Jan of Ziębice
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jan of Ziębice (Polish: Jan ziębicki; b. ca. 1380 - d. 27 August 1428), was a Duke of Ziębice since 1410 (until 1420 with hs brother as co-ruler).
He was the second son of Duke Bolko III of Ziębice by his wife Euphemia, daughter of Duke Bolesław of Bytom.
[edit] Life
The death of his older brother Nicholas (9 November 1405) made him the heir of his father. Bolko III died in 1410 and was succeeded by Jan, who an adult at that time, don't need a regency (like his father). Jan co-ruled with his younger brother Henry II, but he retained all the government in his hands. Henry II died childless in 1420 and since them Jan ruled alone over Ziębice. Like his father and grandfather, he remained as a faithful vassal of the House of Luxembourg.
During the first years of his rule the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War took place. He participated there at the side of the Teutonic Order; however, his interference in the war was limited, especially after the Battle of Tucholą (4 November 1410), where he escaped from the battlefield with other noble and Teutonic knights.
On 6 January 1420 Jan was present in the Congress of Wroclaw, where he spent a major disincentive to the Polish sentence in the process against the Teutonic Order.
The previous politics of his predecessors was negligible, so when Jan assumed the government over his Duchy, he only had the town of Ziębice. For this reasons, he married by 19 March 1408 with Elizabeth (d. 22 February/27 December 1424), widow of the powerful Polish magnate Spytek II of Melsztyn and daughter of Emerik I Lacković, General Starost of Ruthenia, Ban of Dalmatia (Transylvanian Voivodship) and of Hungary. Thanks to this union, Jan obtain a huge dowry and the needed financial autonomy. The case was more strange by the fact that Elisabeth's first husband was one of the most closest advisers of King Władysław II Jogaila of Poland, the long-time enemy of Jan's sovereign, the Sigismund of Luxembourg, King of Hungary and Germany. Moreover, despite the hostile politics of King Sigismund, Elizabeth successfully continued with his many Polish contacts, even after his remarriage with the Duke of Ziębice. The union proved to be childless, so Jan was the last male representative of line Ziębice branch of the Piast dynasty.
By 1428 Silesia was in the middle of the Hussite Wars. Initially, seeing no chances of victory, the Duke Louis II of Brzeg entered into an arrangement with Jan, under which he was compelled to not interfere with the movements of enemy troops. However, and for unknown reasons, Jan broken the ceasefire, and with this he began his participation in the war.
Jan died on 27 August 1428 in the Battle of Stary Wielisław, in the Valley of Kłodzko, fighting against the Hussite leader Jan Kralovca. The cause of the disaster was a thoughtless attack of the Hussite troops, or earthwork built wagons from the battle. It's unknown where Jan was buried. On the alleged place of the Duke's death was built a Chapel during 1904-1905 designed by Ludwig Schneider.
After his death, and according to the treaty of 1343, the Duchy of Ziębice was anexed by the Kingdom of Bohemia.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates information from the revision as of 28 March 2009 of the equivalent article on the Polish Wikipedia.
- SILESIA
- Complete Genealogy of the House of Piast
- Chronological Dates in Stoyan
- Genealogy of the Dukes of Ziębice
| Preceded by Bolko II |
Duke of Ziębice with Henry II (until 1420) 1410–1428 |
Succeeded by Anexed to the Kingdom of Bohemia next holder Puta III of Častolovic |

