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'Ladislaus II' (
Czech: ''Vladislav'') (c.
1110–
18 January 1174) was the second
king of Bohemia from
1158. Before that he had been
duke of Bohemia from
1140. He abdicated in
1172, the royal title was not hereditary.
Vladislav was the son of
Vladislav I and
Richeza of Berg. He was an adventurous youth and, having no possibility of reaching the throne during the reign of his uncle
Sobeslav I, he moved to
Bavaria. He returned at the death of Sobeslav in
1140 and, with the help of his brother-in-law, the
king of Germany,
Conrad III, he was elected prince of Bohemia.
At first, he had to contend with the claims of his cousin, the son of Sobeslav, also named Vladislav. By Sobeslav's request, the
Emperor Lothair II had recognised the rights of his son at the Diet of
Bamberg in May
1138, then, in June, the nobility affirmed them at
Sadska. Another diet at Bamberg confirmed the succession of the son of Vladislav, however, in April 1140. The local dukes,
Conrad II of Znojmo,
Vratislaus II of Brno, and
Otto III of Olomouc, gave him trouble. They were excommunicated by Henry Zdik, bishop of
Olomouc, who was then driven out of his diocese. The territorial dukes then defeated Vladislav through treason at
Vyoska on
22 April 1142, but their siege of Prague failed. Vladislav kept his throne through the help of
Conrad III of Germany, whose half-sister Gertrude of Babenberg he married.
In
1147, he accompanied the king on the
Second Crusade, but halted his march at
Constantinople. On his way back to Bohemia he passed through
Kiev and
Kraków. Thanks to his friendship with Conrad's successor, the emperor
Frederick Barbarossa, Vladislav was elected king of Bohemia on 11 January 1158, becoming the second Bohemian prince to boast such an imperial title after
Vratislaus II. He was also invested with
Upper Lusatia at
Regensburg and his coronation was celebrated in a second ceremony at
Milan on
8 September. Vladislav was a firm ally of Barbarossa. He duly accompanied him to Milan in 1158. During the Italian expeditions of
1161,
1162, and
1167, Vladislav entrusted the command of the Czech contingent to his brother Duke
Děpold I of Jamnitz and his son
Frederick.
After the revolt of the Moravian dukes, Vladislav gradually took the control of the strongholds of
Moravia:
Brno with the death of Vratislaus II in
1156, Olomouc with the death of Otto III (in spite of the claims of Sobeslav, the son of Duke Sobeslav, who was imprisoned), and finally
Znojmo with the death of Conrad II. Vladislav also intervened in
Hungary in
1163 on behalf of the emperor. He married his second son, Sviatopluk, to a Hungarian princess and had diplomatic contact with
Manuel I Comnenus. In
1164, he even married his six-year-old daughter Helena to Peter, son of Manuel.
In
1167, Daniel I, bishop of Prague since
1148 and Vladislav's greatest advisor, died. As a result, relations between the kings of Bohemia and Germany were strained. When his son
Vojtech became
archbishop of Salzburg in
1169, the emperor suspected him of supporting
Pope Alexander III.
Eager to impose his son Frederick on the throne of the still-elective duchy of Bohemia, he abdicated without either the consensus of the Bohemian noblemen or the Emperor's permission. Frederick kept the trone for less than one year, before yielding the place to
Sobeslav II, the elder son of Sobeslav I. Vladislav lived in the lands of his wife, where he died in January 1174. He was buried in the Cathedral of
Meissen. His reign was marked by the founding of numerous
Premonstratensian and
Cistercian abbeys in Bohemia, as well as the construction of a stone bridge across
Vltava in
Prague: the construct was named Judith Bridge in honour of Vladislav's second wife.
Family and children
By his first wife, Gertrude of Babenberg (died
4 August 1150), he had the following issue:
★
Frederick, successor
★ Sviatopluk, married a daughter of
Geza II of Hungary
★
Vojtech,
archbishop of Salzburg as Adalbert III
★ Agnes (died
7 June 1228), abbess of St George of Prague
By his second wife, Judith (married
1155), daughter of
Louis I, Landgrave of Thuringia, he had the following issue:
★
Ottokar, later king of Bohemia, first of a hereditary line
★
Ladislaus, later duke of Bohemia as Ladislaus III
★ Richeza (died
19 April 1182), married
Henry II, Duke of Austria
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