's seal
King of Poland
Reign1434–1444
Coronation25 July 1434, Wawel Cathedral
PredecessorWładysław II Jagiełło
SuccessorInterregnum (1444–1447)
Casimir IV Jagiellon (1447)
Supreme Duke of Lithuania[1][2]
Reign1434–1444
PredecessorWładysław II Jagiełło
SuccessorCasimir IV Jagiellon
King of Hungary and Croatia
Reign1440–1444
Coronation17 July 1440 in Székesfehérvár Basilica
PredecessorAlbert
SuccessorLadislaus the Posthumous
Born31 October 1424
Kraków, Poland
Died10 November 1444(1444-11-10) (aged 20)
Varna, Ottoman Empire
(present-day Bulgaria)
DynastyJagiellon
FatherWładysław II Jagiełło
MotherSophia of Halshany
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Władysław III of Varna is known in Hungarian as I. Ulászló; in Polish as Władysław III Warneńczyk; in Slovak as Vladislav I; in Czech as Vladislav Varnenčík; in Bulgarian as Владислав Варненчик (Vladislav Varnenchik); in Lithuanian as Vladislovas III (or Vladislovas Varnietis); in Croatian as Vladislav I. Jagelović.

Royal title edit

Latin: Ladislaus Dei Gratia Poloniae, Hungariae, Dalmatiae, Croatiae, Rascia etc. rex necnon terrarum Cracouie, Sandomirie, Syradie, Lancicie, Cuyauie, Lithuaniae princeps supremus, Pomeraniae, Russieque dominus et heres etc.

English: Vladislaus by the Grace of God king of Poland, Hungary, Dalmatia, Croatia, Búlgaria, Rascia (Serbian Grand Principality) and lands of Kraków, Sandomierz, Sieradz, Łęczyca, Kuyavia, Supreme Prince of Lithuania, lord and heir of Pomerania and Ruthenia

Early life edit

 
Baptism of Władysław III (1425) at Wawel Cathedral in Kraków as imagined by Jan Matejko the 19th century.

Władysław was the first-born son of Władysław II Jagiełło and Sophia of Halshany.[4] He ascended the throne at the age of ten and was immediately surrounded by a group of advisors headed by Cardinal Zbigniew Oleśnicki, who wanted to continue to enjoy his high status at court. In spite of that, the young ruler and his ambitious mother were aware that there was opposition to them. In 1427, the Polish nobility initiated an anti-Jagiellonian opposition and attempted to have Władysław II Jagiełło's sons Władysław III and Casimir IV Jagiellon declared illegitimate to the Polish throne as they had no blood link to the previous ruling Polish dynasty, the Piasts.[4] Despite the agreements signed between Władysław II and the Polish magnates to ensure the succession for his sons, the opposition wanted another candidate for the Polish throne: Frederick of Brandenburg, who was betrothed to Hedwig, Jagiełło's daughter by his second wife. However, the conspiracy was resolved by the death of the princess, rumoured to have been poisoned by Queen Sophia.

Politics and military career edit

King of Poland edit

The young king's reign was difficult from the very outset. His coronation was interrupted by a hostile nobleman, Spytko III of Melsztyn. On the next day, the customary homage of the townsfolk of Kraków did not take place due to a dispute between the temporal and spiritual lords of Mazovia over their place in the retinue. Neither did Władysław have much to say later about matters of state, which were run by the powerful cleric and chancellor Oleśnicki. The situation did not change even after the Sejm (Polish parliament) had gathered in Piotrków in 1438, and declared the fourteen-year-old king to have attained his majority.

King of Hungary and Croatia edit

This situation continued until 1440, when Władysław was offered the crown of Hungary. However, accepting it would have led to numerous problems. Hungary was under a growing threat from the Ottoman Empire, and some Polish magnates did not want to agree to the king of Poland also being the monarch of Hungary, while Elisabeth, widow of the deceased King of Hungary, Albert II of Germany, attempted to keep the crown for her yet unborn child. Such inconveniences aside, Władysław finally took the Hungarian throne, having engaged in a two-year civil war against Elisabeth. He had received significant support from Pope Eugene IV, in exchange for his help in organising an anti-Muslim crusade. The eighteen-year-old king, although thus far a king solely by title, became deeply involved in the war against the Ottomans, having been brought up in the standard of a pious Christian monarch and ideal Christian knight, and paid no heed to the interests of Poland and of the Jagiellonian dynasty.[citation needed]

Crusade against Muslim Ottomans and Death at Varna edit

 
Władysław III at the Battle of Varna as imagined by Jan Matejko
 
Ottoman miniature depicting Murad II and Władysław III's beheading

The "bulwark of Christianity" and other slogans put forward by the papal envoy Giuliano Cesarini, together with much more reasonable but only verbal promises of Venetian and papal fleets blockading the Dardanelles Straits, along with an enticing vision of a promise of victory in the Crusade of Varna against the Muslims, persuaded Władysław to engage his freshly victorious forces for another season of war, thus breaching the ten-year truce with the aggressive and still powerful Ottoman Empire. Despite their alleged forthcoming help, the Venetian fleet carried the Muslim army from Asia into Europe but failed to sail to Varna,[citation needed] a surprising move that Władysław and his most senior military commander John Hunyadi failed to anticipate. The Venetian treachery placed the huge Muslim army (60,000) under sultan Murad II in close proximity to the unsuspecting crusaders (20,000).[citation needed] As a result, when the Battle of Varna began on 10 November 1444, the Polish king and his multi-ethnic subjects did not sense that this would be for many of them their final fight. Facing the desperate circumstance the king, seeing the experienced Hunyadi fight and break the Sipahi cavalry, decided to gamble and directly attack the sultan, who was protected by the guard cavalry and formidable Janissary infantry. The young king was killed while personally leading his own 500-strong royal Polish heavy cavalry company, his charge losing impetus and coming to a standstill amongst the unyielding Janissaries protecting the sultan. The Janissaries killed the king's bodyguard and beheaded Władysław, displaying his head on a pole.[5] Disheartened by the death of their king, the Hungarian army fled the battlefield. Neither the king's body nor his armor were ever found.[citation needed]

Personal life edit

Władysław III had no children and did not marry. The chronicler Jan Długosz, known for his antipathy towards the king and his father, alleged that there was something unusual about Władysław's sexuality, though Długosz did not specify what: "too subject to his carnal desires", "he did not abandon his lewd and despicable habits".[6] Długosz wrote about him some sentences later: "No age has ever seen and will never see a more Catholic and holy ruler who, according to his highest goodness, has never harmed any Christian. [...] Finally, like a holy king and a second angel on Earth, he lived an unmarried and virgin life at home and during the war."[citation needed]

Władysław was succeeded in the Kingdom of Poland by his younger brother, Duke Casimir IV of Lithuania, in 1447, after a three-year interregnum. In Hungary he was succeeded by his former rival, the child-king Ladislaus the Posthumous.[citation needed]

Legend edit

 
St. Joachim and St. Anne Meeting at the Golden Gate.

According to a Portuguese legend Władysław survived the Battle of Varna (although the Ottomans claimed to have his head, his body in royal armor was never found) and then journeyed in secrecy to the Holy Land. He became a knight of Saint Catharine of Mount Sinai (O Cavaleiro de Santa Catarina) and then he settled on Madeira.[7] King Afonso V of Portugal granted him the lands in Madalena do Mar district of the Madeira Islands, for the rest of his life.[7] He was known there as Henrique Alemão (Henry the German) and married Senhorinha Anes (the King of Portugal was his best man[8]), who gave him two sons. He established a church of Saint Catherine and Saint Mary Magdalene in Madalena do Mar (1471).[9][10] There he was depicted in a painting as Saint Joachim meeting Saint Anne at the Golden Gate on a painting by Master of the Adoration of Machico (Mestre da Adoração de Machico) in the beginning of the 16th century.[7]

According to the tradition, he felt his defeat at Varna was a warning sign from God (since he declared war on a false pretext, violating the truce with the Ottoman Muslims). Thus he wandered as a pilgrim, seeking forgiveness, which he found in Jerusalem. For the rest of his life he would deny his identity. A delegation of Polish monks went to Madeira to question him and certified he was in fact the long lost king, now living in secrecy. He declined their suggestion to ascend the Polish throne again.

