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    • 16 June 1381

      • After working his whole life on reuniting Masovia and making it an independent state, Siemowit III died on 16 June 1381, and was buried at Plock Cathedral.
      en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Siemowit_III,_Duke_of_Masovia
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  2. The death of Siemowit and Casimir in 1442, both without descendants, allowed Ladislaus to reunite the inheritance of his father (all but Gostynin, town that remained under Siemowit V's widow's control).

    Ruler
    Ruler
    Born
    Reign
    1093 Ehingen Daughter of Henry, Count of ...
    28 October 1138 – 27 July 1144
    Duchy of Masovia (at Łęczyca)
    1122 Third son of Boleslaus III of Poland ...
    28 October 1138 – 5 January 1173
    Regency of Casimir II of Poland ...
    Regency of Casimir II of Poland ...
    Regency of Casimir II of Poland ...
    Regency of Casimir II of Poland ...
    1162 Son of Boleslaus IV of Poland and ...
    5 January 1173 – 1186
  3. Duchy of Masovia of Bolesław IV composed of Masovia and Eastern Kuyavia. Following the death of Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth in 1138, as specified by his testament, the Masovian province was governed by his second son Bolesław IV the Curly, who, after he had expelled his elder half-brother Władysław II, in 1146 became Duke of Poland.

    • District principality
    • Life
    • Marriage and Children
    • Konrad's Legacy
    • Sources
    • External Links

    Konrad was the youngest son of High Duke Casimir II the Just of Poland and Helen of Znojmo, daughter of the Přemyslid duke Conrad II of Znojmo (ruler of the Znojmo Appanage in southern Moravia, part of Duchy of Bohemia). His maternal grandmother was Maria of Serbia, apparently a daughter of the pre-Nemanjić župan Uroš I of Rascia. After his father'...

    Around 1208/1209 Konrad married Agafia of Rus, daughter of Prince Svyatoslav III Igorevich. They had ten children: 1. Bolesław I(c. 1210 – 17 April 1248), Duke of Masovia 2. Casimir I (c. 1210/13 – 14 December 1267), Duke of Kuyavia 3. Siemowit I (c. 1215 – 24 June 1262),succeeded eldest brother as Duke of Masovia. 4. Eudoxia (b. c. 1215–1225), mar...

    Konrad is considered by Poles to be responsible for Teutonic Knights' control of most of the Baltic coastline, undermining Polish authority in the area. King Casimir III of Poland had to accept the rule of the Order in Thorn and Kulm by the 1343 Treaty of Kalisz. After the Thirteen Years' War in the 1466 Second Peace of Thorn, the Polish King Casim...

    Bojtar, Endre (1999). Foreword to the Past: A Cultural History of the Baltic People. Central University Press.
    Boockmann, Hartmut (1992). Deutsche Geschichte im Osten Europas. Ostpreußen und Westpreußen(in German). Berlin.
    Bruce-Boswell, Alexander (1957). "Poland, 1050-1303". In Tanner, J.R.; Previte-Orton, C.W.; Brooke, Z.N. (eds.). The Cambridge Medieval History: Victory of the Papacy. Vol. 6. Cambridge at the Univ...
    Corwin, Edward Henry Lewinski (1917). The Political History of Poland. The Polish Book Importing Company.
    Catholic Encyclopedia Innocent III resolved (1207) to organize a new crusade...Instead of concentrating the forces of Christendom against the Mohammedans, the pope himself disbanded them by proclai...
  4. Duke of Masovia was a title borne by the sons and descendants of the Polish Duke Bolesław III Wrymouth. In accordance with the last will and testament of Bolesław, upon his death his lands were divided into four to five hereditary provinces distributed among his sons, and a royal province of Kraków reserved for the eldest, who was to be High Duke of all Poland.

  5. Jul 26, 2023 · Death: August 31, 1247 (59-60) Cracow,, Kraków, Kraków County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland. Place of Burial: Plock, Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland. Immediate Family: Son of Casimir II the Just, High Duke of Poland and High Duchess consort of Poland, Helena - princess of the Znojmo Appanage, Rostislavna Znojmo.

    • Kraków, Małopolskie
    • 1187
    • "Kunigaikštis Konradas I Mazovietis"
    • Kraków, Małopolskie, Poland
  6. His wife Cimburgis died in 1429 while undertaking a pilgrimage to Mariazell, and is buried in the church of the Cistercian abbey at Lilienfeld in Lower Austria. Hamann, Brigitte (Hg.): Die Habsburger. Ein biographisches Lexikon, Wien 1988.

  7. Alexander of Masovia died in Vienna in 1444, at the age of forty-four. He is buried in the Cathedral of St. Stephen. At the time of his death, he was still the titular Vescovo Principe of Trent.

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