- Conrad I, Duke of Bohemia
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Conrad I of Brno (Czech: Konrád I. Brněnský) (died 6 September 1092) was the duke of Bohemia for eight months in 1092. He was the brother and successor of Vratislaus II (died 14 January 1092). He was the third son of Bretislaus I and Judith of Schweinfurt. He did not succeed as king because his brother had only been lifted to the royal dignity ad personam by the Emperor Henry IV and that title was therefore not hereditary.
Before he became duke of Bohemia, he had long ruled over Moravia, as junior sons typically did, as duke of Brno and Znojmo (since 1054).
By his marriage to Wilpirk of Tenling, he had two children:
- Oldřich (or Ulrich), prince of Brno from 1092 to 1097 and from 1100 to his death on 11 November 1115
- Luitopld, prince of Znojmo from 1092 to 1097 and from 1100 to his death on 15 March 1113
He was succeeded as duke by his nephew Bretislaus.
Preceded by
Vratislaus IIDuke of Bohemia
1092Succeeded by
Bretislaus IIMonarchs of Bohemia Přemyslid c.870–1306Bořivoj I · Spytihněv I · Vratislaus I · Wenceslaus I · Boleslaus I · Boleslaus II · Boleslaus III · Vladivoj · Boleslaus III · Boleslaus the Brave1 · Jaromír · Ulrich · Jaromír · Ulrich · Bretislaus I · Spytihněv II · Vratislaus II · Conrad I · Bretislaus II · Bořivoj II · Svatopluk · Vladislaus I · Bořivoj II · Vladislaus I · Sobeslaus I · Vladislaus II · Frederick · Sobeslaus II · Bedřich · Conrad II · Wenceslaus II · Ottokar I · Bretislaus III · Vladislaus III · Ottokar I 2 · Wenceslaus I · Ottokar II · Wenceslaus II · Wenceslaus IIINon-dynastic 1306–1310Henry the Carinthian · Rudolph I · Henry the CarinthianLuxembourg 1310–1437Habsburg 1437–1457Non-dynastic 1457–1471Jagiellon 1471–1526Vladislaus II · LouisHabsburg 1526–1780Ferdinand I · Maximilian · Rudolph II · Matthias II · Ferdinand II · Frederick · Ferdinand III · Ferdinand IV · Leopold I · Joseph I · Charles II · Charles Albert3 · Maria TheresaHabsburg-Lorraine 1780–19181 Also duke of Poland from the Piast dynasty. 2 Hereditary kings since 1198. 3 Antiking. This biographical article of a European noble is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.