Individual Details

Drahomíra of Stodor

(890 - 934)

Drahomira's name is pronounced as "druh-haw-mee-ruh." She was regent while her son Wencelslaus was still a minor. She hired assassins and murdered her mother-in-law.

According to Wikipedia:

Drahomíra of Stodor (Czech: Drahomíra ze Stodor; c. 877 or 890 - died after 934 or 936) was Duchess consort of Bohemia from 915 to 921, wife of the Pøemyslid duke Vratislaus I. She also acted as regent of the Duchy of Bohemia from 921 to 924 during the minority of her son Wenceslaus. She is chiefly known for the murder of her mother-in-law Ludmila of Bohemia by hired assassins.

Life
Drahomíra was born in the present-day Havelland region centered around the fortress of Brandenburg (Brennabor), the daughter of a Hevelli (Stodoran) prince. According to Cosmas of Prague, she married Duke Vratislav I of Bohemia about 906. Drahomíra gave birth to at least six children: her sons were Wenceslaus and Boleslaus, who both succeeded their father as Bohemian dukes. Among her four daughters were one Pøibislava, who became a nun at the Prague St. George's Convent, and possibly Støezislava, the wife of the Bohemian nobleman Slavník, founder of the Slavník dynasty.[1] The marriage led the Pøemyslid dynasty to cooperation with the Polabian Slavs and brought Bohemia in conflict with the Saxon duke Henry the Fowler, who became German king in 919 and later waged war against the Hevelli tribes.


Ludmila and Drahomíra with young Wenceslaus, 19th-century painting
After her husband's untimely death in 921, the Bohemian nobles designated Drahomíra regent for her minor son Wenceslaus. However, she had to divide the government of Bohemia with her mother-in-law Ludmila, widow of Duke Boøivoj I, who took over the religious education of her sons. Popular history depicts Ludmila as a restrained and pious grandmother, but it is likely that the political demands of government called for more energy and worldliness than history records.

Wenceslaus was one of the main reasons for the eventually fatal discord between Drahomíra and Ludmila, who had exerted great influence over Drahomíra's eldest son, leaving Drahomíra to concentrate her efforts on her younger son, Boleslaus. Despite or perhaps as a result of her political and personal efforts, Ludmila attracted Drahomíra's bitter enmity. She alleged that her mother-in-law, with the help of Bavarian missionaries, educated Wenceslaus to become a monk rather than a prince. Moreover, the two women may have disagreed whether to recognise the East Frankish supremacy of Henry the Fowler. Ludmila fled from Prague [2] to Tetín Castle on the road to Regensburg, where on 16 September 921 Drahomíra's henchmen, Tunna and Gommon, attacked and strangled her.

The next year the troops of Duke Arnulf of Bavaria raided the Bohemian duchy. When Drahomíra's son Wenceslaus came of age about 922, he sent his mother into exile, though he called her back in 925. She spent her later years in Prague, however, upon the murder of her son (in 929 or 935) she fled from the court.

In culture
She is the subject of two operas, Drahomíra by František Škroup (1848), and Drahomíra by Karel Šebor (1867).

References
Loserth, Johann (2008). "Propast hrvatske kneževske obitelji Slavnikoviæa" [The collapse of Croatian princely family Slavnikoviæ]. In Nosiæ, Milan (ed.). Bijeli Hrvati II [White Croats II] (in Croatian). Maveda. pp. 168-169. ISBN 978-953-7029-12-8.
[1][dead link]
Bibliography
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis; Line 244-7



-- MERGED NOTE ------------

Drahomira's name is pronounced as "druh-haw-mee-ruh." She was regent while her son Wencelslaus was still a minor. She hired assassins and murdered her mother-in-law.

According to Wikipedia:

Drahomíra of Stodor (Czech: Drahomíra ze Stodor; c. 877 or 890 - died after 934 or 936) was Duchess consort of Bohemia from 915 to 921, wife of the Pøemyslid duke Vratislaus I. She also acted as regent of the Duchy of Bohemia from 921 to 924 during the minority of her son Wenceslaus. She is chiefly known for the murder of her mother-in-law Ludmila of Bohemia by hired assassins.

Life
Drahomíra was born in the present-day Havelland region centered around the fortress of Brandenburg (Brennabor), the daughter of a Hevelli (Stodoran) prince. According to Cosmas of Prague, she married Duke Vratislav I of Bohemia about 906. Drahomíra gave birth to at least six children: her sons were Wenceslaus and Boleslaus, who both succeeded their father as Bohemian dukes. Among her four daughters were one Pøibislava, who became a nun at the Prague St. George's Convent, and possibly Støezislava, the wife of the Bohemian nobleman Slavník, founder of the Slavník dynasty.[1] The marriage led the Pøemyslid dynasty to cooperation with the Polabian Slavs and brought Bohemia in conflict with the Saxon duke Henry the Fowler, who became German king in 919 and later waged war against the Hevelli tribes.


Ludmila and Drahomíra with young Wenceslaus, 19th-century painting
After her husband's untimely death in 921, the Bohemian nobles designated Drahomíra regent for her minor son Wenceslaus. However, she had to divide the government of Bohemia with her mother-in-law Ludmila, widow of Duke Boøivoj I, who took over the religious education of her sons. Popular history depicts Ludmila as a restrained and pious grandmother, but it is likely that the political demands of government called for more energy and worldliness than history records.