According to another version of the legend, promoted by Manuel da Silva Rosa, Władysław (as Henrique Alemão) was the real father of Christopher Columbus.[11]

Remembrance edit

Following his death, Władysław III was commemorated in many songs and poems.[12]

A main boulevard and residential district in Varna are named after Warneńczyk.[13][14] In 1935 a park-museum, Władysław Warneńczyk, was opened in Varna, with a symbolic cenotaph of Władysław III built atop of an ancient Thracian mound tomb.[15] There has also been a soccer team named Vladislav Varna (now PFC Cherno More Varna).[16]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Gudavičius, Edvardas. "Aukščiausiasis kunigaikštis". Vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  2. ^ a b "Vladislovas Varnietis". Vle.lt (in Lithuanian). Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 April 2009. Retrieved 1 March 2009.
  4. ^ a b c "Jagiellonians Timeline". Jagiellonians.com. University of Oxford. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  5. ^ Davies, Norman. God's Playground. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 128.
  6. ^ Jan Długosz: Roczniki, czyli kroniki sławnego Królestwa Polskiego, vol. XII, page 685
  7. ^ a b c São Joaquim e Santa Ana, Museu de Arte Sacra do Funchal.
  8. ^ Rei de Portugal, D. Afonso V, foi o seu padrinho de casamento – Henrique Alemão ou Ladislau III
  9. ^ - Ladislau III da Polónia Lenda ou História?
  10. ^ Diocese do Funchal 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Igreja Santa Maria Madalena em Madalena do Mar.
  11. ^ Orliński, Wojciech (12 June 2012). ""Kolumb. Historia nieznana", Manuel Rosa. Kolumb, syn Władysława". wyborcza.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  12. ^ Michałowska, Teresa (1995). Średniowiecze (in Polish) (First ed.). Warsaw: Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN. pp. 697–706. ISBN 83-01-11452-5.
  13. ^ "bul. "Vladislav Varnenchik"". bul. "Vladislav Varnenchik". Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  14. ^ "История | Район "Владислав Варненчик" – Община Варна". vladislavovo.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  15. ^ "PARK-MUSEUM OF THE COMBAT FRIENDSHIP 1444 "WLADISLAW WARNENCHIK"". varnenchikmuseum.com. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  16. ^ "PFC Cherno More Varna | Retro – football". www.retro-football.bg. Retrieved 18 December 2020.

References edit

  • K. Łukasiewicz, Władysław Warneńczyk, Krzyżacy i Kawaler Św Katarzyny, Warszawa 2010

External links edit

Władysław III of Poland
Born: 31 October 1424 Died: 10 November 1444
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Poland
1434–1444
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Hungary and Croatia
disputed by Ladislaus V

