Frederick, Duke of Bohemia

"Frederick of Bohemia" redirects here. For the later king of Bohemia, see Frederick V, Elector Palatine.
Frederick of Bohemia
Duke of Bohemia

Seal of Duke Frederick
Duke of Bohemia
Reign 1172 – 1173
Predecessor Vladislav II of Bohemia
Successor Soběslav II
Reign 1178 – 1189
Predecessor Soběslav II
Successor Conrad II
Born c.1142
Died 25 March 1189(1189-03-25) (aged 46–47)
Spouse Elisabeth of Hungary
Issue Vratislaus
Helena
Sophia
Ludmilla of Bohemia
Olga
Margaret
House Přemyslid dynasty
Father Vladislav II of Bohemia
Mother Gertrude of Babenberg
Religion Roman Catholicism

Frederick (Czech: Bedřich) (died 25 March 1189) was the Duke of Olomouc from 1164, then Duke of Bohemia from 1172 to 1173 and again from 1178 to his death. He was the son of King Vladislaus II, who abdicated in 1172 in his favour. He was unable to hold on to his duchy, however, because his tenancy was approved by neither the national diet nor the emperor. He was deposed in September the year following by the emperor at the Diet of Hermsdorf. The Emperor Frederick I, godfather and namesake of Frederick, nominated Oldřich, son of Soběslav I, but he renounced the throne in favour of Soběslav II, who was sympathetic to the peasantry, but antagonistic to both nobles and the emperor.

Frederick allied with the emperor and defeated Soběslav at the battles of Loděnice and Prague. The emperor recognised Frederick as an imperial prince, but he also raised the bishop of Prague, Henry Bretislaus, to princely status, making him a direct vassal of the emperor. He also appointed Conrad Otto margrave over Moravia and thus divided the duchy into three parts dependent on him. When Frederick, who was practically a puppet of the emperor, died, he was succeeded by Conrad Otto.

By his marriage to Elizabeth, daughter of Géza II of Hungary, he had the following issue:

Ancestry

Regnal titles
Preceded by
Vladislaus II
Duke of Bohemia
1172–1173
Succeeded by
Soběslav II
Preceded by
Soběslav II
Duke of Bohemia
1178–1189
Succeeded by
Conrad II

External reference

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