Tribal list of the Premyslids

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Root list of the Přemyslids with the persons represented in Wikipedia and important links.

The inadequate, often faulty, source situation affects the entire period of all branches of the family. Secured data are mentioned in a document, dates of birth and death o. G. However, periods of time are often unsecured and, with the greatest possible likelihood of the often divergent data sources, to be viewed with reservations. Genealogical details, even the assignment of members of the house, remain unclear.

The Dukes of Bohemia 868-1085, King of Bohemia 1085-1092

Přemysl the Ploughman is mentioned as the mythical progenitor of the Bohemian ruling family of the Přemyslids . The first historically / documented representative of the Přemyslid family was Bořivoj I , (* between 852 and 855; † 888/889). Around 874 he married Ludmilla of Bohemia , (* between 855 and 860; † September 15, 921 in Tetín ; ▭ in the monastery of St. George ), daughter of Prince Slavibor (830–) and NN They had the following offspring:

A1. Spytihněv I , Duke of Bohemia (894–915), (* around 875; † 915)
A2. Vratislav I , Duke of Bohemia (915-921), (* 888; † February 13, 921); ∞ (around 906) Drahomíra von Stodor (* around 890, according to another statement 877; † after 935, in exile)
B1. Wenceslas of Bohemia , also "Wenceslas of Bohemia" or "Saint Wenceslas", in Czech Svatý Václav , (* (903/907); † September 28, 935 in Altbunzlau , murdered; ▭ in St. Vitus Cathedral , Prague ); ∞ () NN
C1. ( illegitimate with NN ) Zbraslav
B2. Boleslav I , "the cruel", (Duke) (935–972), (* (905/915); † August 15 (973–976)); ∞ ((929)) Biagota NN
C1. [uncertain] Vladivoj , Duke of Bohemia (1002–1003), (* around 981; † (January / March) 1003)
C2. Dobroslawa , († 977); ∞ I: () Gunther von Merseburg , Margrave of the Mark Meissen and the Mark Merseburg , Ekkehardiner , (* before 949; † July 13, 982 near Crotone , Calabria , Italy ), son of Count Ekkehard von Merseburg (-) and NN ( -); ∞ II: (965) Duke Mieszko I , Prince of the Polans , Duke of Poland ((960)), (* 922/945; † May 25, 992), (∞ II: (978) Oda von Haldensleben , (* before 962; † 1023), daughter of Dietrich von Haldensleben , Margrave of Nordmark , (-985) and NN (-)), son of Siemomysl NN (-964) and NN (-)
C3. Boleslav II , "the Pious", Duke of Bohemia (967–999), († February 7, 999); ∞ ((not before 987)) Emma (of Burgundy), († 1005/1006), possibly identical to Emma of Italy , uncertain: (∞ I: (beginning of 966) King Lothar (* end of 941; † March 2, 986 in Laon ), son of King Ludwig IV , "the overseas", (920 / 921–954) and Duchess Gerberga (913–969)), daughter of King Lothar II of Italy (928–950) and Adelheid of Burgundy (931 / 932-999)
D1. Wenzel , († young)
D2. Boleslav III. , "The Red", Duke of Bohemia (999–1002 and 1003), blinded (1003), (* before 999; † 1037 in Poland, in political detention); ∞ () Predslawa NN
D3. Jaromír , Duke of Bohemia (1002–1003, 1004–1012 and 1033–1034), emasculated , blinded (1034), († November 4, 1035 near Lyssa , murdered)
D4. Oldřich (Udalrich) , Duke of Bohemia (1012-1033 and 1033-1034), († November 9, 1034); ∞ I: () NN ; ∞ II: () Božena NN , († 1055)
E1. Břetislav I , Prince of Moravia (around 1025-1031), Duke of Bohemia (1034-1055), (* around 1005; † January 10, 1055 in Chrudim ); ∞ (after 1021) Judith von Schweinfurt , exiled (1055), (* before 1003; † August 2, 1058 in Hungary ), (∞ II: (April 1055) Peter Orseolo (Peter (Orseolo) Király Magyar), King of Hungary , (* around 1008; † August 30, 1059; ▭ in Fünfkirchen ), son of Ottone Orseolo (Pietro Orseolo) (before 1009 – after 1026) and Marie of Hungary (Maria Királyi Hercegnö Magyar) (989-1026)), daughter by Margrave Heinrich von Schweinfurt (around 975–1017) and Countess Gerberga von Kinziggau , Konradiner , (around 970 – after 1036)
F1. Spytihněv II , Prince of Moravia (1049-1054), Duke of Bohemia (1055-1061), (* 1031; † January 28, 1061); ∞ () Hidda von Wettin († January 28, 1061), daughter of Margrave Dietrich I von Wettin (990-1034) and Mathilde von Meißen (-)
G1. Svatibor Friedrich , Patriarch of Aquileia (1084-1085), († February 23, 1085, slain)
G2. Daughter , ∞ () Wichmann von Cella
F2. Vratislav II , Duke of Olomouc (1054-1059), Duke of Bohemia (1061-1085), King of Bohemia (June 15, 1086), (* around 1032; † January 14, 1092, hunting accident; ▭ on Vyšehrad ); ∞ I: () Maria; ∞ II: (1057) Adelheid of Hungary , (* (1040); † January 27, 1062), daughter of King Andrew I of Hungary (1015-1060) and Anastasia of Kiev (1021-1096); ∞ III: (1062/1063) Swatawa of Poland , (* (around 1048); † September 1, 1126), daughter of Prince Casimir I Karl (1016-1058) and Maria Dobroniega (after 1012-1087); Descendants see here
F3. Konrad I (Bohemia) , Prince of Znojmo (1054), Duke of West Moravia ( Brno ) (1061-1092), Duke of Bohemia (1092), (* around 1035; † September 6, 1092 in Prague); ∞ () Wirpirk (Hildburg), first documented mention 1092
G1. Udalrich , Duke of Moravia in Brno (1101–1113), († March 27, 1113); ∞ () NN
H1. Vratislav Brněnský , Duke of Moravia (1146), first documented mention 1132, (* after 1111; † August 16 / September 21, 1155); ∞ (1132) NN Vasilkovna, daughter of Vasilko Rostislavich (around 1067–1124 / 1125) and NN
I1. Spytihněv , Duke of Brno (1189–1191 and 1195–1197), († 1198, as a result of glare )
I2. Svatopluk , Duke of Brno (1195–1197), († before June 5, 1201)
I3. Agnes , († before 1197)
H2. Nadčia , first documented mention 1096
G2. Lutold , Duke of Moravia in Znaim (1101), († March 15, 1112); ∞ () Ita of Austria, daughter of Leopold II of Austria (-1095) and Ita (-1101)
H1. Konrad II , Duke of Moravia in Znaim (–1146), Margrave (1146–1147), Duke of Moravia (1160), documented mention from 1123 to 1161, († after 1161); ∞ (1132) Maria of Hungary († 1190/1196), daughter of Álmos (1068–1129) and Predslava Sviatopolkovna of Kiev (-)
I1. Ernst , († after September 17, 1156)
