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The title of this
article contains the following characters: ś & ę. Where they are
unavailable or not desired, the name may be represented as Duchy of Oswiecim.
Księstwo
Oświęcimskie (pl) |
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Coat of arms of
the Austrian Dukes of Auschwitz, 1890 |
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Capital |
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Government |
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Historical era |
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- Partitioned from |
1315 |
- Vassalized by |
1327 |
- Split off Zator |
1445 |
- Sold to Poland |
1457 |
- Incorporated into |
1564 |
- Seized by Habsburg |
1772 |
The Duchy of Oświęcim (Polish: Księstwo
Oświęcimskie), or the Duchy of Auschwitz (German: Herzogtum
Auschwitz), was one of many Duchies of Silesia, formed in the aftermath of the fragmentation
of Poland.
It was established about 1315 on the Lesser Polish lands east of the Biała river held by the Silesian branch of the Polish royal Piast dynasty.
Briefly semi-autonomus, with its capital in Oświęcim,
it was finally sold to the Kingdom of
Poland in 1457. Annexed by theHabsburg Empire in 1772, the remaining ducal title ceased to exist in 1918 with the
lands being reincorporated into the Second Polish
Republic.
Contents
[hide] o
2.1 Rulers claiming the ducal title
after partition of Poland |
The duchy was created in
In 1445 the duchies of Zator and Toszek were created from some the lands of the duchy.[1] Though the Duchy of Oświęcim had fallen under the Bohemian
vassalage, it was re-united with
At the General sejm of 1564, King Sigismund II Augustus issued privileges of incorporation recognizing both Duchies of
Oświęcim and Zator as part of the Polish Crown into the Silesian County of the Kraków Voivodeship, although the
Polish kings retained both ducal titles.
After the First
Partition of Poland in 1772, the lands of the former
duchies of Oświęcim and Zator were affiliated to the Habsburg Kingdom of
Galicia and Lodomeria, an Austrian crown land from 1804, and joined the German Confederation in 1818. By the 1919 Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye they were attached to the Polish Kraków
Voivodeship.
The Dukes of Oświęcim
belonged to the Silesian branch of the Piast dynasty (see also Dukes of Silesia).
1314/5-1321/4 |
Władysław I (son of Mieszko I
of Cieszyn, from 1290 co-regent, due to division
of |
1321/4-1372 |
Jan I the Scholastic (son of
Władysław I) |
1321/4-1325 |
Eufrozyna Mazowiecka (wife of
Władysław I, mother of Jan I, regent, d. 1329) |
1372-1375/6 |
Jan II (son Jan I) |
1375/6-1405 |
Jan III (son of Jan II,
died childless) |
1405–1406 |
Przemysław (also
known as Przemysław the Younger (Młodszy), son of Przemysław I Noszak (whose uncle was Mieszko cieszyński), from 1404
prince of half ofŚcinawa and Głogów,
from 1405 also in Toszek) |
1410-1433/4 |
Casimir I (son of
Przemysł Młodszy, due to division in 1414 of |
1433/4-1484 |
Przemysław
of Toszek (son
of Casimir I, also prince of Toszek due to its division in 1445) |
1433/4-1456 |
Jan IV
(Janusz) (brother
of Przemysław Toszecki and son of Kazimierz I, also prince of Toszek,
from 1445 due to a division of Oświęcim, 1465-1482 Gliwice, abdicated
(Oświęcim transferred to Crown of Poland), d. 1496) |
In the aftermath of the First Partition
of Poland until 1918, the Habsburg Holy Roman Emperors, from 1804 Emperors of Austria held the title of a Duke
of Auschwitz (German: Herzog
zu Auschwitz) which constituted part of their official grand title.
Emperor |
Acceded |
Deceded |
1772 |
20
February 1790 |
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20
February 1790 |
1 March
1792 |
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1 March
1792 |
2 March
1835 |
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2 March
1835 |
2 December
1848 |
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2 December
1848 |
21
November 1916 |
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21
November 1916 |
11
November 1918 |
1.
^ The History of the City of Oświęcim www.auschwitz.org.pl (based on "Auschwitz 1940-1945. Central Issues in the History of the
Camp", published by the
Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Poland)
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Categories: Former
principalities | Former
countries in Europe | States and territories established in 1315 | States and territories disestablished in 1564 | Duchies of
Silesia | Historical regions in Poland | Former duchies of the Kingdom of Bohemia
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