Bolesà Âaw IV the Curly (; 1122 â 5 January 1173), a member of the Piast dynasty, was Duke of Masovia from 1138 and High Duke of Poland from 1146 until his death in 1173.
Bolesà Âaw was the third son of Duke Bolesà Âaw III Wrymouth of Poland by his second wife Salomea of Berg. The death of his older brothers, Leszek and Casimir, before 1131 and in October 1131, respectively, left him as the eldest son of their parents. Bolesà Âaw was 13 years old at the time of his father's death (1138) and of the legal age to take on the government of the lands he inherited according to his father's testament, the newly created Duchy of Masovia (composed of Masovia and eastern Kuyavia).
In the first years of his government, young Bolesà Âaw remained under the strong influence of his mother and Voivode Wszebor, who feared the ambition of his elder half-brother High Duke Wà Âadysà Âaw II. Wà Âadysà Âaw II tried to restore the unity of the country and deposed the junior dukes.
Trouble began openly in 1141, when Dowager Duchess Salomea â without the consent of High Duke Wà Âadysà Âaw II â organized a meeting with her sons at her residence in à ÂÃÂczyca. Here was decided the betrothal of her youngest daughter, Agnes, to Mstislav II of Kiev, in order to gain allies in a possible conflict. She also set up the division of the à ÂÃÂczyca lands, her dower, between her sons upon her death. The junior dukes in this first struggle were definitely defeated, because Grand Prince Vsevolod II of Kiev decided to make an alliance with Wà Âadysà Âaw II, reinforced by the marriage of Vsevolod's daughter Zvenislava with the high duke's eldest son, Bolesà Âaw the Tall. An additional humiliation for Bolesà Âaw IV and his brothers was that they were sent by the high duke on an expedition to the Kievan Rus' as ambassadors during 1142âÂÂ1143.
The "peace" lasted only two years until 1144 when, after Salomea's death and according to Bolesà Âaw III's Testament, the à ÂÃÂczyca province reverted to the Seniorate Province of High Duke Wà Âadysà Âaw II. The idea to reserve the lands for his younger brothers Henry and Casimir II was not popular with Wladyslaw, who thought that the land was only temporarily separated from his Dzielnica senioralna and now in its entirety should be returned. The outbreak of civil war was therefore only a matter of time.
The war erupted with full force in 1145, and it seemed that the junior dukes were defeated and the high duke finally achieved the unification of the country. At first the combined forces of Bolesà Âaw IV and his brothers prevented the disaster and demanded a hasty reorganization of the forces of Wà Âadysà Âaw at the Battle on the PilicàRiver. The major significance of this battle was to the former voivode Wszebor, whose military experience far exceeded the ability of Wà Âadysà Âaw's commanders. Soon, however, the situation was totally reversed as a result of the Kievan troops who entered in the country as Wà Âadysà Âaw's allies. Bolesà Âaw then had to agree to step down and renounce any pretension over the lands belonging to his mother.
The concessions of the junior dukes ultimately didn't resolve the problem. Moreover, Wà Âadysà Âaw's confidence in his forces had him embark on a final solution, the removal of his half-brothers from their lands. Suddenly, the junior dukes could rely on the support of the high duke's all-powerful voivode Piotr Wà Âostowic, for whom Wà Âadysà Âaw's plans were too radical and threatened to weaken his position. While Wà Âadysà Âaw opted for a quick response against him (the voivode was blinded and muted), forcing Wà Âostowic to go to Kiev, the high duke's final decision on his confrontation with the voivode considerably weakened his position. What's more, Wà Âostowic convinced the Kievans to break his alliance with Wà Âadysà Âaw.
At the beginning of 1146 the rebellions against Wà Âadysà Âaw's government rose mighty, sparked by the fate of Piotr Wà Âostowic. Nevertheless, the final victory of Wà Âadysà Âaw seemed likely, especially after the conquest of Masovia (forcing Bolesà Âaw to escape) and the siege of Poznaà  in Greater Poland in the spring of 1146. However, thanks to the rebellion in Wà Âadysà Âaw's own lands, and the excommunication imposed to him by the Archbishop of Gniezno, the high duke suffered an unexpected defeat. Wà Âadysà Âaw and his family had to flee across the border with the Holy Roman Empire, at first to Bohemia and later to Germany, accommodated by King Conrad III.