I2. Conrad III. Otto , Duke of Moravia (1174), Duke of Moravia in Znaim (1177), Margrave of Moravia (1182–1187), Duke of Bohemia (1189–1191), (* before 1150; † September 9, 1191 near Naples ); ∞ () Heilika von Wittelsbach († after August 13, 1189), daughter of Otto III. (IV.) Von Wittelsbach , Count Palatine of Bavaria, (around 1120 / 25–1189) and Benedicts von Moosburg (-)
I3. Helena , (* (1140/1142); † 1202/1206); ∞ (around 1163) Casimir II. "The Just", Prince of Sandomir and Cracow (1177), Prince of Kujawien and Mazovia (1186), (* 1138; † May 5, 1194 in Cracow ), son of Duke Bolesław III. Schiefmund (1085–1138) and Salome von Berg (around 1099–1144)
F4. Jaromír-Gebehard , Chancellor of King Henry IV (June 11, 1077-1084), Bishop of Prague (June 30, 1068-1090) deposed (1073-1074), (* around 1040; † June 26, 1090 in Gran )
F5. Otto I. , "the beautiful", († June 9 (1087); ▭ in Graditz ); ∞ (before 1073) Euphemia of Hungary , (* around 1045/1055; † April 2, 1111), daughter of King Bela I (1015 / 20–1063) and Richeza of Poland (1013–1075)
G1. Svatopluk of Olomouc , Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (around 1095), Duke of Bohemia (1107–1109), († September 21, 1109, murdered); ∞ () NN
H1. Wenceslas I , Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (1126), (* around 1107 - † March 1, 1130)
G2. Otto II Niger , "the black one", Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (1107), (* around 1095; ⚔ February 18, 1126 in the battle of Chulmec ); ∞ (after 1113) Sophia von Berg, († May 31 (1126)), daughter of Count Heinrich I von Berg (-after 1122) and Adelheid von Mochental (- (1122/1125))
H1. Euphemia , (* 1115); ∞ (December 23, 1143/January 6, 1144) Svjatopolk, Prince of Pskow (1138–1140), Prince of Novgorod (1142–1148), Prince of Volhynia (1148–1154), (* around 1112; † 1154), Son of Mstislaw I. Vladimirovich "the Great" (1076–1132) and Christina of Sweden (–1122)
H2. Otto III. Dethleb , Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (1145), (* 1122; † May 12, 1160); ∞ () Durantia NN , († after December 13, 1160)
I1. Svatava , († before 1160)
I2. Vladimir , Prince of Olomouc, first documented mention 1198, (* 1145; † before December 11, 1200)
I3. Brětislav , first documented mention 1198, († before 1201); ∞ NN
J1. Siegfried , Canon of Olomouc (1220), (†† 1227)
I4. Maria , first documented mention 1198
I5. Durantia , first documented mention 1198
I6. Euphemia , first documented mention 1198
I7. Hedwig , († after January 16, 1160)
H3. Svatopluk , first documented mention 1146
G3. Bohuslava , first documented mention 1078
F6. Dymudia , first documented mention 1055
E2. Vratislav , Canon of Prague (1055)
D5. Luta , first documented mention around 1026
C4. Strahkvas Christian , monk of Regensburg, candidate for bishop for Prague (995), (born September 28, 929; † 996)
C4. Mlada Maria , Abbess of St. George's Monastery , Prague
B3. (Spytihněv) , († young)
B4. Přibislava ; ∞ (before 938) NN
B5. 2 daughters ; ∞ () NN

The Dukes of Bohemia since 1092, 1158–1172 and Hereditary Kings of Bohemia from 1092

Vratislav II , Duke of Olomouc (1054-1059), Duke of Bohemia (1061-1085), King of Bohemia (June 15, 1086), (* around 1032; † January 14, 1092, hunting accident; ▭ on Vyšehrad ); ∞ I: () Maria; ∞ II: (1057) Adelheid of Hungary , (* (1040); † January 27, 1062), daughter of King Andrew I of Hungary (1015-1060) and Anastasia of Kiev (1021-1096); ∞ III: (1062/1063) Swatawa of Poland , (* (around 1048); † September 1, 1126), daughter of Prince Casimir I. Karl (1016-1058) and Maria Dobroniega (after 1012-1087). They had the following offspring:

A1. [II] Břetislav II , Duke of Bohemia (1092–1100), (* around 1062; † December 21/22, 1100, murdered near Zbečno ); ∞ (September 1094) Liutgard von Bogen , († December 31 (1106/1112)), daughter of Count Adalbert I. (Askwin) von Windberg and Bogen (-1105) and Liutgard von Beutelsbach (-1100/1104)
B1. Břetislav , blinded (June 20/30, 1130), († March 8 (1131 or later))
A2. [II] Vratislav , († November 19, 1061)
A3. [II] Judith , "the elder", († December 25, 1086); ∞ (around 1080) Władysław I. Herman , Prince of Poland (1080), (* around 1043; † June 4, 1102 in Płock ), son of Prince Casimir I. Karl (1016-1058) and Maria Dobroniega (after 1012– 1087)
A4. [II] Ludmila , nun
A5. [III] Boleslav , Duke of Olomouc, († August 11, 1091)
A6. [III] Bořivoj II , Duke of Bohemia (1101–1107 and 1117–1120), (* around 1064; † February 2, 1124 in Hungary ; ▭ in St. Vitus Cathedral ); ∞ (October 18, 1100) Gerberga (Helbirg) of Austria, († July 13, 1142), daughter of Margrave Leopold II of Austria (1050–1095) and Ida of Austria (–1101)
B1. Jaromír , († before 1135); ∞ () NN
B2. Spytihněv , first documented mention 1143, († November 9, 1157)
B3. Lupold , documented in 1143, (* around 1102, † around 1157)
B4. Boleslav , first documented mention 1146
B5. Albrecht , († before April 7, 1124)
B6. Richsa , († before February 27, 1124)
A7. [III] Vladislav I , Duke of Bohemia (1109-1125), (* around 1073; † April 12, 1125); ∞ () Rixa (Richenza) von Berg, († September 27, 1125), daughter of Count Heinrich I von Berg (- after 1122) and Adelheid von Mochental (- (1122/1125))
B1. Svantana Liutgard , († after February 19, 1126); ∞ (July 1124) Domvogt Friedrich IV. Of Regensburg, († April 11, 1148, Second Crusade ; ▭ at the Templar cemetery in Jerusalem), (∞ II: (around 1134) Judith (Jutta) von Vohburg, († February 20 (1175)), daughter of Margrave Dietpold III. Of Vohburg (1075–1146) and Adelajda of Poland (1090 / 1091–1127)), son of Domvogt Friedrich III. von Regensburg (–1120) and Liutgard von Windberg-Ratelberg (- (1157))
B2. Vladislav II , Duke of Bohemia (1140–1158), King of Bohemia (January 18, 1158 in Regensburg – 1172), (* around 1110; † January 18, 1174 in Meerane ; ▭ in Strahov Monastery ); ∞ I: (1140) Gertrud von Österreich, (* around 1120 - † August 8, 1150), daughter of Margrave Leopold III. (1073-1136) and Agnes von Waiblingen (1072-1143); ∞ II: (1153) Judith von Thuringia (* 1130/1135 on the Wartburg ; † after September 9, 1174), daughter of Landgrave Ludwig I (–1140) and Hedwig von Gudensberg (1098–1148)
