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・ Wenceslaus I, Duke of Opava
・ Wenceslaus I, Duke of Saxe-Wittenberg
・ Wenceslaus II (disambiguation)
・ Wenceslaus II of Bohemia
・ Wenceslaus II of Legnica
・ Wenceslaus II of Zator
・ Wenceslaus II, Duke of Bohemia
・ Wenceslaus II, Duke of Cieszyn
・ Wenceslaus II, Duke of Opava
・ Wenceslaus II, Duke of Opava-Ratibor
・ Wenceslaus III
・ Wenceslaus III Adam, Duke of Cieszyn
・ Wenceslaus III of Bohemia
・ Wenceslaus III of Oława
・ Wenceslaus III, Duke of Rybnik
Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia
・ Wenceslaus Johann Gustav Karsten
・ Wenceslaus Linck
・ Wenceslaus of Krosno
・ Wenceslaus of Niemodlin
・ Wenceslaus of Płock
・ Wenceslaus of Żagań
・ Wenceslaus Werlin
・ Wench
・ Wench Trouble
・ Wenchang
・ Wenchang chicken
・ Wenchang Railway Station
・ Wenchang Satellite Launch Center
・ Wenchang Wang


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Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia : ウィキペディア英語版
Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia

Wenceslaus (also ''Wenceslas''; (チェコ語:Václav); (ドイツ語:Wenzel), nicknamed ''der Faule'' ("the Idle");〔( Biographie König Wenzels ), Elke Greifeneder, Humboldt University of Berlin〕 26 February 1361 – 16 August 1419) was, by inheritance, King of Bohemia (as ''Wenceslaus IV'') from 1363 and by election, German King (formally King of the Romans) from 1376. He was the third Bohemian and third German monarch of the Luxembourg dynasty. Wenceslaus was deposed in 1400 as King of the Romans, but continued to rule as Bohemian king until his death.
==Biography==
Wenceslaus was born in the Imperial city of Nuremberg, the son of Emperor Charles IV by his third wife Anna von Schweidnitz, a scion of the Silesian Piasts, and baptized at St. Sebaldus Church. He was raised by the Prague Archbishops Arnošt of Pardubice and Jan Očko z Vlašimi. His father had the two-year-old crowned King of Bohemia in 1363 and in 1373 also obtained for him the Electoral Margraviate of Brandenburg. When in 1376 Charles IV asserted Wenceslaus' election as King of the Romans by the prince-electors, two of seven votes, those of Brandenburg and Bohemia, were held by the emperor and his son themselves.
In order to secure the election of his son, Charles IV revoked the privileges of many Imperial Cities that he had earlier granted, and mortgaged them to various nobles. The cities, however, were not powerless, and as executors of the public peace, they had developed into a potent military force. Moreover, as Charles IV had organised the cities into leagues, he had made it possible for them to cooperate in large-scale endeavors. Indeed, on 4 July 1376, two days after Wenceslaus' election, fourteen Swabian cities bound together into the independent Swabian League of Cities to defend their rights against the newly elected King, attacking the lands of Eberhard II, Count of Württemberg. The city league soon attracted other members and until 1389 acted as an autonomous state within the Empire.

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