The junior dukes reassigned the Polish provinces between them. The Duchy of Silesia and the Seniorate Province at Kraków were taken by Bolesà Âaw, who also received the title of high duke, the western Duchy of Greater Poland was retained by his brother Mieszko III, and Henry finally received his long-promised land of Sandomierz. Casimir II, the youngest brother, again remained without lands.
Thanks to the intrigues of his wife, Agnes of Babenberg, a half-sister of King Conrad III, Wà Âadysà Âaw II succeeded in convincing his brother-in-law to make a military expedition to Poland. The hastily organized expedition however clashed with the reluctance of the former subjects of the deposed high duke, and was finally defeated already on the Polish border near the Oder river in August 1146.
In subsequent years, Bolesà Âaw IV along with his younger brothers bellows sought to maintain good relations with the royal House of Hohenstaufen, Wà Âadysà Âaw's allies. To this end, in 1148 the junior dukes organized a meeting in Kruszwica, to which they invited the warlike Margrave Albert the Bear of the German Northern March (the later Margraviate of Brandenburg), who had reached the Polish border in the course of the Wendish Crusade. There, Bolesà Âaw arranged the marriage of his sister Judith with the margrave's son Otto. Boleslaw and Mieszko also militarily supported the Germans in the fight against the reluctant West Slavic Lutici tribes, considerably contributing to the stability of German domination over the middle Spree region. The second important ally of the Piast prince was the Wettin margrave Konrad of Meissen.
Initially, Bolesà Âaw also had a difficult relationship with another opposing force policy like the Hohenstaufens: the Roman Curia under of Pope Eugene III. At first in 1147 the Papal legate Humbold recognized Bolesà Âaw as the new high duke and overlord of Poland. However, one year later, and again instigated by the intrigues of Wà Âadysà Âaw's wife Agnes, the newly Papal legate Guy arrived to the country in connection with the refusal to restore the former high duke, and declared the ban over Poland. The penalty, thanks for the cohesive support of the Polish church hierarchy by the junior dukes, was virtually without repercussions.
Things worsened for Bolesà Âaw in 1157, when King Conrad's nephew Frederick Barbarossa, crowned emperor by Pope Adrian IV in 1155, decided to make a new expedition to Poland, thanks to the ongoing pressures by his aunt Agnes, Wà Âadysà Âaw's wife. This time the campaign was well organized, and the Emperor was well determined to force Bolesà Âaw IV to accept his own conditions. It's unknown why Bolesà Âaw opted for a highly security tactics of war, not defending the swampy areas in front of the middle Oder river, which was for centuries the natural defense of Poland, nor the strongholds of Gà Âogów and Bytom in Silesia. The Imperial army quickly advanced and soon laid siege to Poznan.
Given the difficult situation, Bolesà Âaw was forced to accept the humiliating negotiations and in a shameful ceremony on 30 August 1157, was declared a vassal of the Empire at his camp in Krzyszkowo. Bolesà Âaw was in his knees and beg for forgiveness to the Emperor, in return for which he kindly received from Barbarossa the further control over the Polish lands; also, he had to pay an enormous tribute to Emperor. For unknown reasons however, despite Barbarossa's victory, Wà Âadysà Âaw II to his great disappointment was not restored in the Polish throne. Bolesà Âaw formally swore loyalty to the Emperor on Christmas Day in Magdeburg, and gave his younger brother, Casimir II, as a hostage. Two years later Wà Âadysà Âaw died in exile, having never returned to his country again.
Not before 1163 the sons of the late Wà Âadysà Âaw, Bolesà Âaw I the Tall and Mieszko IV Tanglefoot, backed by the Emperor insisting on the agreement made with Bolesà Âaw IV, were restored in their Silesia heritage; but this return didn't affect the power of Bolesà Âaw as a high duke. Thanks to its German affinities, the senior branch of the Silesian Piasts at least managed to retain its Silesian lands (Wrocà Âaw, Legnica, Gà Âogów, Opole and Racibórz) without problems.
