'Vratislaus II' or 'Wratislaus II' (
Czech: ''Vratislav II'') (died
14 January 1092), the son of
Bretislaus I and Judith, daughter of
Henry of Schweinfurt, was the first
King of Bohemia from
15 June 1085. The royal title was a grant, however, from the
Holy Roman Emperor and was not hereditary. Before being raised to kingship, he had ruled Bohemia as duke since
1061. He was one of the greatest of medieval Czech rulers.
On his father's death in
1055, Vratislaus became duke of
Olomouc. He fell out with his brother
Spytihnev II and was exiled to
Hungary. Vratislaus regained his
Moravian ducal throne with Hungarian assistance and eventually reconciled with his brother and succeed him in the dukeship of all Bohemia and Moravia.
Campaigns of Henry IV
Vratislaus was, from the beginning, a vassal and ally of the
Emperor Henry IV. He supported Henry in both the
Investiture Controversy and the rebellions in
Saxony which dominated his long reign.
Pope Gregory VII, having already gained the support of
Boleslaus II of Poland, was keen on roping in the duke of Bohemia to surround the emperor with adversaries fighting for the church. The pope confirmed Vratislaus in the privilege of wearing the mitre and tunic which his predecessors had had. The pope also expressed gratitude for the regular payment of tribute to the Holy See. Vratislaus was often at odds with his brother
Jaromir, the bishop of
Prague, and he wore his religious vestments around the bishop to irritate him. Jaromir, for his part, ignored the creation of a new Moravian diocese by Vratislaus in
1063. Jaromir even went so far as to take by arms the relics removed from Prague to Moravia. Despite the pope's support for Vratislaus' new see, the Bohemian duke was unswayed in his allegiance to the Empire.
The Saxons revolted under their
Duke Magnus and
Otto of Nordheim,
Duke of Bavaria, in
1070 and Boleslaus of Poland attacked Bohemia in
1071. In August
1073, Henry responded with an invasion of Poland, but a new Saxon revolt drew him back in
1075. Vratislaus joined him and they defeated the rebels on
June 9 at the
First Battle of Langensalza. The Bohemian troops showed conspicuous bravery. Henry then took Jaromir to Germany to be his chancellor by the name of Gebhard and Vratislaus was greatly relieved.
Vratislaus also took part in the wars against the
anti-kings who opposed Henry's rule and were elected by a part of the nobility to replace him. At the
Battle of Flarchheim, only through the aid of Vratislaus' contingent was the imperial army capable of overcoming the rebels of the papally-approved claimant
Rudolf of Rheinfelden,
Duke of Swabia. Vratislaus even succeeded in seizing Rudolf's gold sword. The gold sword was carried in front of Vratislaus on state occasions. Vratislaus raised an army to serve in Henry's Italian campaign of
1081. In
1083, Vratislaus and his Czechs were with Henry when they entered the
Eternal City itself. Despite his serving an excommunicate emperor, Vratislaus maintained good relations with the papacy. Nonetheless, Gregory refused to grant Vratislaus permission to use the
Slavonic liturgy. Never, however, did Vratislaus link his fate with that of Henry's
antipope,
Clement III.
Expansionism
Vratislaus coveted the largely Slavic marches of
Meissen and
Lusatia, but, in spite of Henry's promises and Bohemian successes against the rebellious margraves, he never received them. Vratislaus always obediently returned any territory conquered from Poland or the margraviates to the emperor. Between 1075 and
1086, he held some land in Lower Lusatia in hopes that eventually Henry would confirm it in his possession permanently, but in
1088, with the insurrection of
Egbert II of Meissen, Henry granted the region to
Henry of Ostmark. Vratislaus was thereafter cool to Henry's military adventures. He never adjusted his loyalty, but he abstained from giving the emperor martial aid.
Internal affairs
It was a
Premyslid tradition that Moravia would be entrusted to the younger brothers of the ruling prince. In Vratislaus' case, his two younger brothers
Conrad and
Otto inherited
Brno and Olomouc and the youngest, Jaromir, entered the church. However, enmity grew between the brothers. It was then that Vratislaus founded a diocese at Olomouc, under the
Archbishopric of Mainz to counter Otto's authority within his province. Both pope and emperor took a hand in refereeing the conflict, which was partially fixed with Henry's appointment of Jaromir as chancellor in
1077. In April
1085, a ''
reichstag'' convened in
Mainz suppressed the Moravian see and, but Vratislaus later refounded the see. Jaromir protested in
Rome to
Pope Urban II, but died in
1090.
Sadly for Vratislaus, his last years were occupied by dynastic quarrelling. When his brother Otto died in 1086, he gave Olomouc to his son
Boleslaus, which was seen to be an act against the interests of Conrad. Vratislaus raised an army against Conrad and sent it out under his other son
Bretislaus. Instead, this son turned on him. Vratislaus, in keeping with Czech custom, designated an heir: Conrad. Thus reconciled with his surviving brother, the two demolished Bretislaus, who fled to Hungary.
Vratislaus died of a hunting wound on January 14, 1092, after a reign of thiry years.
Family
Vratislaus was married twice; the first time in
1057 to
Adelaide, daughter of
Andrew I of Hungary, who died in
1061. They had two children:
★
Bretislaus II of Bohemia
★
Judith (died
1086), married (
1080)
Ladislaus I Herman, son of
Casimir I of Poland
In
1062, Vratislaus married a second time to Swatana, a daughter of Casimir, who died in
1126. They had five children:
★
Boleslaus of Olomouc
★
Borivoj II of Bohemia
★
Vladislaus I of Bohemia
★
Sobeslav I of Bohemia
★ Judith (died
9 December 1108), married Wiprecht de Groitzsch
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