Charles Frederick I, Duke of Münsterberg-Oels

Charles Frederick I, Duke of Münsterberg-Oels
Charles Frederick I of Münsterberg-Oels
Spouse(s) Anna Sophie of Saxe-Altenburg
Sophie Magdalene of Brzeg
Noble family House of Poděbrady
Father Charles II, Duke of Münsterberg-Oels
Mother Elisabeth Magdalena of Brzeg
Born 18 October 1593(1593-10-18)
Oleśnica
Died 31 May 1647(1647-05-31) (aged 53)
Oleśnica

Charles Frederick I of Münsterberg-Oels (also: Charles Frederick I of Poděbrady; German: Karl Friedrich I. von Oels und Münsterberg or Karl Friedrich I. von Podiebrad; Czech: Karel Bedřich z Minstrberka; 18 October 1593, Oleśnica – 31 May 1647, Oleśnica) was Duke of Oels from 1617 to 1647 and Duke of Bernstadt from 1639 to 1647. He also held the titles of Duke of Münsterberg[1] and Count of Glatz.

Contents

Life

Charles Frederick was a member of the Münsterberg branch of the Bohemian noble Poděbrady family. His parents were Duke Charles II of Münsterberg and Elisabeth Magdalena (1562–1630), daughter of Duke George II of Brieg.

After his father's death in 1617 Charles Frederick took over the government of the Duchy of Oels. At the same time, he inherited joinly with his older brother Henry Wenceslaus, the Moravian estates Šternberk and Jevišovice. After Henry Wenceslaus's death in 1639, Charles Frederick ruled these estates alone.

In 1619 Charles Frederick was at the head of an embassy that had been sent to Prague by ​​the Silesian Princes and Estates yo invite the newly elected King of Bohemia Frederick V to an inaugural visit to Wrocław. In February 1620, during Frederick V's journey to Wrocław, Charles Frederick and his brother Henry Wenceslaus welcomed the new king in their North Moravian town of Šternberk.[2]

In defense of the freedom of religion and the desire for political interference, Charles Frederick and the Dukes John Christian of Brieg and George Rudolf of Leignitz and the City Council of Wrocław founded on 9 August 1633 a league (German: Konjunktion) which stood under the protection of Saxony, Brandenburg and Sweden. This caused Charles Frederick and his allies to lose the favor of the Emperor. After the Peace of Prague of 1635, they had to therefore make amends.

After the death of his brother Henry Wenceslaus in 1639, Charles Frederick succeeded him as duke of Bernstadt. In 1642 he married second wife, Sophie Magdalene (1624–1660), daughter of Duke John Christian of Brieg.

Charles Frederick was the last male descendant from the Münsterberg line of the Poděbrady family in Oels. Through the marriage of his only daughter, Elisabeth Maria with Silvius Nimrod, Oels and the Bohemian estate of Šternberk came in the possession of the House of Württemberg.

References and sources

  • Ludwig Petry, Josef Joachim Menzel (eds.): Geschichte Schlesiens. vol. 2, ISBN 3-7995-6342-3, p. 62 ff
  • Hugo Weczerka: Handbuch der historischen Stätten: Schlesien, Stuttgart ,1977, ISBN 3-520-31601-3, p. LXIV, 19 and 369 as well as genealogical tables on p. 602-603
  • Dr. Colmar Grünhagen: Geschichte Schlesiens, vol. 2, Friedrich Andreas Perthes, Gotha, 1886, p. 67, 180
  • This page is a translation of its German equivalent.

External links

Footnotes

  1. ^ After Charles Christopher died childless in 1569, the Duchy of Münsterberg as a fief reverted to the Crown of Bohemia . Nevertheless, the member of the Poděbrady family were allowed to continue to use the title "Duke of Münsterberg"; see Dr. Colmar Grünhagen: Geschichte Schlesiens, vol. 2, Friedrich Andreas Perthes, Gotha, 1886, p. 67
  2. ^ Dr. Colmar Grünhagen: Geschichte Schlesiens, vol. 2, Friedrich Andreas Perthes, Gotha, 1886, p.180

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