Wenceslaus I Premyslid (Saint-Duke) of BOHEMIA

Wenceslaus I Premyslid (Saint-Duke) of BOHEMIA

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Wenceslaus I Premyslid (Saint-Duke) of BOHEMIA
Name Winceslas I Premyslid (Saint-Duke) of BOHEMIA
Name Václav PREMYSLID
Name Saint Wenzel VON BOEHMEN
Beruf Duke of Bohemia zu einem Zeitpunkt zwischen 921 und 935

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt etwa 907 Stochov, near Prague, Bohemia (now in Czech Republic) nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 28. September 935 Stará Boleslav, Bohemia, Holy Roman German Empire (martyred) nach diesem Ort suchen

Notizen zu dieser Person

Wenceslaus I (Czech: Václav; c. 907 - September 28, 935), or Wenceslas I, was the duke (kníže) of Bohemia from 921 until his assassination in 935, purportedly in a plot by his own brother, Boleslav the Cruel. His martyrdom, and the popularity of several biographies, quickly gave rise to a reputation for heroic goodness, resulting in his being elevated to Sainthood, posthumously declared king, and seen as the patron saint of the Czech state. He is the subject of Good King Wenceslas, a Saint Stephen's Day carol written over 900 years later, in 1853, that remains popular to this day. Biography Wenceslaus was son of Vratislaus I, Duke of Bohemia from the Premyslid dynasty. His father was raised in a Christian milieu through his own father, Borivoj I of Bohemia, who was purportedly converted by Saints Cyril and Methodius. His mother Drahomíra was the daughter of a pagan tribal chief of Havolans and was baptized at the time of her marriage. In 921, when Wenceslaus was thirteen, his father died and he was brought up by his grandmother, Saint Ludmila, who raised him as a Christian. A dispute between the fervently Christian regent and her daughter-in-law drove Ludmila to seek sanctuary at Tetín Castle near Beroun. Drahomíra, who was trying to garner support from the nobility, was furious about losing influence on her son and arranged to have Ludmila strangled at Tetín on September 15, 921. Wenceslaus is usually described as exceptionally pious and humble, and a very educated and intelligent young man for his time. According to some legends, having regained control of her son, Drahomíra set out to convert him to the old pagan religion. According to other legends, she was a Christian herself; however, very little is known about her rule. Reign After the fall of Great Moravia, the rulers of the Bohemian duchy had to deal both with continuous raids by the Magyars and the forces of the Saxon duke and East Frankish king Henry the Fowler, who had started several eastern campaigns into the adjacent lands of the Polabian Slavs, homeland of Wenceslaus's mother. To withstand Saxon overlordship Wenceslaus's father Vratislaus had forged an alliance with the Bavarian duke Arnulf the Bad, then a fierce opponent of King Henry; however, it became worthless when Arnulf and Henry reconciled at Regensburg in 921. In 924 or 925 Wenceslaus assumed government for himself and had Drahomíra exiled.[citation needed] After gaining the throne at the age of eighteen, he defeated a rebellious duke of Kourim named Radslav.[citation needed] He also founded a rotunda consecrated to St Vitus at Prague Castle in Prague, which exists as present-day St Vitus Cathedral. Early in 929 the joint forces of Duke Arnulf of Bavaria and King Henry I the Fowler reached Prague in a sudden attack, which forced Wenceslaus to resume the payment of a tribute which had been first imposed by the East Frankish king Arnulf of Carinthia in 895. Henry had been forced to pay a huge tribute to the Magyars in 926 and he therefore needed the Bohemian tribute which Wenceslaus probably refused to pay any longer after the reconciliation between Arnulf and Henry. One of the possible reasons for Henry's attack was also the formation of the anti-Saxon alliance between Bohemia, the Polabian Slavs and the Magyars. One of his courtiers was the crypto-Islamic Had Carém. Murder In September 935 (in older sources 929) a group of nobles-allied with Wenceslaus' younger brother Boleslav-plotted to kill the prince. After Boleslav