C1. [I] Friedrich (Bedřich) , Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (1169), Herzug von Böhmen (1172–1173 and 1178–1179), Duke of Moravia (1180), (* around 1142; † March 25, 1189); ∞ (after 1157) Elisabeth of Hungary, (* (1144/1145); † after January 12, 1189), daughter of Gézas II of Hungary (1130–1162) and Euphrosina of Kiev (1130–1186)
C2. [I] Agnes , abbess in the monastery of St. George in Prague (1224), († June 7, 1228)
C3. [I] Svantopluk , first documented mention 1165, († after October 15, 1169); ∞ (around 1164) Odola (Helwich / Adele) of Hungary, daughter of Gézas II of Hungary (1130–1162) and Euphrosina of Kiev (1130–1186)
C4. [I] Adalbert III. of Bohemia , Archbishop of Salzburg (1168–1169 and 1183–1200), (* 1145; † April 8, 1200)
C5. [II] Ottokar I. Přemysl , documented in 1181, (* around 1170 in Königstädtel ; † December 15, 1230); ∞ I: (1187) Adelheid von Meißen , (* after 1160; † February 1, 1211 in Meißen), daughter of Margrave Otto des Reichen (1125–1190) and Margravine Hedwig von Ballenstedt (1140–1203); ∞ II: (1198/1199) Constance of Hungary , (* 1180; † December 6, 1240 in the Porta Coeli monastery in Předklášteří ; ▭ ibid), daughter of King Béla III. of Hungary (1148–1196) and Agnes de Châtillon (1153–1184)
D1. [I] Vratislav , (* around 1201; † before 1209)
D2. [I] Margarete Dagmar , (* around 1186; † May 24, 1212 in Ribe , Denmark ; ▭ in the St. Bendts Church in Ringsted ); ∞ (1205 in Lübeck) King Waldemar II of Denmark, (* June 28, 1170; † March 28, 1241), (∞ II: (1214) Berengaria of Portugal (* around 1195; † March 27, 1221), daughter of Sanchos I of Portugal (1154–1211) and Dulces (1160–1198)), son of King Waldemar I “the Great” of Denmark (1131–1182) and Sophia of Minsk (1141–1198)
D3. [I] Božislava , (* after 1197; † February 6 / before May 13, 1238); ∞ () Count Henry I of Ortenburg, († February 15 (1241)), son of Count Rapoto I . von Ortenburg (–1186) and Elisabeth von Sulzbach (-)
D4. [I] Hedwig , nun of Gernrode (1211–1282)
D5. [II] Vratislav , (* (1200); † before 1209)
D6. [II] Judith (Jutta) , († June 2, 1230); ∞ (1213) Bernhard von Spanheim , (* 1176/1181; † January 4, 1256 in Völkermarkt ), son of Hermann II. Von Spanheim (–1181) and Agnes of Austria (1151–1182)
D7. [II] Anna , (* 1201/1204; † June 26, 1265); ∞ (1214/1218) Heinrich the Pious , Duke of Silesia and Duke of Poland , (* 1196/1207; ⚔ April 9, 1241, in the Battle of Liegnitz ; ▭ in the St. Vincent Church , Breslau ), son by Duke Heinrich I of Silesia (-1238) and Hedwig von Andechs (-1243)
D8. [II] Agnes , († young)
D9. [II] Wenceslas I , coronation (February 6, 1228), King of Bohemia (1230–1253), (* 1205; † September 23, 1253 in Počaply ; ▭ in the Agnes Monastery , Prague ); ∞ (1228) Kunigunde von Schwaben , (* (February / March) 1202; † 13 September 1248; ▭ in the Agneskloster), daughter of Duke Philipp von Schwaben (1177–1208) and Irene von Byzantium (1177 or 1180 / 1181– 1208)
E1. Vladislav III. , Margrave of Moravia , Duke of Silesia in Opole , Duke of Troppau , Duke of Austria (1246–1247), († January 3, 1247); ∞ ( Dispens 4 °, December 8, 1244, after June 15, 1246) Duchess Gertrud von Mödling , titular duchess of Austria and Styria (1246), (* (1228); † April 24, 1288), (∞ II: ( Mid-1248) Margrave Hermann VI of Baden , (* around 1225; † October 4, 1250; ▭ in Klosterneuburg), son of Margrave Hermann V of Baden (-1243) and Countess Palatine Irmengard bei Rhein (around 1200-1260); ∞ III: (27 (June / July) 1252; divorce 1253) Prince Roman Danilowitsch von Halicz , Prince of Slonim and Novogródek , Rurikiden , Duke of Austria (1251–1252), (* (1230); † after 1260), Son of Daniel Romanowitsch of Galicia (1201–1264) and Anna of Novgorod (-before 1252)), daughter of (Hereditary) Duke Heinrich the Cruel of Austria , ( Babenberger ), (1208–1227 / 1228) and Landgravine Agnes von Thuringia (1205 – before 1247)
E2. Ottokar II. Přemysl , elected the "younger king" (July 31, 1248 in Prague, resigned November 1249), Margrave of Moravia (1251), Duke of Austria (1251), King of Bohemia (1253–1278, coronation 1261), Duke of Styria (1261), Duke of Carinthia and Krain (1269), (* 1233; ⚔ August 26, 1278 near Dürnkrut in the battle of Marchfeld ; ▭ in the crypt of the Znojmo Minorite Monastery ); ∞ I: (February 11, 1252 in Hainburg, Dispens 3 ° and 4 ° July 5, 1253, violated 1261) Margarete von Österreich , (* 1204 or 1205; † October 2, 1267 at Krumau am Kamp Castle ; ▭ in the monastery Lilienfeld ), (∞ I: () Heinrich (VII.) , Roman-German King, King of Sicily, (* 1211 in Sicily ; † 12 (?) February 1242 in Martirano , Calabria ), son of Emperor Frederick II. (1194–1250) and Konstanze von Aragón (1184–1222)), daughter of Duke Leopold VI. of Austria , Babenberger , (1176-1230) and Theodora Angeloi (1180 / 1185-1246); ∞ II: (October 25, 1261 in Pressburg ) Kunigunde (Kunguta) of Tschernigow , (* around 1245; † September 9, 1285 in Krummau ; ▭ in the Church of the Savior, Prague), (∞ II: (June 2, 1284 in Prague ) Zawisch von Falkenstein , (* around 1250; † August 24, 1290 at Frauenberg Castle ; ▭ in Hohenfurt Monastery ), Witigonen , son of Budiwoj von Krumau (before 1220 – after 1272) and Perchta von Falkenstein (-)), daughter by Rostislav Mikhailovich, Prince of Halych , ((1225) -1263) and Anna (Agnes) of Hungary ((1226/1227) -)
F1. [II] Heinrich , (* 1262; † 1263)
F2. [II] Kunigunde , nun of St. Francis (1277–1291), abbess of St. George's Monastery in Prague Castle (around 1302), (* January 1265; 〰 February 2, 1265; † November 27, 1321); ∞ (1291, divorced before December 19, 1302) Bolesław II, Prince of Plock (1262), Prince of Mazovia (1294), († April 20, 1313)
