Otto III of Bergau
Otto III of Bergau, also known as Otto the Elder of Bergau, was a Bohemian nobleman, high-ranking provincial official, and political opponent of Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia.
Biography
Otto was the son of Albert of Bergau, and he inherited the castles of and. He held the office of Highest Burgrave of the Kingdom of Bohemia from 1388 to 1393.Otto was a part of the League of Lords against Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia. He likely set off the course of events that secured the capture of Wenceslaus in 1394. After the truce with Sigismund of Luxembourg in 1396, Otto was appointed to Wenceslaus' royal council.
In 1399, Otto had a son, Otto IV of Bergau with his second wife, Markéta of Žlunice.
Otto continued to support Sigismund and his claim to the throne. Wenceslaus was recaptured in 1402, and for his loyalty, Sigismund appointed Otto as in the Kingdom of Bohemia. Otto raised taxes on cities and monasteries and instituted a Jewish pogrom, which resulted in an influx of money into the royal treasury. In a contemporary report, it was stated that, "...the Hungarian king Sigismund committed many evils with the help of some Czech lords like... Bergau... and so on."
In 1403, Otto was appointed one of a five-member group of executors of power when Sigismund left the country. However, waning political support for Sigismund led to attacks against his supporters, including Otto.
During his lifetime, Otto and his son, Otto IV, acquired further estates including Trosky Castle, Hrubý Rohozec, Zbiroh, and parts of Jirkov and Turnov. Otto III died in 1414.