- a
possessive suffix -ín. The German, Hungarian, and
Polish forms are
Trentschin, Trencsén, and Trenczyn, respectively. The site of Trenčín has been inhabited...
-
settled the
rising conflict with King John of
Bohemia by the
provisory Trentschin treaty on St Bartholomew's Day 1335. The
representatives of the Polish...
- the
duchies were
ceded to the
Kingdom of
Bohemia under the
Treaty of
Trentschin.
Thereafter until 1742,
Silesia was one of the
Bohemian crown lands and...
- as
acknowledged by King
Casimir III of
Poland by the 1335
Treaty of
Trentschin. His son,
Bohemian King
Charles IV, was
elected King of the
Romans in...
-
Great of
Poland renounced his
rights to
Silesia in the 1335
Treaty of
Trentschin.
During the time of its establishment, the
Silesian lands covered the...
-
acknowledged by the
Polish king
Casimir III the
Great in the 1335
Treaty of
Trentschin. John also
achieved the
enfeoffment with the
Upper Lusatian lands of Bautzen...
- Trenčianske
Teplice (German:
Trentschin-Teplitz; Hungarian: Trencsénteplic) is a
health resort and
small spa town in
western Slovakia, in the
valley of...
- king
Casimir III the
Great officially renounced Silesia by the
Treaty of
Trentschin. King John had also
acquired the
lands of
Bautzen and Görlitz (later Upper...
- Silesia,
incorporated as a
Bohemian crown land upon the 1335
Treaty of
Trentschin. In the east and southeast, the
western Carpathian Mountains separated...
- king of Poland.
Congress of Visegrád (1339) Visegrád
Group Treaty of
Trentschin Treaty of
Namslau RÁCZ, György. Visegrád 1335 [online]. Bratislava: International...