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Wyświetlanie 1-11 z 11
Tytuł:
Jeszcze o zbrodni rogozińskiej i granicy między Polską a Brandenburgią na Noteci w XIII–XIV wieku
More on the Rogoźno Crime and the Border between Poland and Brandenburg on the River Noteć in the Thirteen and Fourteenth Centuries
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1997192.pdf
Data publikacji:
2020-12-15
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Gdański. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
Opis:
Janusz Bieniak’s study Zarębowie i Nałęcze a królobójstwo w Rogoźnie (The Zaręba and Nalęcz Families and the Regicide in Rogoźno – 2018), alongside important discoveries and interesting proposals of a prosopographic and genealogical nature, has as its main aim to discredit information in the sources concerning the participation (possibly even direct participation) of those families in the crime committed in 1296 in Rogoźno. The crime occurred through the agency of the Margraves of Brandenburg, of the older (Johannine) line of the House of Ascania/ Anhalt. This article takes issue with several aspects of Bieniak’s argument. Bieniak questions my earlier view of the probable recognition of the Nałęcz family of the suzerainty of the Margraves over their Greater Polish possessions situated to the north of the middle and lower stream of the River Noteć, that is on formerly Pomeranian territory (centred on Człopa), which could of course lay them open to the charge of treachery, since in Poland there was no consciousness or understanding of German claims (essentially rights) to the region of Pomerania. At the same time, in terms of German law, from 1231 Pomerania, including, of course, the territory of Nadnotecie still remaining in the thirteenth ‑century and – from a Polish perspective – of the former Pomeranian Zanotecie, remained within the gift of the German Empire within the fief of the Margraves of Brandenburg. Bieniak decisively rejects any reckoning in Poland in the thirteenth century with any kind of claim of the (in any case weakened) German state as a whole (Bieniak calls this the Empire), and even more of Brandenburg, the rulers of which as conquerors had no interest in the historical borders of Pomerania and did not even know them, but were driven only by brutal force and not by any legal titles. Of course, they ignored these, and the Nałęcz and Zaręba families did not see themselves as subordinate to anyone, just like everyone in Poland. Thus, they must be exonerated from participation in the crime of 1296. In this controversy, I wish to point out even more forcibly than previously (and, indeed, quite frequently) that the Nałęcz family, just like the Greater Poland princes (an example from 1253 is cited) and the knightly families settled in Pomerania (the Wedlow, Liebenow, Güntersberg, and Borkow families, 1296–1297, and the Święc family, 1307) knew the suzerain competences of the Margraves and recognized them – of course, under military pressure – over the castles and towns held by the Poles on the left bank of the Noteć (Santok–Drżeń–Wieleń– Czarnków–Ujście) along with their hinterlands, thus becoming Brandenburg and Polish subjects. In fact, the few sources do not permit such a maximum treatment of all the Brandenburg claims at the end of the thirteenth century, but that becomes obvious in subsequent decades of the fourteenth century, when it is by the intervention of the Margraves with support of the Nałęcz, Güntersberg, and Wedlow families that the territories and castles and towns of the eastern lands of Nadnotęcie are seized. That is why reference was made even to the rights raised by the Nałęcz family (of Ostroróg) to several villages in Puszcza Notecka near Drezdenko, most obviously because of those brought in the dowry of Małgorzata Nałęczówna of Szamotuły around 1330 to the German von der Osten lords in Drezdenko, when in 1408 they sold them along with their castle to the Teutonic Knights. On the margins of the article, I also offer a “gentle” defence of my position (also criticized by Bieniak) in the matter of the identification – in a contemporary entry in the annals of the Cistercians of Kołbacz – of Jakub “Kaszuby”, the principle perpetrator (and the only one known by name) of the regicide, with the German knight Jakub Güntersberg, who did, indeed, come from Kaszubia, since in 1296 he had left the service of the Dukes of Western Pomerania (from 1295, the Wołogoski dukedom), having up till then a fief in the lands near Stargard. In this case, “Kasube” was not an ethnic description, but only a geographical‑political one.