F3. [II] Agnes , Poor Clare in Prague, (* November 5, 1269; † May 17, 1296; ▭ St. Klara, Prague); ∞ (Contract 1278 in Iglau , March 1289) Count Rudolf II of Habsburg, Duke of Swabia , Alsace and Aargau (1282), Duke of Austria and Styria (1283), (* 1270 in Rheinfelden ; † May 10, 1290 in Prague ; ▭ 1293 in St. Vitus Cathedral , ibid), son of King Rudolf I of Habsburg (1218–1291) and Gertrud von Hohenberg (around 1225–1281)
F4. [II] Wenceslaus II , King of Bohemia (1283–1305; coronation June 2, 1297), Elector (1289), King of Poland (1300), (* (17/27) September 1271 at Prague Castle ; † June 21, 1305 in Prague; ▭ in the Zbraslav Monastery , ibid); ∞ I: (Contract 1278 in Iglau , January 24, 1285 in Eger ) Guta (Bona / Jutta) von Habsburg, (born March 13, 1271 in Rheinfelden ; † June 18, 1297 in Prague ; ▭ in St. Vitus Cathedral , ibid), daughter from King Rudolf I of Habsburg (1218–1291) and Gertrud von Hohenberg (around 1225–1281); ∞ II: (May 26, 1303) Elisabeth Richza of Poland , (* September 1, 1288 in Posen ; † (18/19.) October 1335 in Königgrätz ; ▭ in Brno ), (∞ I: () Otto von Brandenburg -Stargard, (* before 1276; † before September 25, 1299), son of Albrecht III of Brandenburg-Stargard (around 1250–1300) and Mathilde of Denmark (- around 1300); ∞ III: (shortly after September 8th 1306, maybe October 16, 1306) Rudolf III , Count of Habsburg, Duke of Austria and Styria (1298-1306), King of Bohemia and Titular King of Poland (1306-1307), (* 1281/1282; † 4. July 1307 in the Horažďovice army camp , on the Ruhr ; ▭ in St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague), son of King Albrecht I of Habsburg (1255–1308) and Elisabeth of Tyrol (around 1262–1313)), daughter of King Przemysł II of Poland , ( Piast ), (1257–1296) and Richiza (Rixa / Rycheza) of Sweden (1269 – before 1291)
G1. [I] Přemysl , (* May 6, 1288 - † November 19, 1288)
G2. [I] Wenceslaus III. , King of Hungary (1301), King of Bohemia and Titular King of Poland (1305/1306), (* October 6, 1289, † August 4, 1306 in Olomouc , murdered); ∞ (October 5, 1305) Viola Elisabeth von Teschen , (* (1287/1291); † September 21, 1317; ▭ in Hohenfurt Monastery), (∞ II: (before 1315) Peter I von Rosenberg , Chamberlain of Bohemia , (* (1291); † October 14, 1347 in Hohenfurt Monastery ), (∞ II: (September 1318) Katharina von Wartenberg , († April 7, 1318)), son of Heinrich I von Rosenberg (–1310) and Elisabeth von Dobruška (–1307)), daughter of Duke Mieszko I. von Teschen (1252 / 1256–1315) and NN
Main line of the Přemyslids in the male line extinguished
G3. [I] Agnes , (* October 6, 1289; † shortly after 1296; ▭ in the Church of Our Savior, Prague)
G4. [I] Anna Přemyslovna , (born October 15, 1290 in Prague; † September 3, 1313 in Carinthia; ▭ in the Oberalteich monastery); ∞ (February 13, 1306) Heinrich of Carinthia , King of Bohemia and Margrave of Moravia , Titular King of Poland (1307-1310), Duke of Carinthia and Carniola and Count of Tyrol (1310-1335), (* 1280; † 2. April 1335 at Castle Tirol ; ▭ in Stams monastery ), (∞ II: (September 15, 1315 in Innsbruck ) Adelheid von Braunschweig-Grubenhagen , (* 1285 - † August 18, 1320), daughter of Duke Heinrich I of Braunschweig ( 1267–1322) and Agnes von Meißen (before 1264–1332); ∞ III: (February 1328) Beatrice von Savoyen , (* around 1310; † 1331) daughter of Duke Amadeus V of Savoy (1249–1323) and Sibylle von Baugé (1255–1294)), son of Duke Meinhard II of Görz-Tirol (around 1238–1295) and Elisabeth of Bavaria (1227–1273)
G5. [I] Elisabeth , (born January 20, 1292 in Prague, † September 28, 1330 in Vyšehrad ; ▭ in the royal hall ); ∞ (August 30, 1310 in Speyer) John of Luxembourg , King of Bohemia (1310–1346), Margrave of Moravia , Count of Luxembourg and Titular King of Poland (1310–1335), (* August 10, 1296; ⚔ August 26 1346 in Crécy ; ▭ in the cathedral of Luxembourg ), (∞ II: (1334 in Vincennes Castle ) Beatrix von Bourbon , (* before 1320 - 23 December 1383), daughter of Duke Louis I de Bourbon (1279-1341 ) and Marie of Hainaut and Holland (1280–1354)), son of Emperor Henry VII (1278 / 1279–1313) and Margaretes of Brabant (1275 / 1276–1311)
G6. [I] Guta , (* March 4, 1293; † August 3, 1294; ▭ in Königsaal )
G7. [I] Johann , (February 26, 1294 - March 1, 1294)
G8. [I] Johann , (* March 21, 1295 - † December 6, 1296)
G9. [I] Margareta , (* (April / May) 1296; † (7/8 April 1322); ∞ (1308/1310) Duke Boleslaw III. von Schlesien-Brieg-Liegnitz, (* 23 (March / September) 1291; † 21 April 1352), (∞ II: (1326) Princess Katharina Šubić , († (February 18, March 5) 1358)) , Son of Duke Heinrich V. von Jauer - Liegnitz - Breslau (1245 / 1249–1296) and Elisabeth von Kalisch (1263–1304)
G10. [I] Guta , (* May 21, 1297; † (); ▭ in the Poor Clare Monastery, Prague)
G11. [II] Agnes , (June 15, 1305; † (1336) / January 4, 1337); ∞ (1319) Duke Heinrich I of Silesia-Jauer-Schweidnitz, (* around 1294; † (March 6 / May 15) 1345), son of Duke Bolko I of Schweidnitz and Jauer (1250–1301) and Beatrix of Brandenburg (- (1312/1316))
G12. ( illegitimate with NN ) Johann (Wolek) , Provost of Vyšehrad and Chancellor of the Bohemian King John of Bohemia (1310-1334), Canon of Bamberg (1337), Bishop of Olomouc (1334-1351), († September 27, 1351 in Olomouc )
G13. ( illegitimate with NN ) Elisabeth , nun in the Frauenthal monastery (–1332), Benedictine in the St. Georg monastery , Prague (1332–)
F5. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) Nicholas I , legitimized October 6, 1260, but without the right to the Bohemian succession (October 20, 1260), Lord of Troppau (July 4, 1269), knight (1273), as Nicholas I. Founder of the Duchy of Opava , Duke of Opava (1281), (* around 1255; † July 25, 1318 in Brno ; ▭ in St. Jacob's Church , ibid); ∞ (January 1285 in Eger) Adelheid von Habsburg ; Descendants see here
F6. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) Agnes ; ∞ () Bavor III., Lord of Strakonicz
F7. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) daughter ; ∞ () NN , Mr. von Wartenberg
F8. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) daughter ; ∞ (around 1276) NN , Herr von Krawarz, († (1329)).
