Wartislaw (around 1186)

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Wartislaw was a Pomeranian nobleman from the line of the Ratiboriden , a branch line of the Greifenhaus ruling in Pomerania .

The only mention Wartislaws comes from a present in duplicate certificate from around 1186, with the Pomeranian Duke Bogislaw I. the monastery Kolbatz purchasing a village confirmed and banned the mill construction at two waters in favor of the monastery. There is named as the second witness in the series of witnesses "Wartizlaus Zlaunie". This is conventionally understood as Wartislaw, Herr von Schlawe .

The historian Robert Klempin assumed that this Wartislaw a son Duke Ratibor I. was. Klempin is likely to have followed the chronicler Thomas Kantzow from the 16th century, according to which Duke Ratibor I left two sons, Wartislaw and Swantopolk . The historian Martin Wehrmann assumed that “it is hardly possible to say certain things about his membership in the ducal house”, but also put him in his family tree as the son of Duke Ratibor I.

The historian Adolf Hofmeister took a completely different view : He assumed that "Wartizlaus Zlaunie" was erroneously written for "Wartizlaus Zuantiboriz" in the document, meaning Wartislaw Swantiboricz († 1196).

literature

  • Martin Wehrmann : Genealogy of the Pomeranian ducal house. Leon Sauniers Buchhandlung Verlag, Stettin 1937, p. 40.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Klaus Conrad (arrangement): Pommersches Urkundenbuch . Volume 1. 2nd edition (= publications of the Historical Commission for Pomerania. Series 2, Vol. 1). Böhlau Verlag, Cologne / Vienna 1970, No. 103 and 104.
  2. Represented by: Klaus Conrad (arrangement): Pommersches Urkundenbuch . Volume 1. 2nd edition (= publications of the Historical Commission for Pomerania. Series 2, Vol. 1). Böhlau Verlag, Cologne / Vienna 1970, No. 103, footnote 7.