1440–1444
Succeeded by

władysław, poland, other, people, with, same, name, ladislaus, disambiguation, władysław, october, 1424, november, 1444, also, known, ladislaus, varna, king, poland, supreme, duke, supremus, grand, duchy, lithuania, from, 1434, well, king, hungary, croatia, fr. For other people with the same name see Ladislaus III disambiguation Wladyslaw III 31 October 1424 10 November 1444 also known as Ladislaus of Varna was King of Poland and the Supreme Duke Supremus Dux of Grand Duchy of Lithuania 1 2 from 1434 as well as King of Hungary and Croatia from 1440 until his death at the Battle of Varna 3 He was the eldest son of Wladyslaw II Jagiello King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania and the Lithuanian noblewoman Sophia of Halshany 4 Wladyslaw IIIDetail of Wladyslaw s sealKing of PolandReign1434 1444Coronation25 July 1434 Wawel CathedralPredecessorWladyslaw II JagielloSuccessorInterregnum 1444 1447 Casimir IV Jagiellon 1447 Supreme Duke of Lithuania 1 2 Reign1434 1444PredecessorWladyslaw II JagielloSuccessorCasimir IV JagiellonKing of Hungary and CroatiaReign1440 1444Coronation17 July 1440 in Szekesfehervar BasilicaPredecessorAlbertSuccessorLadislaus the PosthumousBorn31 October 1424Krakow PolandDied10 November 1444 1444 11 10 aged 20 Varna Ottoman Empire present day Bulgaria DynastyJagiellonFatherWladyslaw II JagielloMotherSophia of HalshanyReligionRoman CatholicismWladyslaw III of Varna is known in Hungarian as I Ulaszlo in Polish as Wladyslaw III Warnenczyk in Slovak as Vladislav I in Czech as Vladislav Varnencik in Bulgarian as Vladislav Varnenchik Vladislav Varnenchik in Lithuanian as Vladislovas III or Vladislovas Varnietis in Croatian as Vladislav I Jagelovic Contents 1 Royal title 2 Early life 3 Politics and military career 3 1 King of Poland 3 2 King of Hungary and Croatia 4 Crusade against Muslim Ottomans and Death at Varna 5 Personal life 6 Legend 7 Remembrance 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksRoyal title editLatin Ladislaus Dei Gratia Poloniae Hungariae Dalmatiae Croatiae Rascia etc rex necnon terrarum Cracouie Sandomirie Syradie Lancicie Cuyauie Lithuaniae princeps supremus Pomeraniae Russieque dominus et heres etc English Vladislaus by the Grace of God king of Poland Hungary Dalmatia Croatia Bulgaria Rascia Serbian Grand Principality and lands of Krakow Sandomierz Sieradz Leczyca Kuyavia Supreme Prince of Lithuania lord and heir of Pomerania and RutheniaEarly life edit nbsp Baptism of Wladyslaw III 1425 at Wawel Cathedral in Krakow as imagined by Jan Matejko the 19th century Wladyslaw was the first born son of Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Sophia of Halshany 4 He ascended the throne at the age of ten and was immediately surrounded by a group of advisors headed by Cardinal Zbigniew Olesnicki who wanted to continue to enjoy his high status at court In spite of that the young ruler and his ambitious mother were aware that there was opposition to them In 1427 the Polish nobility initiated an anti Jagiellonian opposition and attempted to have Wladyslaw II Jagiello s sons Wladyslaw III and Casimir IV Jagiellon declared illegitimate to the Polish throne as they had no blood link to the previous ruling Polish dynasty the Piasts 4 Despite the agreements signed between Wladyslaw II and the Polish magnates to ensure the succession for his sons the opposition wanted another candidate for the Polish throne Frederick of Brandenburg who was betrothed to Hedwig Jagiello s daughter by his second wife However the conspiracy was resolved by the death of the princess rumoured to have been poisoned by Queen Sophia Politics and military career editKing of Poland edit The young king s reign was difficult from the very outset His coronation was interrupted by a hostile nobleman Spytko III of Melsztyn On the next day the customary homage of the townsfolk of Krakow did not take place due to a dispute between the temporal and spiritual lords of Mazovia over their place in the retinue Neither did Wladyslaw have much to say later about matters of state which were run by the powerful cleric and chancellor Olesnicki The situation did not change even after the Sejm Polish parliament had gathered in Piotrkow in 1438 and declared the fourteen year old king to have attained his majority King of Hungary and Croatia edit This situation continued until 1440 when Wladyslaw