Vladislaus III of Bohemia
Vladislaus III Henry (
Czech:
Vladislav Jindřich) (died
August 12,
1222) was the youngest son of
Vladislaus II and younger brother of
Ottkar I. On
June 22,
1197, he was elected
Duke of Bohemia. Faced with an uprising in favour of Ottokar, Vladislaus abdicated a few months later on
December 6. Ottokar then took the Bohemian throne without imperial approval and compensated Vladislaus with the near-autonomous
margravate of
Moravia. By his repudiation of the throne, Vladislaus helped to bring an end to the destructive dynastic wars of the
Přemyslids, which had lasted for over twenty five years from the death of his father. He was the 25th and last duke of Bohemia.
Before his brief dukeship, Vladislaus was Duke of
Brno and
Znojmo from
1191 to
1194. He supported his older brother Ottokar when he seized the duchy in
1192. Ottokar made him margrave of Moravia then, but the two never paid the demanded sum to the
Holy Roman Emperor and so were deposed in June
1193 by a decision of the diet of
Worms, which appointed
Bretislaus, Bishop of Prague, duke.
After the death of the
Emperor Henry VI and Bretislaus in 1197, Vladislaus was crowned duke with his brother in attendance. Vladislaus had the eyes of the claimant
Spytihnev III of Brno put out. He also filled the bishopric of Prague with his own
confessor, Milico Daniel II, who held the see until
1214 and never received imperial nomination. Ottokar and Vladislaus then very nearly came to blows, but, their armies encamped facing each other, the two met and negotiated a solution whereby Ottokar became duke and Vladislaus margrave of Moravia. Vladislaus held Moravia until his death twenty five years thence.