Wenceslaus was one of the main reasons for the eventually fatal discord between Drahomíra and Ludmila, who had exerted great influence over Drahomíra's eldest son, leaving Drahomíra to concentrate her efforts on her younger son, Boleslaus. Despite or perhaps as a result of her political and personal efforts, Ludmila attracted Drahomíra's bitter enmity. She alleged that her mother-in-law, with the help of Bavarian missionaries, educated Wenceslaus to become a monk rather than a prince. Moreover, the two women may have disagreed whether to recognise the East Frankish supremacy of Henry the Fowler. Ludmila fled from Prague [2] to Tetín Castle on the road to Regensburg, where on 16 September 921 Drahomíra's henchmen, Tunna and Gommon, attacked and strangled her.

The next year the troops of Duke Arnulf of Bavaria raided the Bohemian duchy. When Drahomíra's son Wenceslaus came of age about 922, he sent his mother into exile, though he called her back in 925. She spent her later years in Prague, however, upon the murder of her son (in 929 or 935) she fled from the court.

In culture
She is the subject of two operas, Drahomíra by František Škroup (1848), and Drahomíra by Karel Šebor (1867).

References
Loserth, Johann (2008). "Propast hrvatske kneževske obitelji Slavnikoviæa" [The collapse of Croatian princely family Slavnikoviæ]. In Nosiæ, Milan (ed.). Bijeli Hrvati II [White Croats II] (in Croatian). Maveda. pp. 168-169. ISBN 978-953-7029-12-8.
[1][dead link]
Bibliography
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis; Line 244-7



-- MERGED NOTE ------------

Drahomira's name is pronounced as "druh-haw-mee-ruh." She was regent while her son Wencelslaus was still a minor. She hired assassins and murdered her mother-in-law.

According to Wikipedia:

Drahomíra of Stodor (Czech: Drahomíra ze Stodor; c. 877 or 890 - died after 934 or 936) was Duchess consort of Bohemia from 915 to 921, wife of the Pøemyslid duke Vratislaus I. She also acted as regent of the Duchy of Bohemia from 921 to 924 during the minority of her son Wenceslaus. She is chiefly known for the murder of her mother-in-law Ludmila of Bohemia by hired assassins.

Life
Drahomíra was born in the present-day Havelland region centered around the fortress of Brandenburg (Brennabor), the daughter of a Hevelli (Stodoran) prince. According to Cosmas of Prague, she married Duke Vratislav I of Bohemia about 906. Drahomíra gave birth to at least six children: her sons were Wenceslaus and Boleslaus, who both succeeded their father as Bohemian dukes. Among her four daughters were one Pøibislava, who became a nun at the Prague St. George's Convent, and possibly Støezislava, the wife of the Bohemian nobleman Slavník, founder of the Slavník dynasty.[1] The marriage led the Pøemyslid dynasty to cooperation with the Polabian Slavs and brought Bohemia in conflict with the Saxon duke Henry the Fowler, who became German king in 919 and later waged war against the Hevelli tribes.


Ludmila and Drahomíra with young Wenceslaus, 19th-century painting
After her husband's untimely death in 921, the Bohemian nobles designated Drahomíra regent for her minor son Wenceslaus. However, she had to divide the government of Bohemia with her mother-in-law Ludmila, widow of Duke Boøivoj I, who took over the religious education of her sons. Popular history depicts Ludmila as a restrained and pious grandmother, but it is likely that the political demands of government called for more energy and worldliness than history records.

Wenceslaus was one of the main reasons for the eventually fatal discord between Drahomíra and Ludmila, who had exerted great influence over Drahomíra's eldest son, leaving Drahomíra to concentrate her efforts on her younger son, Boleslaus. Despite or perhaps as a result of her political and personal efforts, Ludmila attracted Drahomíra's bitter enmity. She alleged that her mother-in-law, with the help of Bavarian missionaries, educated Wenceslaus to become a monk rather than a prince. Moreover, the two women may have disagreed whether to recognise the East Frankish supremacy of Henry the Fowler. Ludmila fled from Prague [2] to Tetín Castle on the road to Regensburg, where on 16 September 921 Drahomíra's henchmen, Tunna and Gommon, attacked and strangled her.

The next year the troops of Duke Arnulf of Bavaria raided the Bohemian duchy. When Drahomíra's son Wenceslaus came of age about 922, he sent his mother into exile, though he called her back in 925. She spent her later years in Prague, however, upon the murder of her son (in 929 or 935) she fled from the court.

In culture
She is the subject of two operas, Drahomíra by František Škroup (1848), and Drahomíra by Karel Šebor (1867).

References
Loserth, Johann (2008). "Propast hrvatske kneževske obitelji Slavnikoviæa" [The collapse of Croatian princely family Slavnikoviæ]. In Nosiæ, Milan (ed.). Bijeli Hrvati II [White Croats II] (in Croatian). Maveda. pp. 168-169. ISBN 978-953-7029-12-8.
[1][dead link]
Bibliography
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis; Line 244-7

Events

Birth890
Death934

Families