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Bolesław and refused
The remains of the missionary were held for ransom by the Prussians and Bohemian Přemyslid rulers refused to pay for Adalbert's ( Vojtech ) body, consequently it was purchased by Duke Bolesław I for its weight in gold, and buried in Gniezno.
As mentioned above, Bolesław I had taken control of the marches of Lusatia, Sorbian Meissen, and the cities of Budziszyn ( Bautzen ) and Meissen in 1002, and refused to pay the tribute to the Empire from the conquered territories.
Bolesław I also refused to aid the Emperor militarily in his Italian expedition.

Bolesław and consent
It wasn't until Henry's death in 1024, that Bolesław was able to acquire the papal consent for his coronation as Polish king.

Bolesław and so
Also in 1105, Bolesław entered into an agreement with his stepmother Judith of Swabia, the so called Tyniec Accord.
He tells us that she was betrothed and married to the Wendish king Bolesław the Brave, who received a large dowry for her ; but she did not want to be his wife and starved herself after their wedding, so Bolesław sent her back to Denmark.
The Senate was abolished in 1946 so in 1947 Bolesław Bierut was elected President only by the Sejm.
Bolesław II may have hoped that Henry III encountered serious difficulties with Wrocław ( which he received in the division ), so at the end the Duchy would come back to him.

Bolesław and young
This eliminated two pretenders to the Polish throne, secured young Bolesław ’ s inheritance as well as diminished the growing opposition to Wladyslaw I Herman among the nobility.
In view of his father ’ s disapproval, and after discovering the plans of Sieciech and Duchess Judith-Sophia to take over the country Zbigniew gained an ally in the young prince Bolesław.
Bolesław retaliated with expeditions into Pomerania in 1104 – 1105, which brought the young prince not only loot, but also effectively disintegrated the alliance of Pomeranians and Zbigniew.
In the first years of his government, young Bolesław remained under the strong influence of his mother Salomea and the Voivode Wszebor, who feared the ambition of his elder half-brother High Duke Władysław II ( the first-born son of the late duke by his first wife Zbyslava of Kiev ).
Although the nominal leadership of the troops was given by Bolesław to his young nephew Przemysł II, the expedition was actually headed by experimented commanders such as the voivode of Poznań, Przedpełk Łodzia, and the castellan of Kalisz Janek.
The plans of Sieciech and Duchess Judith-Sophia to take the complete control over the country were discovered by Zbigniew ; his young half-brother Bolesław became in his ally.
The younger son Bolesław was sentenced to death by the Russian authorities, but his sentence was later changed to life imprisonment because of his young age.
On the other hand, Salome of Berg-Schelklingen, widow of Bolesław III and Władysław's stepmother, who attempted to form alliances with foreign rulers and took every opportunity to secure the reign of her sons, feared that the Junior Dukes had been relegated from their positions to make way for Władysław's sons, the young Bolesław and his brother Mieszko.
Bolesław, who was finally able to maintain an agreement with Henry III until his death, remained in hostile relations with Konrad of Głogów, thanks in great part to the rebellious and obstinate character of the young Duke.

Bolesław and prince
* Bolesław I, prince of Bohemia
By 989, and perhaps as early as 987, Bolesław I married Emnilda, daughter of Dobromir, a Slavic prince of Lusatia.
Though it was undoubtedly a sign of Otto's respect for the Polish ruler, it could not truly mean Bolesław I was King as only the Pope had the authority to invest a prince with the crown and elevate his realm to a status of a kingdom.
The prince was faced with a real possibility of uprising, of the sort that deposed Bolesław the Bold.
Finally in 1137, the Polish prince Bolesław III Wrymouth ( 1107 – 1138 ) came to terms with Duke Soběslav I of Bohemia, when a peace was made confirming the borderline along the Sudetes.
Polish prince Bolesław IV the Curly () built a palace there in the 12th century.
For a 15th century prince of Masovia, see Bolesław IV Warszawski.
Because his main domain was Masovia, the prince was called Bolesław of Masovia.
After prince of Kraków and Sandomierz Bolesław V the Chaste brought here the Knights Templar ( 1250-1257 ), a Roman-Catholic Diocese of Łuków was established here.
It was conquered by Polish prince Bolesław III Wrymouth in 1108.
Several years after the death of High Duke Henry II the Pious at the 1241 Battle of Legnica, Bolesław with the support of the Lesser Polish nobility prevailed as prince at Kraków against his uncle Konrad I of Masovia, and thus became the predominant ruler in fragmented Poland.
The Polish prince Bolesław the Wrymouth ( 1106 – 1138 ) conquered the castles on the Noteć and incorporated Krajna into his state.
The monks were brought there by prince Bolesław III Wrymouth.
He wrote it in during the times of ruling of prince Bolesław II the Bold.
He had 5 sons ( prince Siemowit V of Masovia, prince Kazimierz II of Belz, prince Trojden II, prince Władysław I of Plock, and future bishop Alexander Ziemowit ), and 7 daughters with Alexandra and their 6 daughters married European princes and feudal lords: Bogislaw IX ( Maria or Mary of Masovia ), Ernest the Iron ( Cymburgis of Masovia ), Bolesław I of Cieszyn ( Euphemia or Ofka ), Wilhelm II.
In the medieval times, during Mieszko I and Bolesław I Chrobry rules, pancerni were members of prince own force, as they only in whole army wore mail armours.
Sieciech was the first guardian of the minor prince Bolesław.
However, in earlier historiography, it was theorised that the Polish prince who lived in the hermitage of Ravenna was Lambert, son of Mieszko I or an unknown son of Bolesław I from his first marriage with the daughter of Rikdag, Margrave of Meissen.
In 1257, prince Bolesław V the Chaste gave the town together with 25 nearby villages to the Order of Poor Ladies.

