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Swantibor I, previously referred to by historians as Swantibor III (c. 1351 – 21 June 1413) was a member of the House of Griffin, a Duke of Pomerania-Stettin and for a while governor of the Mittelmark.
This is a list of the duchies and dukes of Pomerania. Dukes of the Slavic Pomeranian tribes (All Pomerania) The lands of Pomerania were firstly ruled by local tribes, who settled in Pomerania around the 10th and 11th centuries. Non-dynastic.
RulerBornReignRuling Partc.1091 First son of Świętobor, Duke of ...1121 – 9 August 1135c.1095 Second son of Świętobor, Duke of ...1121 – 1156Regency of Racibor I, Duke of ...Regency of Racibor I, Duke of ...Regency of Racibor I, Duke of ...Regency of Racibor I, Duke of ...1127 First son of Warcislaus I and Ida of ...9 August 1135 – 18 March 1187"Swantibor III, Duke of Pomerania, or, according to a different way of counting, Swantibor I. (born: c. 1351 – died: 21 June 1413) was a member of the House of Griffins, a Duke of Pomerania-Stettin and for a while governor of the Mittelmark."
Swantibor I, [lower-alpha 1] previously referred to by historians as Swantibor III [lower-alpha 2] (c. 1351 – 21 June 1413) [1] was a member of the House of Griffin, a Duke of Pomerania-Stettin and for a while governor of the Mittelmark.
Jul 4, 2015 · At that time, two distinct families of rulers can be identified, the descendants of Wartislaw [I], who later became dukes of Pomerania (see Chapter 1.A), and the so-called “Swantiboriez/Swantiboren” family who descended from another Wartislaw, son of Swantibor, who were recorded as castellans of Szczecin and Gützkow in the early 13th ...
The Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, dispossesses Henry 'the Lion' Welf, duke of Bavaria and assumes the overlordship of Pomerania himself. This is lost in 1885 to a Danish invasion which makes them overlords of Pomerania.
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Feb 20, 2024 · After Bolesław III Krzywousty defeated Pomeranian dukes at the Battle of Nakło (whose forces, according to Gallus Anonymus numbered thirty thousand), [6] he gave Swietopelk Nakło, and other grods (Slavic settlements) on the river Noteć as a fief. [7]