Źródło:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza; 2020, 24; 350-390
2544-2562
Pojawia się w:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Na marginesie nowego zarysu polityki książąt Barnima I i Bogusława IV
Parenthetically the new outline of the politics of dukes Barnim I and Boguslaw IV
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/1591054.pdf
Data publikacji:
2018
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Szczeciński. Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecińskiego
Źródło:
Przegląd Zachodniopomorski; 2018, 1; 237-240
0552-4245
2353-3021
Pojawia się w:
Przegląd Zachodniopomorski
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Wyjście z zaścianka, czyli o podróży Bogusława X do Niemiec, Włoch i Ziemi Świętej raz jeszcze (Suplement 3)
Leaving Your Hamlet, that is Once More on Bogusław X’s Travel to Germany, Italy and the Holy Land (Supplement 3)
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/694664.pdf
Data publikacji:
2016-10-07
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Gdański. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
Opis:
In 2004, on the occasion of Poland’s accession to the European Union in January of that year an idea emerged to recall a great European voyage of Duke Bogusław X the Great made in 1496– 1498. With this travel - first to the royal court in Germany, then a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, next, to the Apostolic See and again to the court of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and to the courts of German prince-electors - great as regards both its time (485 days) and geographical extent (it spanned the two continents: Europe and Asia, and the territory of eight modern states: Germany, Austria, Italy, Croatia, Albania, Greece, Cyprus, Lebanon and Israel), he overshadowed allthe previous ones. His travel was also great in terms of numerous contacts he established with important personages of his times and effects it brought about. The trip was described in a book A Great Journey of the Great Duke (Wielka podróż wielkiego księcia, Szczecin, 2004). It is possible to learn about this trip thanks to many contemporary sources that emerged in the course of the voyage in Pomerania, Germany and Italy. The time pressure I felt when writing the book - and the topic was new to me - had some negative impact on it. Soon after its publication in April, the book was followed by a separate supplement  (1). Then a supplement 2: Little Known Venetian Letter of Bogusław X to His Mecklenburg Brother-in-Law of 1497 (‘Mało znany wenecki list Bogusława X do meklemburskiego szwagra w  1497’, Przegląd Zachodniopomorski 2004, no. 4: 203–210). And now, a supplement 3 presents various additional materials gathered due to the increasing literature on the subject and discoveries of new sources which throw additional light on the circumstances of taking the trip and its course: the duke’s stay at the Apostolic See or the German royal court in Innsbruck. The supplement 3 includes, i.a., some sources on the efforts of the Hohenzollern diplomacy in April 1497 and March 1498 during two stays of the duke at the German royal court, seeking to counteract possible concessions of Emperor Maximilian I to Duke Bogusław that could limit or abolish both Maximilian’s feudal domination over the duke and a succession of the Brandenburg electors in the duchy of Pomerania after the introduction of Bogusław to the circle of German princes. An example of the interesting supplementary information is special attention paid to Duke Bolesław’s efforts to undertake a matter of peasant escapes from the region of Słupsk to the lands belonging to the city of Gdańsk when he was travelling through Italy in January 1498. In 1497, probably in Venice, a literary composition was published entitled Historia della battaglia data da Turchi con nove vele contra la gallea de Pelegrini de l’ano presente describing Bolesław’s deeds and heroic death of his friend Krzysztof of Świdwin rescuing him. The print was recently discovered in the Biblioteca Trivulziana in Milan and its edition in Polish is being prepared. “Together with German, Hungarian, Polish and Bohemian students - we read in the account of the trip - the president of the university met him [Duke Bogusław] near Bologna”, and welcomed him with an excellent oration in Latin; the president was Johannes de Kitscher, who was the probable author of the abovementioned panegyric, persuaded by the duke to come to work to his court in Szczecin. The supplement ends with a praise of the Great Journey and of Duke Bolesław as Knight of the Holy Sepulcher.
Źródło:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza; 2016, 20; 147-170
2544-2562
Pojawia się w:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Recz nad Iną czy Raciąż koło Tucholi, czyli jeszcze raz o miejscu uwięzienia księcia wschodniopomorskiego Mściwoja II (1269 r.)
