Bogislaw von Schlawe
Bogislaw von Schlawe was Prince von Schlawe - Stolp in the Pomerania region in the 12th century . He was a member of the Ratiboriden , a branch of the ruling family in Pomerania , the Griffin . Very little is known about him.
Life
In a bull written by Pope Gregory IX. Issued in 1238, the deceased are Ratoborius princeps Pomeranie ac B. filius eius ("Ratibor Prince of Pomerania and his son B."). The said Ratibor is classified as Ratibor I. († 1156), the abbreviated name of his son as Bogislaw.
Bogislaw ruled in the rulership of Schlawe-Stolp , also known as the "Land Schlawe". His son Bogislaw III followed him in the rule .
Marriage and offspring
Who Bogislaw was married to is unknown. His children were:
- Bogislaw III.
- Dobroslawa von Schlawe († after 1200) ∞ (I) Duke Boleslaw of Kuyavia († 1195); ∞ (II) Grimislaw , Herr von Schwetz and Libschau († after 1198)
Occasionally Swinislawa , the wife of Duke Mestwin I of Pomerania , was seen as the daughter of Bogislaw.
count
The counting of the rulers of the Griffin House has always been involved. There has been an inequality here from age that causes some confusion.
Since the existence of this Bogislaw was unknown to the genealogists of the early modern period, who first numbered the Pomeranian rulers named Bogislaw, this Bogislaw was not given a number. The historian Martin Wehrmann (1861-1937) uses the name Bogislaw von Schlawe to distinguish it from the other rulers named Bogislaw .
See also
literature
- Martin Wehrmann : Genealogy of the Pomeranian ducal house. Leon Sauniers Buchhandlung Verlag, Stettin 1937, pp. 40–41, 45.
Footnotes
- ^ Klaus Conrad (arrangement): Pommersches Urkundenbuch . Volume 1. 2nd edition. Böhlau Verlag, Cologne and Vienna 1970, No. 354.
- ^ Martin Wehrmann : Genealogy of the Pomeranian ducal house. Leon Sauniers Buchhandlung Verlag, Stettin 1937, p. 15.
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Bogislaw von Schlawe |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Prince of Schlawe-Stolp |
DATE OF BIRTH | 11th century or 12th century |
DATE OF DEATH | 12th century or 13th century |