was offered the crown of Hungary However accepting it would have led to numerous problems Hungary was under a growing threat from the Ottoman Empire and some Polish magnates did not want to agree to the king of Poland also being the monarch of Hungary while Elisabeth widow of the deceased King of Hungary Albert II of Germany attempted to keep the crown for her yet unborn child Such inconveniences aside Wladyslaw finally took the Hungarian throne having engaged in a two year civil war against Elisabeth He had received significant support from Pope Eugene IV in exchange for his help in organising an anti Muslim crusade The eighteen year old king although thus far a king solely by title became deeply involved in the war against the Ottomans having been brought up in the standard of a pious Christian monarch and ideal Christian knight and paid no heed to the interests of Poland and of the Jagiellonian dynasty citation needed Crusade against Muslim Ottomans and Death at Varna edit nbsp Wladyslaw III at the Battle of Varna as imagined by Jan Matejko nbsp Ottoman miniature depicting Murad II and Wladyslaw III s beheadingThe bulwark of Christianity and other slogans put forward by the papal envoy Giuliano Cesarini together with much more reasonable but only verbal promises of Venetian and papal fleets blockading the Dardanelles Straits along with an enticing vision of a promise of victory in the Crusade of Varna against the Muslims persuaded Wladyslaw to engage his freshly victorious forces for another season of war thus breaching the ten year truce with the aggressive and still powerful Ottoman Empire Despite their alleged forthcoming help the Venetian fleet carried the Muslim army from Asia into Europe but failed to sail to Varna citation needed a surprising move that Wladyslaw and his most senior military commander John Hunyadi failed to anticipate The Venetian treachery placed the huge Muslim army 60 000 under sultan Murad II in close proximity to the unsuspecting crusaders 20 000 citation needed As a result when the Battle of Varna began on 10 November 1444 the Polish king and his multi ethnic subjects did not sense that this would be for many of them their final fight Facing the desperate circumstance the king seeing the experienced Hunyadi fight and break the Sipahi cavalry decided to gamble and directly attack the sultan who was protected by the guard cavalry and formidable Janissary infantry The young king was killed while personally leading his own 500 strong royal Polish heavy cavalry company his charge losing impetus and coming to a standstill amongst the unyielding Janissaries protecting the sultan The Janissaries killed the king s bodyguard and beheaded Wladyslaw displaying his head on a pole 5 Disheartened by the death of their king the Hungarian army fled the battlefield Neither the king s body nor his armor were ever found citation needed Personal life editWladyslaw III had no children and did not marry The chronicler Jan Dlugosz known for his antipathy towards the king and his father alleged that there was something unusual about Wladyslaw s sexuality though Dlugosz did not specify what too subject to his carnal desires he did not abandon his lewd and despicable habits 6 Dlugosz wrote about him some sentences later No age has ever seen and will never see a more Catholic and holy ruler who according to his highest goodness has never harmed any Christian Finally like a holy king and a second angel on Earth he lived an unmarried and virgin life at home and during the war citation needed Wladyslaw was succeeded in the Kingdom of Poland by his younger brother Duke Casimir IV of Lithuania in 1447 after a three year interregnum In Hungary he was succeeded by his former rival the child king Ladislaus the Posthumous citation needed Legend edit nbsp St Joachim and St Anne Meeting at the Golden Gate According to a Portuguese legend Wladyslaw survived the Battle of Varna although the Ottomans claimed to have his head his body in royal armor was never found and then journeyed in secrecy to the Holy Land He became a knight of Saint Catharine of Mount Sinai O Cavaleiro de Santa Catarina and then he settled on Madeira 7 King Afonso V of Portugal granted him the lands in Madalena do Mar district of the Madeira Islands for the rest of his life 7 He was known there as Henrique Alemao Henry the German and married Senhorinha Anes