Prokop of Moravia
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Prokop | |
---|---|
Margrave of Moravia | |
Reign | 1375 – 1405 |
Predecessor | John Henry |
Successor | Jobst of Moravia |
Born | c. 1358 Brno, Moravia |
Died | 24 September 1405 Královo Pole |
Burial | |
House | Luxembourg |
Father | John Henry, Margrave of Moravia |
Mother | Margaret of Opava |
Prokop of Moravia, or Prokop of Luxembourg (Czech: Prokop Lucemburský; German: Prokop von Mähren; c. 1358 – 24 September 1405), a member of the House of Luxembourg, was Margrave of Moravia from 1375 until his death in 1405 and the provincial governor of the kingdom.
Prokob was born circa 1358 in the Moravian town of Brno. He was the third son of Margrave John Henry and Margaret of Opava. Upon his father's death in 1375, his eldest brother Jobst was confirmed as Margrave and Lord of Moravia, while Prokop and his brother John Sobieslaw received the title of “junior margraves”.
The brothers soon started the so-called Charles IV in 1378. Jobst and Prokop ruled Moravia together at that time and participated in the joint efforts of the Luxembourg dynasty to obtain the Polish and Hungarian crowns. They financially supported their cousin Sigismund of Luxembourg in obtaining the Hungarian crown. The Czech King Wenceslas IV also sought financial assistance from his Moravian cousins.
, fueled by disputes over inheritance and the destabilizing situation after the death of their uncleIn 1402, Prokop became a prisoner of Sigismund of Luxembourg in Prešpurk and remained in prison for two years. Jobst eventually contributed to his release, but Prokop soon succumbed to illness and died on 24 September 1405 in Brno. After his death, Jobst became the sole lord of Moravia.
His illegitimate son
was the last descendant of the Luxembourg family. However, due to his illegitimate origin, he could not assert the inheritance rights to the property and titles of his ancestors.Ancestors[]
showAncestors of Prokop of Moravia |
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References[]
- Velké dějiny zemí koruny české. Praha: Paseka. 1999. ISBN 80-7185-501-4.
- Velké dějiny zemí koruny české. Praha: Paseka. 1999. ISBN 80-7185-551-0.
- Lucemburkové : česká koruna uprostřed Evropy (Vyd. 1 ed.). Praha: Nakl. Lidové Noviny. 2012. ISBN 978-80-7422-093-7.
- Čechura, Jaroslav (1999–2000). Lucemburkové na českém trůně (1. vyd ed.). Praha: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-73-7.CS1 maint: date format (link)
- Čechura, Jaroslav (1999–2000). Lucemburkové na českém trůně (1. vyd ed.). Praha: Libri. ISBN 80-85983-98-2.CS1 maint: date format (link)
- Čechura, Jaroslav. Lucemburkové životopisná encyklopedie (Vyd. 1 ed.). České Budějovice. ISBN 978-80-86829-69-2.
- Elbel, Petr. Z počátků husitské revoluce : k výročí svěcení husitských kněží na Lipnici v roce 1417 = From the beginnings of the Hussite Revolution : to the anniversary of the ordination of the Hussite priests at Lipnice in 1417 (1. vydání ed.). Brno. ISBN 978-80-87709-22-1.
- Hoensch, Jörg K. (2003). Lucemburkové : pozdně středověká dynastie celoevropského významu, 1308-1437. Praha: Argo. ISBN 80-7203-518-5.
- Mezník, Jaroslav (1999). Lucemburská Morava : 1310-1423. Praha: Lidové noviny. ISBN 80-7106-363-0.
- Spěváček, Jiří. Václav IV., 1361-1419: k předpokladům husitské revoluce (in Czech). Nakl. Svoboda.
- Štěpán, Václav (2002). Moravský markrabě Jošt, 1354-1411 (Vyd. 1 ed.). Brno: Matice moravská. ISBN 80-86488-05-5.
- Margraves of Moravia
- 15th-century people of the Holy Roman Empire
- House of Luxembourg