Bolesław and took
According to the Annales Cracovienses Compilati, this event took place in 1136 ; since it can be assumed that the Polish princess was younger than her betrothed, and also are known the birth dates of the youngest children of Bolesław III ( Agnes in 1137 and Casimir in 1138 ), Judith in consequence could have been born between 1130 and 1135.
After a struggle for power between Bolesław I and Oda with her minor sons ( Bolesław's half-brothers ), the eldest son of Mieszko I took control over all of his father's state and expelled his stepmother and her sons from Poland.
When Otto III reached is majority he again took to the field against the Lutici in the fall of 995, aided by the Polish Duke Bolesław I Chrobry.
However assuming that Mieszko I took control of Lesser Poland in 990 ( which is likely ), than Bolesław I was bestowed the rule in Lesser Poland by his father but without its territory being included in the Polish realm.
The circumstances in which Bolesław I took control of the country following the passing of his father, Mieszko I, forecasted what would later become a prevalent practice among the Piast dynasty.
Bolesław I took advantage of internal strife following the Emperor's death and occupied important areas to the west of the Oder: Margraviate of Meissen and March of Lusatia, including strongholds Budziszyn and Strzala.
Bolesław I, claiming the Ducal throne for himself, invaded Bohemia in 1003 and took Prague without any serious opposition, ruling as Boleslav IV for a little over a year.
Following this Bolesław I's forces took the initiative.
After Henry's death in 1024, Bolesław I took advantage of the interregnum in Germany and crowned himself king in 1025, thus raising Poland to the rank of a kingdom before its neighbor Bohemia.
When Ottokar was placed under the Imperial ban, Duke Bolesław II the Bald of Legnica took the occasion, had his nephew Henry seized at Jelcz and imprisoned him in 1277.
According to some historians, the war lasted only a few weeks, and according to others, only finished around 995, when Bolesław I expelled his stepmother and half-brothers from Poland and took control over all Mieszko I's domains.
It is here that the Congress of Gniezno took place in the year 1000 AD, during which Bolesław I the Brave, Duke of Poland, received Holy Roman Emperor Otto III.
The allied forces of Bolesław easily took control of most important cities including Kalisz, Gniezno, Spycimierz and Łęczyca, in effect taking control of half of Zbigniew ’ s lands.
Taking advantage of element of surprise Bolesław III launched his assault from precisely that direction, and took control of the city.
Once the missionary activities of Otto of Bamberg took root Bolesław III began to implement an ecclesiastical organization of Pomerania.
According to the city's webpage, the first historic note about Słupsk comes from 1015 when ruler of Poland Bolesław I Chrobry took over the town, incorporating it into Polish state.
The Congress of Gniezno ( or Gnesener Übereinkunft, ) was an amical meeting between the Polish duke Bolesław I Chrobry and Emperor Otto III, which took place at Gniezno on March 11, 1000.
Bolesław supported Henry's rival, Margrave Eckard I of Meissen, expanded the Polish realm into the March of Lusatia and the Milceni lands, and also took the Bohemian throne at Prague, interfering with Henry's interests.
In the area of Gryfice the Battle of Niekładź took plcace in 1121, in which Polish ruler Bolesław III Krzywousty defeated Wartislaw I, Duke of Pomerania and Swantopolk I, Duke of Pomerania
At the time of Przemysł I's death, his wife was five months pregnant of their last child ; for this, his brother Bolesław took the government of all his domains ; after the birth of Przemysł II, he remained under the tutelage of his uncle until 1273, when he received Poznań as his own district.
However, is known that Władysław Odonic took care properly for the upbringing of his offspring, evidenced by the fact that Bolesław, like his older brother Przemysł I, was able to read and write Latin.
:: Przemysł captured his brother Bolesław and took all his lands and castles.
Since them the cooperation between the brothers took place without problems, but Bolesław was still aparted from the foreign politics.
On 8 May 1254 Bolesław took part in the national Congress of Piast princes at Kraków on occasion of the canonization of St. Stanislaus, were was also decided to form a coalition against Swantopolk II, Duke of Pomerania.
Bolesław claimed the ducal throne for himself, invaded Bohemia in 1003 and took Prague without any serious opposition, ruling as Boleslaus IV for a little over a year.

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