Duchy of Głogów

Duchy of Głogów
Duchy of Głogów
Księstwo Głogowskie (pl)
Herzogtum Glogau (de)
Hlohovské knížectví (cs)
Silesian duchy
Duchy of Legnica
1251 – 1506 Kingdom of Bohemia

Coat of arms

Silesia 1249-1273: Creation of the Duchy of Głogów (green) for Konrad I from the territory of Bolesław II the Bald of Legnica (violet)
Capital Głogów
Government Principality
Historical era Middle Ages
 - Konrad Spindleshanks
    Duke of Głogow
1177
 - Partitioned from
    Legnica
1251
 - Split off Żagań 1273
 - Split off Olésnica 1312
 - Vassalized by Bohemia 1331
 - Lost Krosno to
    Brandenburg
1482
 - Fell to Bohemia 1506
 - Annexed by Prussia 1742

The Duchy of Głogów (Polish: Księstwo głogowskie, Czech: Hlohovské knížectví) or Duchy of Glogau (German: Herzogtum Glogau) was one of the duchies of Silesia ruled by the Silesian Piasts. Its capital was Głogów in Lower Silesia.

Głogów Castle

In 1177, under the rule of Konrad Spindleshanks, the youngest son of High Duke Władysław II the Exile of Poland, the town of Głogów had already become the capital of a duchy in its own right. However when Konrad died between 1180 and 1190, his duchy was again inherited by his elder brother Bolesław I the Tall, Duke of Wrocław. After the death of Bolesław's grandson Duke Henry II the Pious at the 1241 Battle of Legnica his sons in 1248 divided the Lower Silesian Duchy of Wrocław among themselves. Konrad I, a child when his father died, claimed his rights too and in 1251 and received the northern Głogów territory from his elder brother Bolesław II the Bald, then Duke of Legnica.

Under the rule of Konrad's son Henry III the principality became smaller, as fragmentation and division continued, and other, smaller duchies were split from it like Ścinawa and Żagań in 1273 as well as the duchies of Oleśnica and Wołów in 1312. After Henry's son Przemko II had died without heirs in 1331, King John the Blind was able to seize the duchy as a fiefdom of the Kingdom of Bohemia and granted it to the Piast Duke Henry I of Jawor six years later. As Henry I left no issue, King John's son, Charles IV incorporated one half of Głogów into Bohemia, granting the remaining half to Duke Henry V of Iron (Żelazny) of Żagań in 1349.

When in 1476 the Głogów line of the Piast dynasty became extinct with the death of Henry XI, fights over his succession broke out between his cousin Duke Jan II the Mad of Żagań and Elector Albert III Achilles of Brandenburg, the father of Henry's widow Barbara of Hohenzollern. In consequence the duchy's northern part of Krosno Odrzańskie was incorporated by the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1482. The truce however eroded Duke Jan II, who continued his attacks on the neighbouring territories and in 1480 even invaded the royal Bohemian half of the Głogów duchy. This action finally brought the Bohemian antiking Matthias Corvinus to the scene, who in 1488 conquered Głogów, deposed Jan II and made his son János the duke.

Upon Matthias' death in 1490 his territories were inherited by King Vladislas II Jagiellon of Bohemia, who granted the fief of Głogów to his brothers John I Albert in 1491 and Sigismund I the Old in 1499, both future kings of Poland. In 1506 the duchy finally was incorporated into the Lands of the Bohemian Crown, which, after Vladislas' son Louis II Jagiellon had died in 1526, were inherited by Archduke Ferdinand I of Austria and became part of the Habsburg Monarchy.

Głogów remained part of the Crown of Bohemia within the province of Silesia until the end of the First Silesian War in 1742 when it, like the majority of Silesia, became part of Frederick the Great's Kingdom of Prussia. The territories of Prussian Silesia east of the Oder-Neisse line fell to the Republic of Poland after World War II.

Dukes of Głogów

  • 1177 - 1180: Konrad Spindleshanks

Again part of the Duchy of Wrocław, from 1248 on part of Legnica

Duchy vassalized by the Crown of Bohemia

  • 1337-1346 Henry I of Jawor

Annexed by Bohemia, one half to Żagań in 1349, ruled by:

  • 1349-1369: Henry V of Iron, Duke of Głogów and Żagań
  • 1369-1393: Henry VI the Older, son, jointly with his brothers
    • 1369-1395: Henry VII Rumpold
    • 1369-1378: Henry VIII the Sparrow
  • 1395-1397: Henry VIII the Sparrow (alone)
  • 1397-1401: Rupert I of Legnica, regent for
  • 1397-1412: Jan I of Żagań, son of Henry VIII, jointly with his brothers
    • 1397-1467: Henry IX the Older
    • 1397-1417: Wenceslaus of Krosno
    • 1397-1423: Henry X Rumpold
  • 1467-1476: Henry XI, son of Henry IX

Line extinct, whole duchy directly under the Crown of Bohemia

  • 1476-1488 Jan II the Mad of Żagań

1482: Northern part sold to Brandenburg

See also


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