Recz nad Iną or Raciąż koło Tucholi, or Another Look at the Place of Imprisonment of the Eastern Pomeranian Duke Mściwoj II (1269)
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2106611.pdf
Data publikacji:
2022-09-16
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Gdański. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
Tematy:
place (Recz nad Iną) and date of the imprisonment (1268–1268) and liberation (before 1 July 1269) of the West Pomeranian duke Mściwoj II
Opis:
After the death of Duke Świętopełk (1266), before civil war broke out between his sons Mściwoj II in Świecie and Warcisław II in Gdańsk–Słupsk, which ended with the banishment of the younger of the two by Mściwoj with Brandenburg help (1269–1271), Mściwoj was imprisoned in a castle called Redzk by some of his powerful subjects(“barons”), at the inspiration or even with the participation of Warcisław. However, later, a more powerful group of knights (milites) freed him and concluded a “covenant” with him (entering into his service?), which led to the expulsion of Warcisław II from Gdańsk. This is recorded in narrative sources from Oliwa and Poznań. A place called Redzk, with a castle, cannot be found in Gdańsk Pomerania. However, without exception, scholars have identified Redzk with castellan Raciąż, a village near Tuchola in the southern part of Gdańsk Pomerania and, thus, within Mściwoj’s domains. In sources from1178 to 1300, this spot appears as: Recinsz, Ratzens, Racins, and Racensze. All these are very different from Redzk. Here it is also worth recalling that the castle in Raciąż was destroyed in 1256 by knights from Great Poland, and, according to documents and archaeological sources, it was not rebuilt before 1270. These and other considerations prompt the author to transfer the site of Mściwoj’s brief incarceration far westward to Recz nad Iną, to a place with a castle that around that time (1268, 1269?) had been taken from the Knights of St John by Barnim I and his knights from Stargard. These knight included five Wedel brothers, who from this time on remained in the service of Mściowoj and took part in the margraves’ expansion into Gdańsk Pomerania (1271–1273). The location of the Duke’s incarceration is further suggested by the homage he made the margraves of Brandenburg in the nearby Choszczno (then Arnswalde) on 1 April 1269. Those who stubbornly identify Redzk with the at that time non‑existent castle in Raciąż have not asked themselves why Mściwoj decided on such a politically far‑reaching step, that is, to pay feudal tribute to the House of Ascania/Anhalt and made to that end the long journey with his immediate entourage some 200 kilometers westward from his duchy. Logic suggests linking this step with his liberation from imprisonment in Recz. The chroniclers evidently were thinking of that group of German knights who in occupied Recz chose the pro‑Brandenburg option, when in 1269 the margraves intervened in the continuing conflict between Barnim I, his knights, and the Cistercians of Kołbacz, on one hand, and the Korytów and Stargard Knights of St John, on the other. They drove off the Cistercians and their lay brothers from their centre in “Sowno” (in Sivin by Lake Sowno), which should, of course, be identified as Arnswalde itself (Choszczno), where on 1 April their very important encounter with Mściwoj II took place. Arnswalde had hitherto lain in the duchy of Barnim I of Szczecin. Because a result of the turmoil was Ludwik von Wedel and his brothers’ transferring their services to the margraves (which is apparent in the sources at the latest after 1272), while earlier the had been actively involved in grabbing the possession of the Knights of St John, taking over, among other possessions, Recz and their castle, the author points out the possibility of Mściwoj’s liberation at the hands of those very knights, so that after the quick taking of Recz by the margraves, the secular duke could travel to Choszczno on 1 April 1269, a place in which the outrage perpetrated by Barnim I and his subordinates on the Korytów Knights of St John was still deeply felt. Further conclusive evidence that knights from West Pomerania were involved in Mściwoj’s imprisonment, and at least in his liberation, is offered by an undated letter of Mściwoj II – dated by scholars to the years 1269–1271, although usually to the beginning of 1271 – in which on the advice of “his