the King of Portugal was his best man 8 who gave him two sons He established a church of Saint Catherine and Saint Mary Magdalene in Madalena do Mar 1471 9 10 There he was depicted in a painting as Saint Joachim meeting Saint Anne at the Golden Gate on a painting by Master of the Adoration of Machico Mestre da Adoracao de Machico in the beginning of the 16th century 7 According to the tradition he felt his defeat at Varna was a warning sign from God since he declared war on a false pretext violating the truce with the Ottoman Muslims Thus he wandered as a pilgrim seeking forgiveness which he found in Jerusalem For the rest of his life he would deny his identity A delegation of Polish monks went to Madeira to question him and certified he was in fact the long lost king now living in secrecy He declined their suggestion to ascend the Polish throne again According to another version of the legend promoted by Manuel da Silva Rosa Wladyslaw as Henrique Alemao was the real father of Christopher Columbus 11 Remembrance editFollowing his death Wladyslaw III was commemorated in many songs and poems 12 A main boulevard and residential district in Varna are named after Warnenczyk 13 14 In 1935 a park museum Wladyslaw Warnenczyk was opened in Varna with a symbolic cenotaph of Wladyslaw III built atop of an ancient Thracian mound tomb 15 There has also been a soccer team named Vladislav Varna now PFC Cherno More Varna 16 Gallery editGallery nbsp The Royal Seal of Wladyslaw III Warnenczyk 1438 nbsp Cenotaph effigy Wawel Cathedral nbsp Coat of arms nbsp The Memorial of the Battle in Varna built on an ancient Thracian mound tomb bearing the name of the fallen king nbsp Imaginary portrait from Thuroczi Janos Chronica Hungarorum Wladyslaw was only 20 when he died nbsp Church Madalena do Mar Madeira hypothetical burial place of Wladyslaw IIISee also editHistory of Poland 1385 1569 List of Polish monarchsPortals nbsp Poland nbsp Hungary nbsp Croatia nbsp Christianity nbsp Monarchy nbsp BiographyNotes edit a b Gudavicius Edvardas Auksciausiasis kunigaikstis Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 11 April 2021 a b Vladislovas Varnietis Vle lt in Lithuanian Retrieved 11 April 2021 Wladyslaw III MSN Encarta Archived from the original on 28 April 2009 Retrieved 1 March 2009 a b c Jagiellonians Timeline Jagiellonians com University of Oxford Retrieved 20 April 2021 Davies Norman God s Playground Oxford Oxford University Press p 128 Jan Dlugosz Roczniki czyli kroniki slawnego Krolestwa Polskiego vol XII page 685 a b c Sao Joaquim e Santa Ana Museu de Arte Sacra do Funchal Rei de Portugal D Afonso V foi o seu padrinho de casamento A Lenda Henrique Alemao ou Ladislau III Henrique Alemao Ladislau III da Polonia Lenda ou Historia Diocese do Funchal Archived 2 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Igreja Santa Maria Madalena em Madalena do Mar Orlinski Wojciech 12 June 2012 Kolumb Historia nieznana Manuel Rosa Kolumb syn Wladyslawa wyborcza pl in Polish Retrieved 19 September 2020 Michalowska Teresa 1995 Sredniowiecze in Polish First ed Warsaw Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN pp 697 706 ISBN 83 01 11452 5 bul Vladislav Varnenchik bul Vladislav Varnenchik Retrieved 18 December 2020 Istoriya Rajon Vladislav Varnenchik Obshina Varna vladislavovo bg in Bulgarian Retrieved 18 December 2020 PARK MUSEUM OF THE COMBAT FRIENDSHIP 1444 WLADISLAW WARNENCHIK varnenchikmuseum com Retrieved 18 December 2020 PFC Cherno More Varna Retro football www retro football bg Retrieved 18 December 2020 References editK Lukasiewicz Wladyslaw Warnenczyk Krzyzacy i Kawaler Sw Katarzyny Warszawa 2010External links editBain Robert Nisbet 1911 Wladislaus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed pp 765 767 see page 766 para 3 Wladislaus III 1424 1444 king of Poland and Hungary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wladislaus III of Poland and Hungary Wladyslaw III of PolandJagiellon dynastyBorn 31 October 1424 Died 10 November 1444Regnal titlesPreceded byWladyslaw II King of Poland1434 1444 Succeeded byCasimir IVPreceded byAlbert King of Hungary and Croatiadisputed by Ladislaus V1440 1444 Succeeded byLadislaus V Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wladyslaw III of Poland amp oldid 1177726895, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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