invited Wenceslaus to the feast of Saints Cosmas and Damian in Stará Boleslav, three of Boleslav's companions - Tira, Cesta and Hnevsa - murdered Wenceslaus on his way to church after a quarrel between him and his brother. Boleslav thus succeeded him as the Duke of Bohemia. According to Cosmas's Chronicle, one of Boleslav's sons was born on the day of Wenceslaus' death, and because of the ominous circumstance of his birth the infant was named Strachkvas, which means "a dreadful feast". There are discrepancies in the records regarding the date of St Wenceslaus' death. It has been argued that Wenceslaus' remains were transferred to St Vitus's Church in 932, ruling out the later date; however, the year 935 is now favored by historians as the date of his murder.[1] There is a tradition which states that Saint Wenceslaus' loyal servant, Podevin, avenged his death by killing one of the chief conspirators. Podevin was executed by Boleslav.[citation needed] Legacy Canonisation and other memorials Wenceslaus was considered a martyr and a saint immediately after his death, when a cult of Wenceslaus grew up in Bohemia and in England.[2] Within a few decades of WenceslausWenceslausWenceslaus's death four biographies of him were in circulation.[3][4] These hagiographies had a powerful influence on the High Middle Ages conceptualization of the rex justus, or "righteous king"-that is, a monarch whose power stems mainly from his great piety, as well as from his princely vigor.[5] Referring approvingly to these hagiographies, the chronicler Cosmas of Prague, writing in about the year 1119, states:[6] But his deeds I think you know better than I could tell you; for, as is read in his Passion, no one doubts that, rising every night from his noble bed, with bare feet and only one chamberlain, he went around to God’s churches and gave alms generously to widows, orphans, those in prison and afflicted by every difficulty, so much so that he was considered, not a prince, but the father of all the wretched. Several centuries later the legend was claimed as fact by Pope Pius II.[7] Although Wenceslas was, during his lifetime, only a duke, Holy Roman Emperor Otto I posthumously "conferred on [Wenceslas] the regal dignity and title" and that is why, in the legend and song, he is referred to as a "king".[8] The usual American English spelling of Duke Wenceslas's name, Wenceslaus, is occasionally encountered in later textual variants of the carol, although it was not used by Neale in his version.[9] Wenceslas is not to be confused with King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia (Wenceslaus I Premyslid), who lived more than three centuries later. An equestrian statue of Saint Wenceslaus and other patrons of Bohemia (St. Adalbert, St. Ludmila, St. Prokop and St. Agnes of Bohemia) is located on Wenceslaus Square in Prague. His helmet and armour are on display inside Prague Castle.[10] The hymn "Svatý Václave" (Saint Wenceslas) or "Saint Wenceslas Chorale " is one of the oldest known Czech songs in history. Its roots can be found in the 12th century and it still belongs to the most popular religious songs to this day. In 1918, in the beginning of the Czechoslovak state, the song was discussed as one of the possible choices for the national anthem. Since 2000, the feast day of Saint Wenceslas (September 28) is a public holiday in the Czech Republic, celebrated as Czech Statehood Day. Wenceslaus in legend Good King Wenceslas MENU0:00 Christmas carol Good King Wenceslas Problems playing this file? See media help. Wenceslaus is the subject of the popular Saint Stephen's Day (celebrated on December 26 in the West) Carol, "Good King Wenceslas". It was published by John Mason Neale in 1853, and may be a translation of a poem by Czech poet Václav Alois Svoboda. An enduring legend claims a huge army of knights sleep inside Blaník, a mountain in the Czech Republic. The knights will awake and under the command of St. Wenceslaus and bring aid to the Czech people when they face ultimate danger (see also King in the mountain legends). There is a similar great legend in Prague which says that when the Motherland is in danger or in its darkest times and close to ruin, the equestrian statue of King Wenceslaus in Wenceslaus Square will come to life, raise the army sleeping in Blaník, and upon crossing the Charles Bridge his horse will stumble and trip over a stone, revealing the legendary sword of Bruncvík. With this sword, King Wenceslaus will slay all the enemies of the Czechs, bringing peace and prosperity to the land.