DÃÂpolt II (1150s â 21 November 1190), also known as Diepold II (modern English Theobald), was a Bohemian nobleman from the cadet branch of the Pà Âemyslid dynasty and the leader of the Bohemian troop in the Third Crusade.
DÃÂpolt II was the only son of DÃÂpolt I (son of Duke Vladislav I of Bohemia) and of his wife Gertrude (daughter of Albert the Bear of Brandenburg).
He was first mentioned after the death of his father. He had a good relationship with the Duke Frederick of Bohemia (Czech: Bedà Âich), his cousin. After 1182 he was in dispute with his other cousin Bishop of Prague Jindà Âich Bà Âetislav (Henry Bretislaus, later known as Duke Bretislaus III of Bohemia). The bishop imposed an interdict on DÃÂpolt's land (the regions of ÃÂáslav, Chrudim and Vraclav). In 1187 he emigrated and came back in 1189 when Conrad II became the new duke of Bohemia.
In 1189 Conrad II appointed DÃÂpolt I to lead the Bohemian troop in the Third Crusade. The Bohemian troop joined the crusaders led by the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in Esztergom, Hungary. Many of the Bohemian soldiers were former prisoners who were freed just to participate the crusade (8 of them were executed by Frederick Barbarossa because of their violence and robbery already in Serbia). After the death of Frederick Barbarossa in the Saleph River on 10 June 1190 DÃÂpolt II decided to stay in the Holy Land and to continue under the command of Frederick VI, Duke of Swabia. He took part in the siege of Acre in autumn 1190. There he also died on 21 November 1190, maybe because of a war injury or plague. The surviving rest of his troop then probably became a part of the troop of King Richard I of England.
DÃÂpolt II was married to Adéla/Adelajda Zbysà Âawa of Silesia, the daughter of Bolesà Âaw I the Tall. They had: