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BOLESLAUS I

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 159 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BOLESLAUS I  ., called " The

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Great," king of Poland (d . 1025), was the son of Mieszko, first Christian prince of Poland, and the Bohemian princess Dobrawa, or Bona, whose
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chaplain, Jordan, converted the court from paganism to Catholicism . He succeeded his
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father in 992 . A born
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warrior, he speedily raised the little struggling
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Polish principality on the Vistula to the rank of a great power . In 996 he gained a seaboard by seizing Pomerania, and subsequently took
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advantage of the troubles in Bohemia to occupy Cracow, previously a Czech city . Like his contemporaries, Stephen of Hungary and Canute of Denmark, Boleslaus recognized from the first the essential superiority of
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Christianity over every other form of religion, and he deserves with them the name of " Great " because he deliberately associated himself with the new faith . Thus despite an inordinate love of adventure, which makes him appear rather a wandering chieftain than an established ruler, he was essentially a man of insight and progress . He showed great sagacity in receiving the fugitive Adalbert, bishop of Prague, and when the saint suffered martyrdom at the hands of the pagan Slays (
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April 23, 997), Boleslaus
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purchased his relics and solemnly laid them in the church of Gnesen, founded by his father, which now became the metropolitan see of Poland . It was at Gnesen that Boleslaus in the
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year loon entertained
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Otto III. so magnificently that the emperor, declaring such a man too worthy to be merely princess, conferred upon him the royal
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crown, though twenty-five years later, in the last year of his
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life, Boleslaus thought it necessary to crown himself king a second time . On the
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death of Otto, Boleslaus invaded Germany, penetrated to the Elbe, occupying
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Stralsund and
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Meissen on his way, and extended his dominions to the
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Elster and the
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Saale . He also occupied Bohemia, till driven out by the emperor Henry IV. in 1004 . The German war was terminated in Io18 by the peace of Bautzen, greatly to the advantage of BolesIaus, who retained Lusatia .

He then turned his arms against Jaroslav,

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grand duke of Kiev, whom he routed on the banks of the
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Bug, then the boundary between Russia and Poland . For ten months Boleslaus remained at Kiev, whence he addressed triumphant letters to the emperors of the East and West . At his death in 1025 he
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left Poland one of the mightiest states.of
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Europe, extending from the Bug to the Elbe, and from the Baltic to the Danube, and possessing besides the overlordship of Russia . But his greatest achievement was the establishment in Poland of a native church, the first step towards
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political independence . See J . N . Pawlowski, St Adalbert (Danzig, 1860) ; Chronica Nestoris (Vienna, 1860) ; Heinrich R. von Zeissberg, Die Kriege Kaiser Heinrichs II. mit Herzog Boleslaw I . (Vienna, 1368) .

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