[11] Ogden Nash wrote a comic epic poem - "The Christmas that Almost Wasn't", loosely based on the same legend - in which a boy awakens Wenceslaus and his knights to save a kingdom from usurpers who have outlawed Christmas.[12] 1994 television film Good King Wenceslas is a highly fictional account of his early life. The film stars Jonathan Brandis in the title role, supported by Leo McKern, Stefanie Powers, and Joan Fontaine as Ludmila.[13] Footnotes ^ The St Joseph's Catholic Missal, c. 1962, gives the date of his death as 938 ^ Describing the Codex Gigas, a thirteenth-century manuscript from Bohemia in the Swedish National Library in Stockholm, it is stated: "All this bears witness to the outstanding importance of the cult of Vaclav in Bohemia at the time of the Devil's Bible's compilation. Moreover, all three festivals are inscribed in red ink, denoting their superlative degree." ^ The First Slavonic Life (in Old Church Slavonic), the anonymous Crescente fide, the Passio by Gumpold, bishop of Mantua (d. 985), and The Life and Passion of Saint Václav and his Grandmother Saint Ludmilla by Kristian. ^ Lisa Wolverton’s Hastening Toward Prague: Power and Society in the Medieval Czech Lands, p. 150. Available online at [1]. ^ http://www.mun.ca/mst/heroicage/issues/9/defries.html See Defries, David. "St. Oswald's Martyrdom: Drogo of Saint-Winnoc's Sermo secundus de s. Oswaldo", §12, in The Heroic Age: A Journal of Early Mediaeval Northwestern Europe, Issue 9 (Oct 2006). ^ Book I of the Chronica Boëmorum, Quoted in Wolverton, op. cit. Not to be confused with Saint Cosmas. ^ Cited by Kresadlo in Good King Wenceslas. ^ Catholic Encyclopedia wikt:s.v. “St Wenceslas”. ^ Wencesla-us is the Mediaeval Latin form of the name, declined in the Second Declension. ^ http://prague-castle.org/chapel.html ^ Košnár, Julius (2008). Staropražské povesti a legendy. Prague: Nakladatelství XYZ. p. 289. ISBN 978-80-86864-86-0. ^ Ogden Nash, "The Christmas that Almost Wasn't", Little, Brown and Company, 1957 OCLC 1211904 ^ Good King Wenceslas (1994) at the Internet Movie Database From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Another version: Saint Wenceslaus, Czech Svatý Václav, Prince of Bohemia, martyr, and patron saint of Bohemia, Czech Republic. Wencelaus was raised a Christian by his grandmother St. Ludmila, but his ambitious mother, Drahomíra (Dragomir), a pagan, had her murdered and acted as regent herself, until Wenceslaus came of age in 924 or 925. Her court intrigues and the wishes of the people to end the conflicts between Christian and non-Christian factions in Bohemia led Wenceslaus to take the reins of government. As duke he was pious, reportedly taking the vow of virginity, and encouraged the work of German missionary priests in the Christianization of Bohemia. His zeal in spreading Christianity, however, antagonized his non-Christian opponents. Faced with German invasions in 929, Wenceslaus submitted to the German king Henry I the Fowler. His submission provoked some of the nobles to conspire against him, and they prompted his younger brother, Boleslav (Boleslaus), to murder him. Waylaid by Boleslav en route to mass, Wenceslaus was killed at the church door. Frightened by the reports of miracles occurring at Wenceslaus' tomb, Boleslav had his remains transferred in 932 to the Church of St. Vitus, Prague, which became a great pilgrimage site during the medieval period. Wenceslaus was regarded as Bohemia's patron saint almost immediately after his assassination. His virtues are sung in the Christmas carol (19th century) “Good King Wenceslas.” http://en.wikipedia.org

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Hochgeladen 2024-04-16 14:43:58.0
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