Wenceslaus I Premyslid (CzechVáclav), (c.1205 - September 22/23, 1253) was a King of Bohemia (1230 - 1253). Wenceslaus was the son of Ottokar I and Konstancia, daughter of Bela III, King of Hungary. He encouraged huge numbers of Germans to settle in the villages and towns around the perimeter of Bohemia and Moravia. As a sign of increasing development - courtesy of the new settlers, stone buildings began to replace wooden ones in Prague.
In 1241 Wenceslas successfully repelled a raid on Bohemia by Batu Khan, although Moravia suffered devastation at the hands of the Mongols. Wenceslas' foreign policy was based around uniting the Duchy of Austria with the Kingdom of Bohemia following the death of the last Babenberg Duke, Frederick II, at the battle of the Leitha river in 1246. Wenceslas' eldest son, Vladislav, was married to Frederick's sister Marguerite and received the hmage of the Austrian barons as their future ruler. However, this prince died before he could be formally acclaimed as Duke. Wenceslas' second son Premysl Otakar then married Marguerite's kinswoman Gertrude and claimed the duchy for himself. The Austrian question was put on hiatus when in 1249 Premysl Otakar led a nobles uprising against Wenceslas. The rebellion was quelled, but Wenceslas felt it prudent to crown Otakar as 'junior King' and to give him control of Moravia. Wenceslas died in 1253 and was succeeded by his son Premysl Ottokar II.
Wenceslaus III Premyslid (Czech and Slovak Václav, Hungarian Vencel, Polish Wacław), (October 6, 1289 – August 4, 1306) was the king of Hungary (1301 - 1305) and king of Bohemia (1305 - 1306).
Wenceslaus III was the son of Wenceslaus II, King of Bohemia and Poland, and Judith von Habsburg, the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf I.
Wenceslaus was the last of the male Premyslid rulers of Bohemia.
WENCESLAUS (1361-1419), German king, and, as Wenceslaus IV., king of Bohemia, was the son of the emperor Charles IV.
Born at Nuremberg on the 26th of February 1361, he was crowned king of Bohemia in June 1363, and invested with the margraviate of Brandenburg in 1373.
In 1404, when Sigismund was recalled to Hungary, Wenceslaus regained his freedom and with it his authority in Bohemia; and after the death of the German king Rupert in 1410 appears to have entertained hopes of recovering his former throne.