Boček III of Poděbrady

Boček III of Poděbrady
Noble family House of Poděbrady
Father Boček II of Poděbrady
Mother Anna Elisabeth of Leipa
Born before 1395
Died probably 1429

Boček III of Poděbrady (also: Boček III of Kunštát and Poděbrady, German: Boček III. von Podiebrad, Czech: Boček III. z Poděbrad or Boček III. z Kunštátu a Poděbrad or Boček mladší z Poděbrad; died: 1429) was a Bohemian-Moravian nobleman and supporter of the Hussites.

Life

Boček III was a member of the noble Poděbrady family. His parents were Boček II of Poděbrady and Anna Elisabeth of Leipa (Czech: Anna Eliška z Lipé), a daughter of Henry of Leipa (Czech: Jindřich z Lipé). In some sources he is referred to as Boček the Younger, to distinguish him from his father, who is then called Boček the Elder.

Boček III is first mentioned in a document from 1395. He and his father are named together several times, until his father's death in 1417. Boček then inherited the Moravian estates jointly with his younger brother Victor. Victor also inherited the Bohemian dominions Litice Castle and Náchod and the Lordship of Hummel, while the youngest brother Hynek Boček received the family seat at Poděbrady. John, the oldest brother, died during his father's lifetime, between 1407 and 1409. Victor and Boček III fought several legal battles about their Moravian possessions against their distant relatives Gerald Puška of Kunštát and Smil of Kunštát at Bludov. In 1417, Boček III successfully besieged Pyšolec Castle; a year later he acquired the Lordship of Vranová Lhota.

After the start of the Hussite Wars, Boček III participated in a meeting at Brno, where the nobles were forced to reject the Four Articles of Prague and to obey King Sigismund of Bohemia. A short time later, however, Boček III joined the Hussites. In 1422, he ook part in the Hussite siege of Kroměříž.

Boček III lived most of his life in Moravia. He called himself "Lord of Bouzov, and after 1427, "Lord of Moravská Třebová". He was not married and left no descendants. The year of his death is not certain. It is believed that he outlived his brother Victor, who died in 1427, by one or two years. Victor, in turn, outlived Hynek, who died in 1426.

References and sources

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.