Kojata IV from Hrabischitz

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Kojata IV. Von Hrabischitz , also Kojata von Brüx (Czech Kojata z Mostu ), († 1228 ) was a Bohemian nobleman from the Hrabischitz family .

Life

The son of Grabissa III. von Hrabischitz was first mentioned in 1207 when he donated a tenth of the vineyards in Brüx to the Ossegg monastery . He did not appear again until 1220. It was only between 1220 and 1224 that he was often named as a secondary witness, often behind his brother Vschebor IV. During this period he also appeared for the first time as a subdapifer . Together with his brother, he had some late Romanesque churches built, such as the church of St. Nicholas in Potfohre , which has been preserved to this day. This church resembles the Staufer buildings in Alsace. Another church in Unterjamling is associated with the Hrabischitz family, but only the remains of the western tower and the wall of the main nave remain.

The will of the childless magnate of Astes von Brüx contained numerous donations to people and institutions. He gave the Archdiocese of Prague to Krty , the convent of the Crusader Order of the Divine Tomb in Schwaz, the prosperous market towns of Brüx, as well as Rudig and Unterjamling (Dolní Jamné). He transferred several villages to his wife Vratislava, including Budíkovice , Kojetice bei Trebitsch and Šestajovice , which should also fall to the convent after her death. The Benedictine monastery Opatovice , which was co-founded by the Hrabischitzers , received Slavkovice from Kojata while he was still alive and after his death was given Starý Mateřov and market returns every ninth week in Brüx. The settlements of Kobeřice, Zmina and Krastno as well as Sezemice and Přelovice , which have since disappeared, were bequeathed to the Premonstratensians at Strahov Monastery . He left Drnovice and Račice in Moravia to his nieces Euphemie and Svatochna . He transferred further settlements and villages in Bohemia and Moravia to his entourage and servants.

Due to his death, the Brüxer branch of the Hrabischitzer family died out and the family tree was reduced to the lines of the descendants of Slauko I. and Boresch I.

literature

  • Tomáš Velímský : Hrabišici Všebor a Kojata. A počátky vrcholně středověkého Mostu , in: Český časopis historický 90 (1992)
  • Tomáš Velímský: Hrabišici páni z Rýzmburka , Praha 2002, ISBN 80-7106498-X