F9. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) Ješek , priest of Vyšehrad (1290), (* 1265/1270; † August 26, 1296; ▭ in Vyšehrad)
F10. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) Elisabeth ; ∞ () Vicard, Lord of Polná , Burgrave of Brno (1303)
F11. ( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik) daughter ; ∞ (after May 1277) NN , Herr von Weitra
F12. ( illegitimate with Agnes von Chuenring ) Elisabeth ; ∞ (1275) Heinrich V. von Kuenring , Lord of Weitra (1280), († July 1281 in Troppau), son of Heinrich II. Von Kuenring (-1293) and Kunigunde (von Dobra) (- (1303))
E3. Beatrix (Božena) , (* (1230/1231); † May 27, 1290 in Breslau ; ▭ in the Poor Clare Monastery, ibid); ∞ (before June 1243) Margrave Otto III. "The Pious" of Brandenburg, (* 1215; † October 9, 1267 in Brandenburg an der Havel ; ▭ in the church of the Strausberg Dominican Monastery), son of Albrechts II , Margrave of Brandenburg (1205-1220), Ascanian , (before 1177–1220) and Mathilde (Mechthild) von der Lausitz , Wettiner , (1185–1225)
E4. Agnes , († October 10, 1268; ▭ in the Altzella monastery ); ∞ (1244) Margrave Heinrich III. "The illustrious" of Meissen, Landgrave of Thuringia and Count Palatine of Saxony (1264), (* around 1215 in ( Meißen ); † before February 8, 1288 in Dresden ; ▭ in the Altzella monastery), (∞ I: (May 1 1234) Constantia von Österreich , (* 6 (April / May) 1212; † before June 5, 1243), daughter of Leopold VI. Of Austria (1176–1230) and Theodora Angelina (1180 / 1185–1246); ∞ II : (1270) Elisabeth von Maltitz , (* 1238/1239; † January 25, 1333; ▭ in the Altzella monastery)), son of Margrave Dietrich the oppressed (1162–1221) and Jutta von Thuringia (1184–1235)
E5. Daughter , († before 1248; ▭ in St. Francis Church, Prague)
D10. [II] Vladislav II , Margrave of Moravia (1224-1228), first documented mention 1218, (* 1207; † February 10, 1228)
D11. [II] Přemysl , Margrave of Moravia (1228-1239), (* 1209; † October 16, 1239); ∞ (before September 25, 1232) Margarete von Andechs-Meranien, († October 18, 1271), (∞ II: (June 2, 1240) Count Friedrich V. von Truhendingen and Dillingen, (* before 1223; † August 30 1274), son of Friedrich IV. Von Truhendingen (–1253) and NN (von Graisbach) (-)), daughter of Duke Otto I von Andechs-Diessen (–1234) and Countess Palatine Beatrix von Staufen (–1231)
D12. [II] Blažena (Wilhelma Boema) , Guglielmiten , (* 1210; † October 24, 1281 in Milan; ▭ in the Chiaravalle Milanese monastery )
D13. [II] Agnes , "the saint", beatification (1874), canonization (November 12, 1989), nun, then superior of St. Francis in Prague, (born January 20, 1211 in Prague; † March 6, 1282 ibid)
C6. [II] Vladislav Heinrich , Duke of Moravia in Olomouc (1194–1194 and 1197–1222), (* around 1160; † August 12, 1222; ▭ in the Velehrad monastery ); ∞ () Hedwig NN (-)
C7. [II] Richsa (Richza) , († April 19, 1182; ▭ in Klosterneuburg); ∞ (1179 in Eger ) Duke Heinrich the Elder of Austria-Mödling, (* 1158; † (August / September) 1223; ▭ in Heiligenkreuz), son of Heinrich II. Jasomirgott of Austria (1107-1177) and Theodora Komnena (1134 –1184)
B3. Diepold I , Duke of Moravia in Jamnitz, († (14/15) August 1167 in Italy , at the plague ); ∞ (1153) Margravine Gertrud von Brandenburg, daughter of Margrave Albrecht von der Nordmark (around 1100–1170) and Sophie von Winzenburg (1105–1160)
C1. Diepold II. , (⚔ (21/22) November 1190 in Palestine, 3rd Crusade ); ∞ (1177/1182) Adelheid von Schlesien (* after 1165; † March 29 before 1213), daughter of Duke Boleslaw I of Silesia (around 1135–1201) and Margravine Adelheid von Sulzbach (around 1126–11 ??)
D1. Diepold III. , (* 1194/1203; † April 2, 1223)
E1. Boleslaw , († April 9, 1241)
E2. Sobjeslav , († after 1238)
E3. Przemysl
E4. Theobald IV. , († after 1230)
E5. Otto , († 1125/1126)
D2. Sobeslaw , (after October 1, 1247)
D3. Boleslaw , (⚔ April 9, 1241)
D4. Otto , Provost of Magdeburg, († 1225)
D5. Przemysl , († young)
C2. Hedwig , († 1201/1210/19 February 1211); ∞ () Count Friedrich I. von Brehna , founder of the Count family von Brehna , Margrave of Meißen, (* around 1126; † January 4, 1182; ▭ in Petersberg Monastery ), son of Margrave Conrad I of Meißen (around 1098–1157 ) and Luidgard (from Ravensburg) (around 1100–1146)
B4. Heinrich , († after 1169); ∞ () Margarete NN , († before January 19, 1186; ▭ in the Doxan Monastery )
C1. Elisabeth , nun
C2. Margarete , nun
C3. Heinrich Břetislav III. , Duke of Bohemia (1193–1197), Bishop of Prague (1182–1197), († June 15, 1197 in Eger ; ▭ in the Doxan Monastery )
A8. [III] Soběslav I. Udalrich , Duke of Bohemia (1125-1140), (* around 1075; † February 14, 1140 at Hostin Hradec Castle ); ∞ (around 1123) Adelheid of Hungary, (* (1105/1107); † September 15, 1140), daughter of King Álmos (1074 / 1075–1127 / 1129) and Predslava Sviatopolkovna of Kiev (-)
B1. Vladislav , († 1165); ∞ (around 1152) NN , daughter of Albrecht von der Nordmark (around 1100–1170) and Sophie von Winzenburg (1105–1160)
B2. Soběslav II , Duke of Bohemia (1173–1178), (* around 1128; † January 29, 1180); ∞ (1173/1177) Elisabeth of Poland, (* around 1152; † April 2, 1209), (∞ II: () Konrad II. Von Landsberg , (* after September 13, 1159; † May 6, 1210), son of Margrave Dedo III (1142–1190) and Countess Mechthild von Heinsberg (–1190)), daughter of Mieszko the Old (1126–1202) and Elisabeth of Hungary (1128–1155)
B3. Maria von Böhmen , († around 1160; ▭ in the Augustinian Canons in Backnang ); ∞ I: (September 1138) Margrave Leopold IV of Austria , (* around 1108; † October 18, 1141 in Niederaltaich ; ▭ in Heiligenkreuz Abbey ), son of Margrave Leopold III. von Austria (1073–1136) and Agnes von Waiblingen (1072–1143); ∞ II: (after 1141) Margrave Hermann III. von Baden , (* around 1105; † January 16, 1160; ▭ in Backnang Abbey ), son of Margrave Hermann II of Baden (around 1060–1130) and Judit von Hohenberg (around 1080 – around 1123)
B4. Udalrich II , Duke of Bohemia (1165), Duke of Moravia (1176–1177) (* 1134; † October 18, 1177); ∞ I: () Cäcilie von Thuringia , daughter of Landgrave Ludwig I (1090–1140) and Hedwig von Gudensberg (1098–1148); ∞ II: () Sophie von Wettin, daughter of Margrave Otto the Rich (1125–1190) and Hedwig von Ballenstedt (1140–1203)
C1. [II] Agnes , nun in Gerbstedt
B5. Wenceslas II , Duke of Bohemia (1191–1192), (* 1137; † around 1192 in captivity)
A9. [III] Judith , "the younger one", heiress of the Nisangaues and Budissins (Bautzen), (* around 1070; † December 9, 1108); ∞ (around 1085) Margrave Wiprecht II of Groitzsch "the Elder", Burgrave of Magdeburg (1118), (* around 1050; † May 22, 1124 in Pegau ; ▭ in the Pegau Monastery ), son of Gaugraf Wiprecht I of Balsamgau (- around 1050) and Sigena von Leinungen (around 1025 - before 1110)

