Von Rugen, Jaroslaw II 1a

Birth Name Von Rugen, Jaroslaw II
Gender male
Age at Death 42 years, 7 months, 19 days

Events

Event Date Place Description Sources
Birth 1218 Bergen Auf Rugen, Pommerania, Prussia   2
Death 1260-08-20 Bergen Rugen, Rugen, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany   2

Age: 42y

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Von Rugen, Wizlaw11771249-06-07
Mother Sverkersdotter, Margareta1183
    Brother     Von Rugen, Peter 1208
    Brother     Von Rugen, Jaromar 1210
    Brother     Von Rugen, Wizlaw 1212
    Brother     Von Rugen, Burizlaw 1214
    Brother     Von Rugen, Nicholas 1216
         Von Rugen, Jaroslaw II 1218 1260-08-20
    Sister     Von Rugen, Eufemie 1218

Families

Family of Von Rugen, Jaroslaw II and of Pomerania, Euphemia

Unknown Partner of Pomerania, Euphemia ( * 1220 + 1270 )
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
von Pommern-Rugen, Margaret Elisabeth12371272-05-27
of Rugen, Vitslav IIabout 12401302-12-29
Rugen, Jaromar IIIabout 12441282

Source References

  1. Michael Neuman: http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=clcaldwell&id=I26363 Caldwell and related families
      • Source text:

         

        ID: I26363
        Name: King of Norway Sigurd Slembedjakn Magnusson
        Sex: M
        Birth: ABT 1100 in Bergen, Norway
        Death: 1134 in Bergen, Norway

        Father: King of Norway Magnus "Barefoot" Olafsson b: 1073 in Bergen, Norway
        Mother: Margareta Ingesdatter b: ABT 1076 in Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden

        Marriage 1 Queen of Norway and Denmark Malmfrida b: ABT 1100 in Kiev, Ukraine
        Children
        Has Children Christina Sigurdsdotter b: ABT 1120 in Bergen, Norway

         

      • Citation:

        e-mail: michaelneuman@earthlink.net

      • Source text:

        He was first mentioned on 8 November 1231. From 28 September 1246, he was co-ruler with his father, Prince Vitslav I. During the early years of his reign, he tried to maintain peaceful relations with his neighbours, the Dukes of Pomerania, especially with the princes of Gützkow, who were vassals of Barnim I. He promoted trade by outlawing wrecking and providing safe passage for merchant ships from Lübeck. In 1249, troops from Lübeck destroyed the city of Stralsund; this resulted in a war which lasted four years, during which privateers Stralsund were allowed to capture ships from Lübeck. All privileges granted to Lübeck were suspended, until the paid compensation for the damage done to Stralsund.
        Jaromar II donated land to the three Cistercian monasteries in his territory, in Bergen auf Rügen, Neuenkamp, and Hilda. In 1252, he donated the Radevice Land in Mönchgut to Hilda Abbey, near Greifswald. He supported the settlement of other religious orders in his territory. The Dominicans founded the St. Catherine monastery in Stralsund; the Franciscans founded the St. John monastery, also in Stralsund, in 1254. In 1255, he granted Lübeck style city rights to Barth and in 1258 to Damgarten.

         

        Jarmers Tower in Copenhagen
        Jaromar II was an ardent supporter of the archbishops in the Danish domestic struggle between the Danish king and the archbishops Jakob Erlandsen of Lund and Peder Bang of Roskilde. In Peder Bang escaped from a Danish prison, into exile in Schaprode in Rügen. In April of the year, Jaromir II and Peder Bang landed on the main Danish island of Zealand and took the city of Copenhagen. They probably committed some serious acts of violence in the process, and burned down a large part of Copenhagen, after looting the city. King Christopher I of Denmark suddenly died in Ribe in May 1259. His widow, Margaret Sambiria, took up the regency for her underdage son Eric V. She raised a peasant army, which was defeated by Jaromar II at Næstved. After devastating Zealand, Scania and Lolland,[1] he landed with his army on Bornholm, where he destroyed the royal fortress at Lilleborg.[2] A woman seeking revenge stabbed him with a dagger on Bornholm, or in Skane[3] in 1260. It is unknown where he was buried; perhaps in Bergen auf Rügen Abbey or in Neuenkamp Abbey in Franzburg.
        The Jarmers Tower on Jarmers Plads ("Jaromar Place") in Copenhagen is a monument, reminding us of the devastation Jaromar II brought to the city.
        Marriage and issue [edit]

        Jaromar II married Euphemia, a daughter of Swietopelk II, Duke of Pomerania. Together, they had three children:
        Vitslav II (1240-1302), his successor
        Margaret (c. 1247 – 1272), married Duke Eric I of Schleswig
        Jaromar III (before 1249 – before 1285), co-ruler with Vitslav II
        References [edit]

        Theodor Pyl (1881), "Jaromar II.", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German) 13, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 724–726
        Joachim Wächter: Das Fürstentum Rügen — Ein Überblick, in: Beiträge zur Geschichte Vorpommerns: die Demminer Kolloquien 1985–1994, Thomas Helms Verlag, Schwerin, 1997, ISBN 3-931185-11-7
        Authority control
        VIAF: 80644187 GND: 136270387
        External links [edit]

        The children of Jaromar II on the home page of Jens Ruge (German)
        Rugia under Danish sovereignty, taken from Otto Wendler: Geschichte Rügens — von der ältesten Zeit bis auf die Gegenwart, 1895 (German)

  2. G39S-WDG FamilySearch.org