See also

Family of Casimir I + and Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Husband: Casimir I + (1016-1058)
Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA (aft1011-1087)
Children: Boleslaw II (1042-1081)
Wladislaw I + HERMAN (1043-1102)
Swietoslawa of POLAND (1044-1126)
Mieszko (1045-1065)
Otto (1046-1048)

Husband: Casimir I +

picture

Casimir I +

Name: Casimir I +
Sex: Male
Nickname: The Restorer
Father: Mieszko II + (990-1034)
Mother: Richeza + of LOTHARINGIA (994-1063)
Birth 25 Jul 1016 Krakow, Poland
Occupation Prince of Poland
Death 28 Nov 1058 (age 42) Poznan, Poland
Burial Archcathedral Basilica of St. Peter and St. Paul
Poznan, Poland

Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA

picture

Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Name: Maria + DOBRONIEGA
Sex: Female
Father: Vladimir I + (960-1015)
Mother: Anna of the BYZANTINE EMPIRE (963-1011)
Birth aft 1011 Kiev, Ukraine
Occupation Duchess Consort of Poland
Title Princess of the Ukraine
Title frm 1040 to 1058 (age 28-47) Duchess Consort of Poland
Death 1087 (age 75-76) Krakow, Poland

Child 1: Boleslaw II

picture

Boleslaw II

Name: Boleslaw II
Sex: Male
Birth 1042 Poland
Occupation King of Poland
Title frm 1058 to 1076 (age 15-34) Duke of Poland
Title frm 1076 to 1079 (age 33-37) King of Poland
Death 2 Apr 1081 (age 38-39) Ossiach, Carinthia

Child 2: Wladislaw I + HERMAN

picture

Wladislaw I + HERMAN

Name: Wladislaw I + HERMAN
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Judita I + (1056-1085)
Spouse 2: Judith of SWABIA (1054-1118)
Birth 1043 Krakow, Poland
Occupation Prince of Poland
Title Prince of Poland
Death 4 Jun 1102 (age 58-59) Plock, Poland
Burial Masovian Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedrak, Plock, Poland

Child 3: Swietoslawa of POLAND

picture

Swietoslawa of POLAND

picture

Spouse: Vratislav II +

Name: Swietoslawa of POLAND
Sex: Female
Spouse: Vratislav II + (1035-1092)
Birth 1044 Krakow, Poland
Title Queen of Bohemia
Occupation Queen of Bohemia
Death 1 Sep 1126 (age 81-82) Praha, Czechoslovakia

Child 4: Mieszko

picture

Mieszko

Name: Mieszko
Sex: Male
Birth 16 Apr 1045 Krakow, Poland
Occupation Prince of Poland
Title Prince of Poland
Death 28 Jan 1065 (age 19) Krakow, Poland

Child 5: Otto

Name: Otto
Sex: Male
Birth 1046
Death 1048 (age 1-2)

Note on Husband: Casimir I +

Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; b. Kraków, 25 July 1016 - d. Poznan', 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country from 1034 until his death.

 

He was the only son of Mieszko II Lambert by his wife Richeza, daughter of Count Palatine Ezzo of Lotharingia (Ezzonen) and granddaughter of Emperor Otto II.

 

Casimir is known as the Restorer because he managed to reunite all parts of the Polish Kingdom after a period of turmoil. He reinstated Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania into his realm. However, he failed to crown himself King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.

Contents

[hide]

 

1 Life

1.1 Early years

1.2 Flight

1.3 Interregnum

1.4 Restoration

2 Marriage and issue

3 Ancestry

4 See also

5 References

 

[edit] Life

[edit] Early years

 

Relatively little is known of Casimir's early life. He must have spent his childhood at the royal court of Poland in Gniezno. In order to acquire a proper education, he was sent to one of the Polish monasteries in 1026. According to some older sources he initially wanted to have a career in the Church (it is probable that he held the post of Oblate) and even asked for a dispensation to became a monk. This hypothesis, however, is not supported by modern historians. Regardless, he left the church for good in 1031.