Opava branch of the Přemyslids

( illegitimate with NN Palczierzik ) Nicholas I , legitimized October 6, 1260, but without the right to the Bohemian succession (October 20, 1260), lord of Opava ( Opava ) (July 4, 1269), knight (1273), as Nicholas I founder of the Duchy of Opava , Duke of Opava (1281), (* around 1255; † July 25, 1318 in Brno ; ▭ in St. Jacob's Church , ibid); ∞ (January 1285 in Eger) Adelheid von Habsburg . They had the following offspring:

A1. Nicholas II , Duke of Troppau (July 3, 1318–1365), Duke of Ratibor (January 14, 1337–1365), Chamberlain of the Kingdom of Bohemia , Burgrave of Glatz (1350), (around 1288; † December 8, 1365 ); ∞ I: (to 1318) Anne of Silesia-Ratibor, (* (1292/1298); † before August 22, 1340), daughter of przemysław of racibórz of Ratibor (1258 / 1268-1306) and Anna of Mazovia (1274 / 1276- 1324); ∞ II: (around 1342/11 August 1345) Duchess Hedwig von Schlesien- Oels , (* (1329/25 March 1338); † (1351/1359)), daughter of Konrad I von Oels (1292 / 1294– 1366) and Elisabeth von Schlesien-Breslau (1311 / 1312-1328); ∞ III: (before August 5, 1359) Jutta von Schlesien-Falkenberg, (* (before 1346); † (October) (after 1378)), daughter of Duke Boleslaw I (II.) Von Schlesien-Falkenberg (1290 / 1295–1362 / 1365) and Euphemia of Silesia-Breslau (1312/1313 – after 1384)
B1. [I] Euphemia , (* (1319); † before September 11, 1352); ∞ (1335) Duke Ziemowit III. of Mazovia , (* before 1313 / before 1326; † June 16, 1381 in Płock ), son of Trojden I of Mazovia (1284 / 1286–1341) and Maria von Halytsch-Wolodymyr (before 1293–1341)
B2. [I] Elisabeth (Elka) , nun in the Dominican convent Ratibor (1340), (* around 1321; † after December 4, 1386)
B3. [I] Agnes , nun in the Dominican convent Ratibor (1340), (* around 1323; † September 7, 1404)
B4. [I] Anna , (* (1325); † (14./17.) March 1361; ▭ in the Retz monastery); ∞ (before February 15, 1346) Burchard XI. von Querfurt , Burgrave of Maidburg, Count Burchard I. von Hardegg, captain of Krems (1344), royal court master (1354–1358), documented 1313 to 1359, (* around 1285/1290; † November 12, 1360/1361), (∞ I: () Czudna (from Bechin), († before 1335)), son of Burchard IX. (XII.) Von Querfurt (around 1250–1297 / 1314) and ( NN von Neuhaus)
B5. [I] Margareta , (* (1330); † (1363)); ∞ (February 1353) Johann Heinrich von Luxemburg, Count of Tyrol (1335-1341), Margrave of Moravia (1349-1375), (born February 12, 1322 in Prague, † November 12, 1375 in Brno), son of King Johann of Luxembourg (1296–1346) and Elisabeth of Bohemia (1292–1330)
B6. [I] Johann I , Duke of (Troppau) -Ratibor (1365-1380 / 1382), Duke of Troppau (1367-1377), Duke of Jägerndorf , Freudenthal and Fürstenwalde (1377-). Founder of the Přemyslid lineage Troppau-Ratibor, extinguished in 1521 , (* (1332) / after August 22, 1340; † (February 16, 1380/28 October 1382)); ∞ (after January 20, 1361) Duchess Anna von Glogau – Sagan († (July 14, 1405 / September 1, 1405)), daughter of Duke Heinrich V von Glogau - Sagan (–1369) and Anna von Płock (–1363 )
C1. Johann II , "the Iron", Duke of (Troppau) -Ratibor , Jägerndorf and Freudenthal , governor (1388–1397), pledgee of Glatz and Frankenstein (1397–1422), (* around 1365; † August 12, 1424; ▭ in the monastery church of the Dominican Sisters in Ratibor ); ∞ (before January 16, 1407) Princess Helena of Lithuania († after March 2, 1449), daughter of Prince Koributas (Korybut) Dimitry of Lithuania, Prince of Nowogrod-Siewierski, ((1331) -after 1404) and Anastasia Olegovna von Ryazan (- after August 12, 1399)
D1. Nicholas V (VI.) , Together with his brother Wenceslaus III. Duke of (Troppau) -Ratibor , Jägerndorf , Freudenthal and Rybnik , (* (1400); † December 27, 1452); ∞ I: (around 1435) Margarethe Clemm von Ellguth; ∞ II: (1451) Barbara Rockenberg († after June 12, 1452), (∞ I: () Wilhelm Olbuczów, citizen of Cracow; ∞ II: () Georg Orienth, citizen of Cracow)
E1. Johann IV. , Duke of Jägerndorf , Loslau and Lobenstein (1452–1474), deposed in 1474 by Matthias Corvinus , (* around 1435; † 1483 in Loslau )
E2. Wenzel V , Duke of Jägerndorf (1452–1464), Duke of Rybnik and Pless (1461–1474), (* around 1440; † (23 January / 23 June) 1478 in Glatz , in captivity)
E3. Barbara , Duchess of Jägerndorf (1491), (* around 1445, † 1510); ∞ (1475) Duke Johann IV of Teschen-Auschwitz (* 1426/1430; † October 28, 1495/21 February 1497), (∞ I: (1465) Katharina NN ), son of Duke Casimir I (around 1396 –1434) and Anna von Glogau-Sagan (–1426/1433)
E4. Machna , (around 1450 - † (January 4 / July 28) 1508); ∞ (after August 12, 1482) Duke Casimir II of Teschen-Zator (* before 1450; † (January 8 / July 7) 1490), son of Duke Wenceslaus I of Auschwitz-Zator (around 1415 / 1418– 1465) and Maria Kopczowska (- after 1468)
E5. Nikolaus , († young, after December 22, 1452)
D2. Wenceslaus III , together with his brother Nikolaus V. (VI.) Duke of Troppau-Ratibor and Jägerndorf (1424–1437), from 1437 sole Duke of Ratibor, (* around 1405; † October 29, 1456; ▭ in the monastery church of the Dominican Sisters in Ratibor ); ∞ (October 15, 1437) Margarethe (Małgorzata) of Szamotuł († November 5, 1464), (∞ I: () Casimir II of Bels or of Płock and Kujawien (* 1396/1407; † 1442), son of Ziemowit IV. Of Mazovia (–1426) and Alexandra of Lithuania (–1434), daughter of Vinzenz von Szamotuły (-) and NN (-))
E1. Johann V (III./I.) , "The younger", Duke of Ratibor (1456–1493), (* around (1440/1446); † April 14, 1493); ∞ (around January 13, 1478) Magdalena von Oppeln († May 1501), daughter of Duke Nikolaus I of Oppeln (around 1420–1476) and Duchess Magdalena von Liegnitz (–1497)
F1. Nicholas VI (VII.) , Duke of Ratibor (1493–1506), (* around 1478; † November 3, 1506); ∞ (1505) Anna von Tęczyński († around 1530), (∞ II: (after 1506) Jan Kosciolecz), daughter of Zbigniew Tęczyński Starost von Lemberg, Krakauer Unterämmerer, (-) and NN Suchorzewska (-)
F2. Johann IV. (VI./II.) , Duke of Ratibor (1493–1506), (* (February / April) 1483; † (November 3 / December 19) 1506)
F3. Valentin , together with his brothers Nikolaus VI. and Johann IV Duke of (Troppau) -Ratibor (1493–1506), then sole Duke of (Troppau) -Ratibor, Lord of Oderberg (1506), (* around 1485; †† November 13, 1521; ▭ in the monastery church of the Dominican Sisters in Racibórz )
Family extinct (ultimus familiae) - According to the inheritance contract of 1512, the Duchy (Troppau) -Ratibor fell to John II of Opole, who combined the two duchies to form the Duchy of Opole-Ratibor .
