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Vitslav II (c. 1240 – 1302),
variously called Vislav, Vizlav, Wislaw,
Wizlaw and
Witslaw in
English sources (German:
Wizlaw II) was a
prince of Rügen...
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Vitslav I (c. 1180 – 7 June 1250),
variously called Vislav, Vizlav, Wislaw,
Wizlaw and
Witslaw in
English sources, was a
prince of Rügen. The
first surviving...
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Vitslav III (1265/8–1325),
variously called Vislav, Vizlav, Wislaw,
Wizlaw and
Witslaw in
English sources, was the last
Slavic ruler of the
Danish Prin****lity...
- 1221,
leaving the
government of the prin****lity to his brother,
Vitslav I.
Vitslav I had
taken part as
early as 1219 in a
military campaign by Waldemar...
- children. In
early 1299 he
married secondly with Euphemia,
daughter of
Vitslav II,
Prince of Rügen. In 1301 she bore
Haakon his
younger daughter, Ingeborg...
-
commissioning translations of romances.
Euphemia was most
likely the
daughter of
Vitslav II,
Prince of Rügen (1240–1302).
Older Norwegian historiography claims...
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reigned and
things looked bad for Valdemar's crusade.
Luckily for him,
Vitslav of Rügen
gathered his men in a
second camp and
attacked the
Estonians from...
- of Duke
Bogislaw IV of
Pomerania and his wife Margareta, a
daughter of
Vitslav II,
Prince of Rügen.
Vartislaw IV had four sisters: Jutta, Elisabeth, Margareta...
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Santa Maria ("Da que Deus", "Renaissance"),
Jenaer Liederhandschrift from
Vitslav III,
Prince of Rügen ("Loibere Risen", "Renaissance"), Egil's Saga ("Licht")...
- 1231. From 28
September 1246, he was co-ruler with his father,
Prince Vitslav I.
During the
early years of his reign, he
tried to
maintain peaceful relations...