[edit] Flight

Casimir the Restorer, by Matejko

 

Casimir's father, Mieszko II, was crowned King of Poland in 1025 after the death of his father Boles?aw I the Brave. However, the powerful magnates of the country feared a strong central government like the one that existed under Boles?aw I's rule. This led to considerable friction between the King and the nobility.

 

Taking advantage of the King's precarious situation, Mieszko II's brothers Bezprym and Otto turned against him and allied themselves with the Emperor Conrad II, whose forces attacked the country, regaining Lusatia. Years of chaos and conflict followed, during which Mieszko II died (1034) under suspicious circumstances, after he was forced to abdicate.

 

At the time of his father's death, Casimir was in Germany at the court of his uncle Hermann II, Archbishop of Köln. In 1037 both the young prince and his mother returned to Poland and atempted to seize the throne. This precipitated a rebellion by local barons, which coupled with the so called "Pagan Reaction" of the commoners, forced Casimir and Richeza to flee to Saxony.

 

However, soon Casimir returned to Poland and in 1038, once again, tried to regain power with the aide of his influential mother. This also failed and he had to flee again, this time to the Kingdom of Hungary where he was imprisoned by Stephen I. The Dowager Queen remained in Germany as a nun until her death, in 1063.

[edit] Interregnum

 

The central parts of Poland were controlled by Bezprym. The central district of Wielkopolska revolted against the nobles and catholic clergy in a mass rebellion. A pagan revival in the area lasted for several years. The district of Masovia seceded and a local lord, Miec?aw, formed a state of his own. A similar situation occurred in Pomerania. Taking advantage of the chaos and his neighbour's weakness, Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia, invaded and ravaged the country: Lesser and Greater Poland were severely pillaged, Poznan' was captured and Bretislaus sacked Gniezno, taking the relics of Saint Adalbert, Radim Gaudentius and other five eremites with him. On the way back he conquered part of Silesia including Wroc?aw and destroyed religious buildings, which were built by Mieszko I during the feast of the conversion of Poland, and plundered Mieszko I's tomb.

[edit] Restoration

Casimir the Restorer returning to Poland, by Wojciech Gerson.

 

After initially escaping to Hungary, Casimir went to Germany, where in 1039 his relative the Emperor Henry III (who feared the increased power of the Bohemian ruler) gave him military and financial support. Casimir received a force of 1,000 heavy footmen and a significant amount of gold to restore his power in Poland. Casimir also signed an alliance with Yaroslav I the Wise, the Prince of Kievan Rus', who was linked with him through Casimir's marriage with Yaroslav's sister, Maria Dobronega. With this support, Casimir returned to Poland and managed to retake most of his domain. In 1041, Bretislaus, defeated in his second attempted invasion by Emperor Henry III signed a treaty at Regensburg (1042) in which he renounced his claims to all Polish lands except for Silesia, which was to be incorporated into the Bohemian Kingdom.[1] It was Casimir's success in strengthening royal power and ending internal strife that earned him the epithet of "the Restorer".

 

The treaty gained Casimir a period of peace on the southern border and the capital of Poland was moved to Kraków, the only major Polish city relatively untouched by the wars. It is probable that the Holy Roman Emperor was pleased with the balance of power restored in the region and forced Casimir not to crown himself the King of Poland. In 1046 Emperor Henry III held royal and imperial courts at Merseburg and Meissen, at which he ended the strife among the Dux Bomeraniorum (Duke of Pomerania), Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia, and Casimir I.

 

In 1047 Casimir, aided by his Kievan brother-in-law, started a war against Masovia and seized the land. It is probable that he also defeated Miec?aw's allies from Pomerania and attached Gdan'sk to Poland. This secured his power in central Poland. Three years later, against the will of the Emperor, Casimir seized Bohemian-controlled Silesia, thus securing most of his father's domain. In 1054 in Quedlinburg, the Emperor ruled that Silesia was to remain in Poland in exchange for a yearly tribute of 117 kg. of silver and 7 kg. of gold.

