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Page "Mieszko I of Poland" ¶ 54
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Bolesław and gave
Probably after the wedding, and in accordance with prevailing custom, Bolesław I gave a separate district to Mieszko II to rule: Kraków.
Otto III gave Bolesław a replica of his Holy Lance ( part of the Imperial Regalia ) and Bolesław presented the Emperor with a relic, an arm of Saint Adalbert in exchange.
According to the peace treaty Bolesław I lost Lusatia and Meissen and likely gave up his claim to the Bohemian throne.
Otto III gave Bolesław a replica of his Holy Lance, part of the Imperial Regalia, and Bolesław presented the Emperor with a relic, an arm of St. Adalbert in exchange.
In 1107, Coloman and Bolesław III gave assistance to Duke Svatopluk of Moravia against Duke Borivoj II of Bohemia.
Some historians believe that Bolesław III gave Władysław the district of Silesia before his own death, in order to create an hereditary fief for his eldest descendants.
Bolesław formally swore loyalty to the Emperor on Christmas Day in Magdeburg, and gave his younger brother, Casimir II, as a hostage.
Apparently, the new division was made pacefully, because later in that same year the brothers together gave support to Konrad I of Głogów against his brother Bolesław II the Bald.
Bolesław retain the Duchy until 1273, when he gave it to Ziemomysł's brother Leszek II the Black, except Radziejów and Kruszwica, who remained in Greater Poland.
In 1254 the Piast Duke Bolesław II the Bald of Legnica gave the area to the Benedictine monastery of Opatovice, who already had established Grüssau Abbey at nearby Krzeszów.
In this year the Polish king Bolesław Wstydliwy gave the land in the valley of Notec river to Sedziwoj of Czarnków.
Surrounded by adversity and even taken prisoner ( for a short time in 1270 ) Mestwin II gave the possession of Gdansk to the Brandenburg duke Conrad who was holding the city of Gdansk until Mestwin II forced them to resign from their possession of the city by use of force in 1273, having been strengthened by new alliance with his maternal cousin Bolesław Pobożny, the duke of Great Poland.
Being horrified by those events some of Vršovci fled to Poland, where they were received with honours by king Bolesław III Krzywousty who gave them lands in the duchy of Masovia, that were foundation of future Rawa Voivodeship.
In 1086, and after six years of marriage, Duchess Judith gave birth a son, the future Bolesław III Wrymouth.
In 1257, prince Bolesław V the Chaste gave the town together with 25 nearby villages to the Order of Poor Ladies.
Władysław was, however, faster and gave the Grand Prince several additional political advantages, as a result of which the marriage of Bolesław with the daughter of Grand Prince Vsevolod, Zvenislava took place in 1142.
The German aid only gave Bolesław a temporary advantage in the war against his brother.

Bolesław and Erik
:: The King of the Swedes, Erik, entered into an alliance with the very powerful King of the Polans, Bolesław.

Bolesław and daughter
Hedwig was daughter of the Duke Bolesław the Pious and the Hungarian Princess Blessed Jolenta.
She was the daughter of Bolesław III Wrymouth, Duke of Poland, by his second wife Salomea, daughter of Henry, Count of Berg.
He was the second son of Bolesław I the Brave, but the eldest born from his third wife Emmilda, daughter of Dobromir, possible ruler of Lusatia.
* Agnes of Opole ( d. 1413 ), daughter of Duke Bolesław ( Bolko ) II of Opole and sister of Duke Władysław, in 1374.
He strengthened his alliance with the Empire by marrying Oda, the daughter of the Saxon Margrave Dietrich of Haldensleben, in 978 and by marrying his son Bolesław I to a daughter of Margrave Rikdag of Meissen.
In 984 and at the instigation of his father, the eighteen-year-old Bolesław I married the daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen, probably named Hunilda or Oda.
Though opinions vary about the identity of Bolesław I's second wife, a number of researchers still support the hypothesis of her being the daughter of Géza.
By 989, and perhaps as early as 987, Bolesław I married Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, a Slavic prince of Lusatia.
Bolesław I claimed an hereditary right to Meissen as a relative of its former ruler Margrave Rikdag ( only through marriage ; he was the former husband of his daughter ).
Also, Bolesław I ( then a widower ) reinforced his dynastic bonds with the German nobility through his marriage with Oda, daughter of Margrave Eckard I of Meissen.
* wife-a daughter of Bolesław I Chrobry and Emnilda ( wife of Sviatopolk 1013 – 1018 )
Richeza was the daughter of Bolesław III Wrymouth, Duke of Poland, by his second wife Salomea, daughter of Henry, Count of Berg.
In order to seal this alliance, a marriage was arranged between Bolesław III's daughter Richeza with Niels ' eldest son, Crown Prince Magnus.
Once in Poland, Duke Bolesław III arranged a new marriage for his daughter.
He continued his policy of convergence with the Empire by marrying Oda, the daughter of the Saxon margrave Dietrich of Haldensleben, in 978 and by marrying his son Bolesław I to a daughter of Margrave Rikdag of Meissen.
He was the eldest son of Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth, sole ruler of Poland since 1107, by his first wife Zbyslava, a daughter of Sviatopolk II of Kiev.
After hearing the news about the events in Łęczyca, Władysław decided to make a quick response, as a result of which the Grand Prince of Kiev not only broke all his pacts with the Junior Dukes, but also arranged the betrothal of his daughter Zvenislava to Władysław's eldest son Bolesław.
He was the third son of Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth of Poland by his second wife Salomea, daughter of the Swabian count Henry of Berg.
However, the Junior Dukes in this first struggle were definitely defeated, because the Kievan Grand Prince Vsevolod II decided to made an alliance with Władysław II, reinforced by the marriage of Vsevolod's daughter Zvenislava with the High Duke's eldest son Bolesław I the Tall.
Despite now he had his own district, Bolesław didn't pursue a foreign policy, who continue under the hands of his brother, a fact revealed during the dispute with Duke Casimir I of Kuyavia for the possession of Ladzka, who was given to him by Henry II the Pious as a dowry of his daughter Constance-Casimir I's second wife -; this decision wasn't recognized by Władysław Odonic's sons, but eventually they reconciled and even signed and an alliance with the Kuyavian Duke, which effectively ended with any attempt to change the ownership of the disputed land.

Bolesław and sister
In 1015 Bolesław I sent a detachment of Polish horsemen to aid his nephew Canute the Great, son of his sister Swietoslawa, in his conquest of England.
Due to the childlessness of Otto III, the seven daughters of his sister Mathilde ( the only of Otto II's daughters who married and produced children ), were the only potential brides for Mieszko, Bolesław I's son and heir ; the oldest of Otto III's nieces, Richeza, was the chosen one.
The pact was sealed by marriage of the then widower Bolesław III with the sister of the wife of Vladislaus I, Salomea of Berg.
There, Bolesław arranged the marriage of his sister Judith with the margrave's son Otto.
Despite his success, Przemysł I wanted to end his disputes with the Silesian Piasts and in 1244 he married Bolesław II's sister Elizabeth, brought this to the monastery in Trzebnica.
Przemysł I released them in 1250, when he was involved in the conflict between Bolesław II the Bald and his brother Konrad ( husband of Przemysł I's sister Salomea ).
Her other sister, Margaret had married at the age of seven to Bolesław III the Generous, after he had come to the court of Bohemia with his mother, Elisabeth of Greater Poland.

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