About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: 1351 births, 1351 by country, 1351 deaths, 1351 establishments, 1351 in Europe, 1351 in law, Conflicts in 1351, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, Jobst of Moravia, Constance, Duchess of Wodzis aw, Ross Errilly Friary, Mus Soseki, Cathedral of Our Lady, Muhammad bin Tughluq, Paul of Burgos, Telde, Abu Al-Hasan Ali ibn Othman, Treason Act 1351, Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March, Taddea Visconti, Fifth Council of Constantinople, Pierre d'Ailly, Eleanor of Guzman, George de Lawedre of Haltoun, List of state leaders in 1351, Order of the Star, K no Moronao, K no Morofuyu, Joan of Valois, Leopold III, Duke of Austria, Casimir IV, Duke of Pomerania, Mastino II della Scala, M eri te, K no Moroyasu, Conrad of Piacenza, Statute of Labourers 1351, Heinrich Dusemer, Margareta Ebner, Antonio Bamboccio, Juana Nunez de Lara, Tuckelhausen Charterhouse, Taj al-Din ibn Qutb al-Din, Chungjeong of Goryeo, Jion, Edmund Gonville, 1351 in Ireland, Battle of Vlaardingen, Battle of Mikagehama. Excerpt: Constance (Polish: ) (died 1351) was a Polish princess member of the House of Piast and sovereign Duchess of Wodzis aw l ski from 1324 until her death. Her name appears twice in contemporary sources: firstly, in a letter of Pope John XXII dated 22 September 1321, where she is named "Duchess of Raciborz," and secondly in the Chronicle of Raciborz, who give her the title of "Duchess of Wodzis aw" (ksi n wodzis awsk ) and mentions her death in 1351. None of these sources showed Constance's parentage. Historians and sources are agreed that she was a member of the Piast dynasty; however, the difficult of establishing who was her father, caused two theories to emerge about her origins. The first hypothesis states that Constance was the daughter of Duke W adys aw of Opole and wife of Henry IV Probus, Duke of Wroc aw, who repudiated her after several y...