Following the defeat by the German forces, Bolesà Âaw initiated a bold plan for the conquest of the pagan Prussians, settling beyond the northeastern Polish border along the Baltic coast. This concept of an early Prussian Crusade was conceived in view of the repeated seizures by more and more Baltic tribes in the several districts of Bolesà Âaw's Masovian province. The high duke proclaimed a crusade against the pagans and pressured the collaboration of both the pope and the Emperor. The initial campaigns were successful however efforts and attempts to conquer these province were finally defeated in 1166. Furthermore, during one of the battles the younger brother of the high duke, Henry of Sandomierz, was killed.
After Henry's death, against the dispositions of the Bolesà Âaw III's Testament, the high duke incorporated Sandomierz into the Seniorate Province. This caused the anger and frustration of his youngest brother, Casimir II the Just, who was the next in line to inherit the lands and was the only of Bolesà Âaw III' sons still without any land.
Casimir was supported in his rebellion by his elder brother Duke Mieszko III the Old of Greater Poland, the magnate Jaksa of Miechów and Sviatoslav, son of Voivode Piotr Wà Âostowic, as well as the Archbishops of Gniezno and Kraków; also, almost all Lesser Polish nobility was on his side. In February 1168 the rebels gathered in JÃÂdrzejów, and there they proclaimed Mieszko III as the new high duke and Casimir was formally invested with Sandomierz. But at the end Bolesà Âaw maintained his rule by largely accepting the demands of rebels; he divided late Henry's duchy in three parts: the lands of Wià Âlica were granted to Casimir, Bolesà Âaw himself obtained Sandomierz proper and the rest passed to Mieszko III.
After the disaster of the Prussian Crusade, the Silesian dukes Bolesà Âaw I the Tall and Mieszko IV Tanglefoot attempted to dethrone the high duke and to recover the Seniorate Province and thereby the Polish overlordship. Bolesà Âaw's reprisal expedition in the following year ended with a total disaster, so the high duke eventually had to reconcile with his Silesian nephews.
In 1172 Duke Mieszko III rebelled again; this time supporting his grandnephew Jarosà Âaw of Opole (the eldest son of Bolesà Âaw I the Tall), who, forced to become a priest in his early years, was barred from the Silesian succession. Unsatisfied with this, Jarosà Âaw tried to gain power and obtain his own lands. The support of this rebellion was so strong, that his father was forced to escape to Erfurt. This originated another expedition in his aid by Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, who again invaded Poland and defeated the rebels. The high duke ordered Mieszko III to Magdeburg where peace was made with the Empire after the payment of 8,000 pieces of silver and the Silesian duchy was again granted to Bolesà Âaw I the Tall at the Emperor's mercy; despite his victory, the high duke finally accepted the autonomy of his Silesian nephews.
Shortly afterwards another rebellion took place, this time of the Lesser Polish nobles, who were extremely dissatisfied with the harsh and dictatorial high duke's government. The rebels invited Casimir II, then duke of Wià Âlica, to take the Kraków throne, but Bolesà Âaw's resistance against his younger brother was so strong that both parties made concessions, who led finished with any riots until the end of the high duke's reign. Casimir succeeded Bolesà Âaw in Sandomierz upon his death in 1173 and became high duke four years later.
Bolesà Âaw was known for his many gifts and grants to the Church. Particularly enriched thanks to him, among others were: the Church of St. Mary and St. Catherine and of St. Vincent near Wrocà Âaw, the Benedictine monastery in Trzemeszno and the Collegiate church in Tum near à ÂÃÂczyca. Around 1151 he founded the Canonical Regular Kolegiata in Czerwià Âsk.
In 1137 Bolesà Âaw married Viacheslava (b. ca. 1125 â d. 15 March ca. 1162?), daughter of Prince Vsevolod Mstislavich of Novgorod and Pskov. They had three children:
After the death of his first wife, Bolesà Âaw married Maria (d. aft. 1173), whose origins are disputed. This union was childless.
Bolesà Âaw's eldest son died in 1172 aged sixteen and reportedly the high duke was devastated by his death. He was succeeded in the Masovian-Kujavian principality by his second and only surviving son Leszek, at the age of eleven or less. As overlord and holder of Kraków and Gniezno, he however was succeeded by his next brother Mieszko III the Old.
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