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  1. Jul 22, 2022 · circa 1180. Birthplace: Bergen auf Rügen, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. Death: June 07, 1249 (64-73) Immediate Family: Son of Jaromar I Prince from Rugen and Hildegard Knudsdatter af Danmark, Princess. Husband of Margaretha Sverkerdatter, av Sverige. Father of Euphemia von Rügen and Fürst Jaromar II von Rügen.

  2. Euphemia of Rügen (c. 1280 – May 1312) was Queen of Norway as the spouse of Håkon V of Norway. She is famous in history as a literary figure, and known for commissioning translations of romances. Biography. Euphemia was most likely the daughter of Vitslav II, Prince of Rügen (1240–1302).

  3. When Jaromar II Prince of Rügen was born in 1218, in Bergen auf Rügen, Rügen, Pomerania, Prussia, Germany, his father, Vitslav I Prince of Rügen, was 41 and his mother, Margareta Sverkersdotter, was 26. He had at least 2 sons and 1 daughter with Euphemia of Pomerania. He died on 20 August 1260, in Scandinavia, Europe, at the age of 42.

  4. Vitslav was probably born between 1240 and 1245 as the son of Prince Jaromar II of Rügen and Euphemia, a daughter of Duke Swantopolk II of East Pomerania. After his father, who had taken part on the side of the church in battles in Denmark between the Danish royal house and the Archbishopric of Lund. When his father was stabbed to death by a ...

  5. When Wizlaw II. Fürst von Rügen was born in 1212, in Bergen auf Rügen, Rügen, Pomerania, Prussia, Germany, his father, Wizlaw I Fürst von Rügen, was 35 and his mother, Margareta Sverkersdotter, was 20. He had at least 4 sons and 4 daughters with Unknown. He died on 29 December 1302, in Oslo, Norway, at the age of 90, and was buried in ...

  6. Life [edit]. He was first mentioned on 8 November 1231. From 28 September 1246, he was co-ruler with his father, Prince Vitslav I.During the early years of his reign, he tried to maintain peaceful relations with his neighbours, the Dukes of Pomerania, especially with the princes of Gützkow, who were vassals of Barnim I.

  7. Vitslav III (1265/8–1325), variously called Vislav, Vizlav, Wislaw, Wizlaw and Witslaw in English sources, was the last Slavic ruler of the Danish Principality of Rugia. He is often identified with the author of the Minnesinger Vitslav of the Jenaer Liederhandschrift. Rügen would have fallen to Vitslav's nephew, Wartislaw IV, but Wartislav died in 1326, causing the Rügen war of succession ...

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