true knight, Pan Ludwik,” he seeks the help of the margraves of the senior line, offering in exchange the town and the fortress of Gdańsk and Gdańsk lands! The bringer of the letter and intermediary between Mściwoj and the margraves was his trusted translator dominus Henryk, probably Ludwik’s brother. The Ludwik mentioned in the letter has been identified with Ludwik von Wedel, who was involved in seizing the possessions of the Knights of St John. Indeed, the family embarked on a rapid career. Already in the years 1271–1272, Ludwik I and his brothers took part in the expedition of the Margrave Konrad against Gdańsk and Gdańsk Pomerania; later Ludwik remained in the Margrave’s entourage, and on 17 August 1272, he was present, along with his brother Henryk, among the knights of the Margrave in distant Lübeck in connection with preparations for a further incursion into the Gdańsk lands. It is evident that earlier Ludwik participated in freeing Mściwoj in Recz and that is why he could remain for some time in his entourage, playing a key role in his choosing the Brandenburg option. His description in the letter as miles and dominus clearly indicates an outstanding figure and precludes looking for someone unknown from the Duke’s German entourage. At the same time, an approximate date for Mściwoj’s imprisonment has been adopted (after 9 October 1268, when he was in Gdańsk at the purging of his brother), and, indeed, for his liberation by German knights, which has been set after the period immediately following 1 April 1269 (when the Duke paid homage to the margraves, perhaps under duress).
Źródło:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza; 2022, 25; 211-240
2544-2562
Pojawia się w:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Pomorskie i polskie wątki w działalności i twórczości Johannesa de Kitzschera (ok. 1460/65–1521)
Pomeranian and Polish Aspects of the Activity and Work of Johannes de Kitzscher (ca. 1460/65–1521)
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/694641.pdf
Data publikacji:
2017-06-28
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Gdański. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
Opis:
The subject of the author’s considerations are the Pomeranian and Polish aspects of the biography and activity of the Saxon humanist, doctor of laws, and orator Johannes von Kitscher (ca. 1460/65–1521). When Johannes von Kitscher was the rector of the university in Bologna (1497), the Pomeranian Duke Bogislaw X, who was traveling through Italy, acquired his services and engaged him to work on his court as a political councillor and diplomat. Performing this function, as well as that of a provost of a collegiate church in Kołobrzeg, he wrote the Tragicomedy, published in 1501 in Leipzig – once renowned dramatic piece based upon the Duke Bogislaw’s journey to the Holy Land, and in particular the naval battle fought with the Turks on August 30, 1497, off the Peloponnesian coast; a mediocre, childish work, as it was dedicated to the Duke’s seven‑year‑old son, Georg. He also delivered a eulogy during the funeral of the Duke’s wife, Anna Jagiellon (1503). As an advocate of a strong‑arm regime, he compromised himself as the Duke’s councillor during his conflict with the city of Straslund and left Pomerania in 1504. Years later, now in the service of the Hohenzollerns, he delivered a speech before the Polish sejm (1512), enclosed to the paper.
Źródło:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza; 2017, 21; 150-177
2544-2562
Pojawia się w:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Mściwoj II jako lennik margrabiów brandenburskich (w latach 1269–1273)
Mestwin II as a vassal of Brandenburg margraves (in the years 1269–1273)
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/694719.pdf
Data publikacji:
2019-12-17
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Gdański. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego
Opis:
In the paper, the author enters into a comprehensive polemic with the assertions of Błażej Śliwiński contained in his monograph on the Duke of Gdańsk Mestwin II regarding his relations with Brandenburg margraves. Once again he is attempting to substantiate his view that the feudal relation of Mestwin II to the margraves had earlier, Carolingian roots. Other detailed issues related to the policy of the Gdańsk duke regarding Brandenburg are also discussed in the paper.