F4. Magdalena , († young)
E2. Katharina , († around 1480); ∞ (before 1461) Włodko / Władisław von Domoborz, castellan von Nakel , († 1467, beheaded in Kalisch)
E3. Helena , (* around 1445, † around 1480); ∞ (before 1464) Jan Ostroróg , voivode of Posen, adviser to King Casimir IV Jagiełło and Johann Albrechts , castellan von Meseritz, (* 1436 - † September 22, 1501)
E4. Anna , (* around 1450; † around 1480)
D3. Margareta , Duchess of Ratibor, (* around 1410 - † July 5, 1459); ∞ I: (1426/30 July 1433) Duke Casimir I of Auschwitz , Duke of Tost and half of Gleiwitz (1416–), (* around 1396; † April 7, 1434; ▭ in the Dominican Church in Teschen), (∞ I: (1414/1417) Anna von Glogau and Sagan († 1426/1433), daughter of Duke Heinrich VIII. Von Glogau and Sagan (1357 / 1363–1397) and Katharina von Oppeln (–1420)), son of Duke Primislaus I. von Auschwitz (1362 / 1370–1406) and NN (-); ∞ II: (1435/1437) Duke Ziemowit V of Masovia, Prince of Gostynin , (* (1389); † February 17, 1442), son of Duke Ziemowit IV. Of Masovia , Duke of Płock and Kujawien , (before 1352 –1426) and Princess Alexandra of Lithuania (around 1360–1434)
C2. Nikolaus IV. , Together with his brother Johann II. "The Iron", Duke of Ratibor and Freudenthal (1405), (* around 1370, † around 1406)
C3. Margareta , (* around 1380; † before September 7, 1407); ∞ (January 1, 1406) Boleslaus I of Teschen, Duke of Teschen (1410–1431), Duke of Auschwitz (1410–1414), Duke of half of Glogau (1410–1431), (* after 1363; † May 6th 1431), (∞ II: () Euphemia of Masovia († 1447), daughter of Duke Ziemowit IV. Of Masovia (before 1352–1426) and Princess Alexandra of Lithuania (around 1360–1434)), son of Duke Przemislaus I. (1332 / 1336–1410) and Elisabeth von Beuthen - Cosel (–1373)
B7. [II] Nicholas III. , Duke of Troppau (1367–1377), Duke of Leobschütz (1377–1394), (* around 1339; † July 9, 1394)
B8. [III] Anna , Klarissin zu Troppau (1397), (* after March 14, 1361; † after August 7, 1398); ∞ (after April 24, 1379) Peter II. Von Sternberg († March 1, 1397 / July 7, 1397)
B9. [III] Wenceslas I , Duke of Troppau (1367-1381), (* after 1359; † 1381)
B10. [III] Přemysl I , Duke of Troppau (1367–1433), Duke of Leobschütz (1394–), (* (1365/1366); † September 28, 1433); ∞ I: (around 1395) Anna von Lutz († after August 17, 1404); ∞ II: (around 1405) Katharina von Münsterberg († 23 (April / May) 1422), daughter of Duke Bolko III. von Münsterberg (1344 / 1348–1410) and Eufemia von Beuthen - Cosel (–1411); ∞ III: (around 1425) Helena of Bosnia († February 2, 1434 / March 7, 1435)
C1. [I] Wenzel II. , Minorenn (1416), Lord of Leobschütz (before 1428), Duke of Troppau and Leobschütz (1433–1448), (* around 1397; † 1446); ∞ (around 1420) Elisabeth von Krawarn († June 7, 1443 - July 2, 1453)
D1. Johann I. Hanuš , Duke of Troppau in Loslau (1447-1454), Lord of Fulnek (1448-1454), (* around 1420; † before July 2, 1454)
D2. Johann II. Pius , Duke of Troppau and Leobschütz (1448–1464), Herr auf Fulnek (1454–1464), (* around 1425, †† around 1485); ∞ () Katharina NN († March 12 (1460))
→ The Troppau line of the male line extinguished - the Duchy of Leobschütz moved in as a settled fiefdom for King Matthias Corvinus . He then passed it on to his son Johann Corvinus
D3. Anna , (around 1430 - April 29, 1478); ∞ (December 1460) Johann von Hasenburg auf Budin, Chancellor and Colonel Court Judge of Bohemia, († April 15, 1495), (∞ I: () Katharina von Častolowitz , daughter of Puta the Younger von Častolowitz (–1434) and Anna von Kolditz († 1467)), son of Nikolaus I von Hasenburg auf Libochowitz (-1459) and Škonka von Kunstadt , heiress of Kost Castle , (around 1398-1459)
C2. [I] Nikolaus IV. (V.) , Duke of Troppau and Lord on Zuckmantel (1433–1437), (* around 1400; † after October 15, 1437)
C3. [II] Agnes , (* around 1404; † after May 22, 1437); ∞ I: (around 1420) Johann VI. von Krawarn and Neutischtein , († 1432/1434); ∞ II: (around 1434) Georg I von Sternberg and Odrau (* before 1418; † 1438), son of Albert von Sternberg (–1413/1414) and Elisabeth von Krawarn (- around 1453)
C4. [II] Wilhelm , Duke of Troppau (1434–1452), Duke of Münsterberg (1443–1452), (* around 1410; † August 15, 1452; ▭ in the Heilig-Geist-Kirche, Troppau); ∞ (around 1435) Salome von Častolowitz († February 26, 1489), daughter of Puta II. Von Častolowitz (–1434) and Anna von Kolditz (–1467)
D1. Friedrich , Duke of Troppau (1452–1456), (* around 1440; † around 1470)
D2. Katharina , (1443 - April 14, 1505); ∞ (around 1460) Duke Johann II of Sagan and Glogau (born June 16, 1435; † September 22, 1504 in Wohlau ), son of Duke Johann I of Sagan and Glogau (1385–1439) and Scholastica of Saxony-Wittenberg (1391–1463)
D3. Wenzel IV. (III.) , Duke of Troppau in Steinau (1452–1474), (* around 1445; † February 2, 1474 in Steinau )
D4. Přemysl III. , Duke of Troppau , matriculated at the University of Cracow (1464), Duke of Münsterberg (1466), Canon of Breslau , Olmütz , Vienna , provost of the parish of St. Othmar in Mödling , (* around 1450; † February 17, 1493; ▭ in the parish church of St. Othmar , Mödling)
D5. Anna , Abbess of Trebnitz Monastery (July 24, 1469–), (* around 1448; † August 15, 1515)
C5. [II] Guta (Jutta) , (* around 1415; † 1445); ∞ (around 1435) Count Georg II. Von Bösing († after 1450/1467)
C6. [II] Ernst , Duke of Troppau (1434–1461) and Münsterberg (1453–1455), (* around 1415; † (1460/1464))
C7. [III] Přemysl II , Duke of Opava (1433–), member of the Wroclaw Cathedral Chapter (1446–), (* around 1423/1425; † June 16, 1478; ▭ in the Church of the Holy Cross , Wroclaw)
C8. [III] Katharina , (* around 1425; † 1475); ∞ () Johann Jitschin von Cimburg auf Jitschin, Rosenau and Vsetín, ambassador of King George of Podebrady , († 1475)
C9. [III] Hedwig , Abbess of the Trebnitz Monastery , (* around 1430, † around 1500)
A2. Wenceslas , canon in Prague and Olomouc (1324), (* (1290); † after March 5, 1367)
A3. Johann , (* (1300); † 1325)

References and comments

  1. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa from Detlev Schwennicke : European family tables , new series , volume I.2, table 176, publisher: Vittorio Klostermann , Frankfurt a. M. 2000