 

At that time Casimir focused on internal matters. To strengthen his rule he re-created the bishopric in Kraków and Wroc?aw and erected the new Wawel Cathedral. During Casimir's rule heraldry was introduced into Poland and, unlike his predecessors, he promoted landed gentry over the druz.yna as his base of power. One of his reforms was the introduction, to Poland, of a key element of feudalism: the granting of fiefdoms to his retinue of warriors, thus gradually transforming them into medieval knights.

[edit] Marriage and issue

 

Casimir married Maria Dobroniega (ca. 1012 - 1087), daughter of Grand Duke Vladimir I of Kiev. There is no consensus among historians where it was happened. W?adymir D. Koroliuk said that it was in 1039, Aleksej A. Szachmatow and Iwan Linniczenko 1041, while Dymitr S. Lichaczew 1043.[2]

 

They had five children:

 

Boles?aw II the Bold (ca. 1043 - 2/3 April 1081/82).

W?adys?aw I Herman (ca. 1044 - 4 June 1102)

Mieszko (16 April 1045 - 28 January 1065).

Otto (ca. 1046 - 1048).

S'wie;tos?awa (ca. 1048 - 1 September 1126), married ca. 1062 to Duke (from 1085, King) Vratislaus II of Bohemia.

Note on Wife: Maria + DOBRONIEGA

Maria Dobroniega of Kiev (b. aft. 1012[1] - d. 1087), was a Kievian Rus princess of the Rurikid dynasty and by marriage Duchess of Poland.

 

She was one of the youngest children of Vladimir I, Grand Prince of Kiev. The identity of her mother is disputed among historians and web sources.

 

Grand Prince Vladimir I had married seven times and had fathered many children, legitimate and illegitimate. Anna Porphyrogeneta, his sixth wife, is known to have predeceased Vladimir by four years. Chronicle Thietmar of Merseburg, writing from contemporary accounts, mentions that Boleslaw I of Poland captured Vladimir I's widow during his raid on Kiev in 1018. The historians long had no clue as to identity of this wife. The emigre historian Nicholas Baumgarten, however, pointed to the controversial record of the "Genealogia Welforum" and the "Historia Welforum Weingartensis" that one daughter of Count Kuno von Oenningen (future Duke Konrad I of Swabia) by "filia Ottonis Magni imperatoris" (Otto the Great's daughter; possibly Rechlinda Otona [Regelindis], claimed by some as illegitimate daughter and by others legitimate, born from his first marriage with Edith of England) married "rex Rugorum" (King of Russia). He interpreted this evidence as pertaining to Vladimir I's last wife. This woman is a possible identity for Maria's mother.

 

[edit] MarriageMaria married around 1040 to Casimir I the Restorer, Duke of Poland. This marriage helped Casimir to gain support in his reclaim over the Polish throne. Casimir had attempted to seize the throne twice before, both times he failed. With the support of Maria's brother, Yaroslav I the Wise, Casimir was able to make a successful claim.

 

The couple had five children:[2]

 

1.Boleslaw II the Bold (b. ca. 1043 - d. 2/3 April 1081/82).

2.Wladyslaw I Herman (b. ca. 1044 - d. 4 June 1102)

3.Mieszko (b. 16 April 1045 - d. 28 January 1065).

4.Otto (b. ca. 1046 - d. 1048).

5.Swietoslawa (b. ca. 1048 - d. 1 September 1126), married ca. 1062 to Duke (and since 1085 King) Vratislaus II of Bohemia.

Maria's husband died on 28 November 1058. Her sixteen year old son, Boleslaw, became King of Poland. Boleslaw II is considered one of the most capable of the Piast rulers; however, he was deposed and expelled from the country in 1079. Boleslaw II died two years later, in 1081.

 

Maria survive her son six years and died in 1087, aged seventy-seven or seventy-six.