Online Encyclopedia

OTTAKAR II

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 368 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OTTAKAR II  ., Or PREMYSL OTTAKAR H . (C . I230-1278),

king of Bohemia, was a son of King Wenceslaus I., and through his
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mother, Kunigunde, was related to the
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Hohenstaufen
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family, being a grandson of the German king, Philip, duke of Swabia . During his
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father's lifetime he ruled Moravia, but when in 1248 some discontented Bohemian nobles acknowledged him as their
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sovereign, trouble arose between him and his father, and for a short time Ottakar was imprisoned . However, in 1251 the young prince secured his election as duke of Austria, where he strengthened his position by marrying Margaret (d: 1267),
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sister of Duke Frederick II., the last of the
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Babenberg rulers of the duchy and widow of the German king, Henry VII . Some years later he repudiated this lady and married a Hungarian princess . Both before and after he became king of Bohemia in succession to his father in September 1253 Ottakar was involved in a dispute with Bela IV., king of Hungary, over the possession of Styria, which duchy had formerly been
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united with Austria . By an arrangement made in 1254 he surrendered
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part of it to Bela, but when the dispute was renewed he defeated the Hungarians in
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July 126o and secured the whole of Styria for himself, owing his formal investiture with Austria and Styria to the German king, Richard,
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earl of
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Cornwall . The Bohemian king also led two expeditions against the Prussians . In 1269 he inherited Carinthia and part of Cambia; and having made good his claim, contested by the Hungarians, on the field of
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battle, he was the most powerful prince in Germany when an election for the German
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throne took place in 1273 . But Ottakar was not the successful
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candidate . He refused to acknowledge his victorious
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rival, Rudolph of Habsburg, and urged the pope to adopt a similar attitude, while the new king claimed the
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Austrian duchies .

Matters reached a

climax in 1276 . Placing Ottakar under the
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ban of the
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empire, Rudolph besieged Vienna and compelled Ottakar in November 1276 to sign a treaty by which he gave up Austria and the neighbouring duchies, retaining for himself only Bohemia and Moravia . Two years later the Bohemian king tried to recover his lost lands; he found allies and collected a large army, but he was defeated by Rudolph and killed at Diirnkrut on the March on the 26th of August 1278 . Ottakar was a founder of towns and a friend of law and order, while he assisted trade and welcomed German immigrants .
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Clever, strong and handsome, he is a famous figure both in
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history and in legend, and is the subject of a tragedy by F . Grillparzer, Konig Ottokars Glitck and Ende . His son and successor was Wenceslaus II . See 0 . Lorenz, Geschichte Konig Ottokars, ii . (Vienna, 1866) ; A . Huber, Geschichte Oesterreichs,
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Band i, (
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Gotha, 1885); and F . Palacky, Geschichte von Bohmen, Band i .

(

Prague, 1844) .

End of Article: OTTAKAR II
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