  2. Name not in Schwennicke Volume I.2, Plate 176, there is only son. Data are taken from Wenceslaus of Bohemia
  3. Registered with Schwennicke as a possible son of Boleslav II (Bohemia) .
  4. ^ First marriage not in Schwennicke Volume I.2, Plate 176
  5. King Rudolf II. Left two underage children, the later King Konrad (* 926) and Adelheid (* 931). While Lothar found protection and support at the court of Otto I, the King of Italy, Hugo von Vienne (926-948), tried to win the power game around Burgundy. He married the widow of Rudolf II of Burgundy and married his son Lothar to Adelheid. But as early as 940 Hugo had to bury his hopes in Burgundy, as Konrad, with the support of Otto I, took over the paternal inheritance. Hugo dies in 948, and so does his son and successor two years later. Thus the struggle for Italian rule flared up again. The most promising favorite was now the Margrave of Ivrea, Berengar, who believed that Otto I would support him and became King of Italy as Berengar II. Berengar used the young queen widow Adelheid and her daughter Emma as a bargaining chip and tried to marry Adelheid to his son, because only then could he legitimize and enforce his claims. But Adelheid managed to flee, and as the course of history shows, she married Otto I, who was almost 20 years her senior, who was able to assert his claims on Italy, and Berengar II was appointed by him as sub-king. Only so much is known about Emma, ​​Adelheid's daughter from her first marriage, that she was married to King Lothar of France, who died in 986. With this, the traditions about Emma break off. Some vague references can be found in Palackỷ, who writes that the wife of Boleslav II, Duke of Bohemia, is Emma of Burgundy, who is the sister of King Conrad of Burgundy (Palackỷ 1968, p. 230). She could be Adelheid's daughter, because there is no sister of Konrad with this name. However, Emma would have been at least 36 years old when her first son was born. This assumption is supported by the fact that after the death of her husband, this Emma took refuge from Boleslav III in Bavaria with her sons Jaromir and Ulrich in 1003. found at Heinrich II. According to Thietmar's report, Duke Ulrich was a reliable companion in arms of the emperor. Another reference in Palackỷ relates to the dispute between the bishops of Prague and Ölmütz in the 1970s. He explains that the grandmothers of Bishop Jaromir, also called Gebhard, and Mathilde von Tuszien were sisters. Although there is also a misinterpretation here, it is known that Jaromir (Gebhard) were temporarily the chancellor and his brother Vratislav II. The most reliable allies of Henry IV. Palackỷ would have been careful not to deliberately write anything wrong in his history. Conclusion: There remain a few questions that need to be asked. For example: Is the wife of Boleslav II, Emma of Burgundy, the daughter of Adelheid from his first marriage? Palackỷ indicates this. If he were right, Emma of Burgundy would have become a mother at the age of 37, since she could have married Boleslav II at the earliest in 986 and when the Bohemian duke died, the eldest son from this connection could not have been older than 13 years. That women gave birth late at that time is known from Constanze, the wife of Henry VI. she only became a mother at the age of 40. Her son was Frederick II, Roman Emperor and King of Sicily. Gertrud von Braunschweig was also at least 36 years old when Heinrich II von Eilenburg was born in 1103. So the same could be assumed for Emma of Burgundy. An answer to this problem will only be possible if the sources that Palackỷ used are found.
    • Excerpt from: Wiprecht: Contributions to the history of the Easter country in the High Middle Ages, 1st edition 1998, Sax-Verlag Beucha, page 50 ff, contribution by: Helmut Hentschel, Rötha - Wiprecht and his relations to the Bohemian ruling house, ISBN 978-3-930076- 63-5
  6. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay Detlev Schwennicke : European Family Tables , New Series , Volume I.2, Plate 177, Publisher: Vittorio Klostermann, Frankfurt a. M. 2000
  7. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa from Detlev Schwennicke : European family tables , New Series , Volume I.2, Plate 179, Publisher: Vittorio Klostermann , Frankfurt a. M. 2000
  8. Their origin is not known with certainty. One possible origin is "from Istria-Carniola". Daughter of Ulrich I (Istria-Carniola) and Sophia of Hungary . The Moravian husband of Margrave Ulrich's daughter has been identified as Duke Konrad. This seems to be proven by the onomastic evidence provided by the couple's son, who was given the name "Udalrich", probably after his maternal grandfather. However, there appears to be a timing problem with this hypothesis. Although his date of birth is unknown, the sons of Duke Břetislav were born in the period (1030-1040). The children of Margrave Ulrich, on the other hand, were born between (1065-1070), which would mean a considerable age difference between the couple if Duke Konrad is accepted as the real Duke of Moravia. In addition, it would be impossible for the Udalrich couple's son to have had a daughter who was alive as early as 1096. According to Wilhelm Wegener ., The wife of Duke Konrad Wilpirk (Hildburg), daughter of Count Sieghard VII (Sizo) from Ebersberg (-1044) and Philihild can on he upper Isar (- (1075)) Wilpirk (Hildburg) of Tengling been his , but he has not cited primary sources to explain or cite his rationale for this speculation. It is chronologically acceptable that all children of Count Sieghard VII (Sizo) must have been born before his death in 1044.
  9. manfred-hiebl.de Otto III.
  10. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Detlev Schwennicke : European family tables , new series , volume I.2, plate 178, publisher: Vittorio Klostermann, Frankfurt a. M. 2000
  11. euweb.cz family tree Rurikids9 , accessed May 26, 2014, English
  12. euweb.cz family tree Rurikids10 , accessed May 26, 2014, English
  13. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Detlev Schwennicke : European Family Tables , New Series , Volume III.1, Plate 18, Publisher: JA Stargardt, Marburg 1984
  14. not with Schwennicke
  15. a b c d e f g h Detlev Schwennicke : European Family Tables , New Series , Volume III.1, Plate 20, Publisher: JA Stargardt, Marburg 1984
  16. uni- Erlangen Nikolaus I. von Troppau , accessed on May 4, 2014.
  17. a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj genealogy.euweb.cz Böhmen 3 , accessed May 25, 2014 , engl.
  18. Medlands Ziemowit V. of Mazovia , accessed May 25, 2014, Eng.

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