Źródło:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza; 2019, 23; 216-244
2544-2562
Pojawia się w:
Studia z Dziejów Średniowiecza
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
Tytuł:
Wielki dzień Skalina (7 IV 1269), początki Choszczna i pomorskich v. Kleistów. W tle konflikt księcia Barnima I, jego rycerstwa z ziemi stargardzkiej i cystersów kołbackich z joannitami oraz interwencja margrabiów brandenburskich w zlewni lewobrzeżnej Iny
Skalin’s great day (7th April 1269), origins of Choszczno and the Pomerania’s von Kleists. In the background conflict of Duke Barnim I, his knights from the Stargard Land and the Cistercians from Kołbacz with the Joannites, and intervention of the Brandenburg margraves in the left-bank drainage basin of river Ina
Autorzy:
Rymar, Edward
Powiązania:
https://bibliotekanauki.pl/articles/2034530.pdf
Data publikacji:
2021
Wydawca:
Uniwersytet Szczeciński. Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecińskiego
Tematy:
Skalin
1269 Choszczno Reunion
origins of Choszczno
knightly families von Kleist and von Blankenburg
zjazd w Choszcznie 1269
początki Choszczna
rody rycerskie von Kleist i von Blankenburg
Opis:
Wiele się działo w roku 1269, zwłaszcza w jego pierwszej połowie, w księstwach na Pomorzu, tym zwanym dziś Zachodnim, a także w jego otoczeniu (na Pomorzu Nadwiślańskim, w Brandenburgii, Meklemburgii i innych podmiotach politycznych północnych Niemiec), nie bez znaczenia dla tej części Pomorza, w której i Skalin, wieś na południowy wschód od Stargardu nad Iną się znajduje. Nadal mamy trudności w interpretacji tamtych licznych zdarzeń. Zmierzając do objaśnienia przedmiotu i przyczyn czynności rycerza Konrada „Clesta” w Skalinie 7 kwietnia 1269 roku i okoliczności, które ją poprzedzały, przypomniano i zinterpretowano m.in.: relacje księcia Barnima I z margrabiami brandenburskimi w styczniu tego roku, konflikt Barnima i jego rycerstwa z ziemi stargardzkiej oraz cystersów z Kołbacza z joannitami z ziemi stargardzkiej i choszczeńskiej (korytowskimi), interwencję margrabiów wypędzających w 1269 roku tychże cystersów z ich dworu „w Sownie” – położonego przy jeziorze „Sowno” (Zouina, Sovin), spotkanie margrabiów brandenburskich 1 kwietnia 1269 roku w Arnswalde/Choszcznie z Mściwojem II księciem świeckim (z ośrodkiem w Świeciu nad Wisłą) na Pomorzu Nadwiślańskim, który złożył im hołd lenny. W toku rozważań zajęto się też m.in. początkami Choszczna (po zidentyfikowaniu go z owym „dworem w Sownie”) i początkami pomorskich i brandenburskich rodów rycerskich von Kleist i von Blankenburg.
Much was going on in 1269, particularly in its first half, in the duchies in Pomerania, both that called today “West”, and its surroundings (in Vistula Pomerania, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg, and the remaining political entities of Northern Germany), not without significance for this part of Pomerania where Skalin, a village south-east from Stargard on Ina, is located. We still encounter difficulties to interpret those numerous events. In order to remind and explain the subject and reasons of knight Konrad “Clest’s” activities in Skalin on 7 April 1269 and the circumstances that preceded them, the author reminded and interpreted among others: relationships of Duke Barnim I with the Brandenburg margraves in January that year, conflict of Barnim I, his knights from the Stargard Land, and the Cistercians from Kołbacz with the Joannites from the Stargard Land and the Choszczno Land (village Korytowo), intervention of the margraves expelling those Cistercians in 1269 from their manor “in Sowno”, i.e. located by the lake “Sowno” (Zouina, Sovin), meeting of the Brandenburg margraves on 1st April 1269 in Arbswalde/Choszczno with Mestwin II, Duke of Świecie (with the centre in Świecie on Vistula in Vistula Pomerania), who paid homage to them. Discussed were also the origins of Choszczno (after identifying it with the above mentioned “manor in Sowno”), and the origins of the knightly families von Kleist and von Blankenburg.
Źródło:
Przegląd Zachodniopomorski; 2021, 36; 31-67
0552-4245
2353-3021
Pojawia się w:
Przegląd Zachodniopomorski
Dostawca treści:
Biblioteka Nauki
Artykuł
    Wyświetlanie 1-11 z 11

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