'Wenceslaus' or 'Wenceslas' (
Czech: '''Václav''',
IPA: ;
German: '''Wenzel'''), styled 'Wenceslaus I, Duke of
Bohemia' (b.
907, d.
September 28,
935 or
929 – see death controversy below) was the son of
Vratislav I, Duke of Bohemia. His father was raised in a Christian milieu through his father,
Bořivoj's, who was converted by
Saint Cyril and
Saint Methodius, the "apostles to the Slavs". His mother
DrahomÃra, however, was the daughter of a
pagan tribal chief who held on to the pagan belief system, as did many Czech nobles at the time, fearing that the arrival of Christian bishops would threaten their authority. Wenceslaus himself is venerated as 'Saint Wenceslaus'.
Childhood
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
TetÃn Castle near
Beroun.
DrahomÃra, who was trying to garner support from the nobility, was furious about losing influence on her son and arranged to have Ludmila strangled at TetÃn on
September 15,
921.
According to some legends, having regained control of her son, DrahomÃra set out to convert him to the old pagan religion. According to other legends she was herself a Christian. About her rule we know nothing.
Career
In 924 or 925 Wenceslaus assumed government for himself and had DrahomÃra exiled. After gaining the throne at the age of eighteen, he promoted the spread of Christianity throughout Bohemia. This was accomplished not only by building churches, such as future
St Vitus Cathedral (named after a Roman saint whose body was translated to Saxony from St. Denis) at
HradÄany Hill in
Prague, but also by his acquiescence to the influence of the
Holy Roman Empire. Because of this relationship with the Holy Roman Empire, the pagan nobility of Bohemia saw Wenceslaus and his faith as a threat not only to their pagan tradition, but also to their very sovereignty.
Early in 929 Wenceslaus became an "amicus" ("friend" (in Latin), but with lower prestige) of the
German King Henry I the Fowler, although it remains unclear as to whether this was the result of a voluntary submission or forced upon Wenceslaus by a German invasion. Some chroniclers identify either the growing German influence or hostility to Wenceslaus's religious policies as the main reason for his death.
Death and controversy
In September of 935 (or 929), a group of nobles allied with Wenceslaus's younger brother, Boleslaus (
Boleslav I of Bohemia), in a plot to kill the prince. Boleslaus had been raised in the pagan tradition by Drahomira, and was Wenceslaus's successor to the throne. After inviting his brother to the feast of
Saints Cosmas and Damian, Boleslaus murdered him on his way to church, and thus succeeded him as the Prince of Bohemia. (The title of Prince, indicates independence from the Catholic Holy Roman Empire, as opposed to Duke, the title granted by the Empire to Wenceslaus.) Purportedly Wenceslaus was murdered by being hacked to death at the door of the church in the town now called
Stará Boleslav.
According to Cosmas's chronicle, one of Boleslav's sons was born on the day of Wenceslaus's death, and because of the ominous circumstance of his birth the infant was named
Strachkvas, which means "a dreadful feast".

Statue of Saint Wenceslaus and other patrons of Czechia (St.Adalbert/Vojtěch of Prague, St.Ludmila, St.Prokop and St.Agnes "Czech") at Wenceslaus square in Prague
There are discrepancies in the records regarding the date of Wenceslaus's death. It has been argued that Wenceslaus's remains were transferred to St Vitus's Church in 932, ruling out the later date; however, the year 935 is now favoured by historians as the date of his murder.
There is a tradition which states that Saint Wenceslaus's loyal servant,
Podevin, avenged his death by killing one of the chief conspirators. Podevin was executed by Boleslav.
Canonization and other memorials
After his death, Wenceslaus was canonised as a saint due to his martyr's death, as well as several purported miracles that occurred after his death. Wenceslaus is the patron saint of the
Czech people and the
Czech Republic. His feast day is
September 28. Since the year 2000, this day is a
public holiday in the Czech Republic, celebrated as ''Czech Statehood Day''. In his honour, a statue of Wenceslaus clad in armour on horseback stands in Prague's Václavské náměstà (
Wenceslaus Square). A
parody of this statue, created by
David Černý, hangs in a building that faces the square. He is best known in the English speaking world, outside of the Czech Republic, as the subject of the
Christmas carol "
Good King Wenceslas".
Wenceslaus in fiction
An old legend says that a huge army of knights sleep inside
BlanÃk, a mountain in the
Czech Republic. The knights will wake and under the command of St. Wenceslaus will help the Motherland when it is in ultimate danger. (See also
King in the mountain legends)
He is the subject of the popular
Boxing Day and Christmas Carol
Good King Wenceslaus.
There is a 1994 television film entitled ''Good King Wenceslaus'' which 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.
Wenceslaus is a major character in
Ogden Nash's comic epic poem "The Christmas that Almost Wasn't," in which a boy awakens Wenceslaus and his knights to save a kingdom from usurpers who have outlawed Christmas.