Background
Although he was the firstborn, his father did not expect Boček to succeed him as Count, because of a mental disability.
Although he was the firstborn, his father did not expect Boček to succeed him as Count, because of a mental disability.
His exact birth date is not known. Following the family tradition, Boček received, as his baptismal name, the name of many of his ancestors from the house of the Lords of Kunstadt. Unlike his three younger brothers, Victor, Henry the Elder and Henry the Younger, Boček was not created an Imperial Prince and he was not made Count of Kladsko.
A year later, the brothers confirmed Náchod"s existing privileges and granted more.
However, when later in the same year, he transferred possession of Münsterberg and Kladsko to the three brothers, Boček was not included. Boček received Litice Castle, which included Rychmberk Castle and the Častolovice and Černíkovice and the town of Týniště nad Orlicí and half of each of the cities Žamberk and Choceň and the town of Kunvald.
He also received the city of Jičín, the Lordship of Veliš u Jičína, the estates of the monastery Postoloprty and a number of smaller estates. Mount Zlaté, with its mines, remained common property.
Its profits were to be divided among the brothers equally.
Henry the Elder received the estates of Náchod and Hummel, that had been joint property of Boček and Victor until then The inheritance division of 1472 is the last document that Boček has personally and independently worked on. He is mentioned in later documents, but always in the context of someone else representing him or acting on his behalf.
Since Victor spent most of his time in Hungarian captivity, Henry the Elder probably acted as Boček"s guardian.
Around 1491, Henry the Elder acquired some of Boček"s larger East Bohemian possessions, belonging to the Lordship of Litice nad Orlicí. Henry sold these during Boček"s lifetime to William II of Pernstein.
lieutenant is believed that Henry the Elder, when he assumed ownership of Litice, committed himself to caring for Boček for the rest of his life. Boček died on 28 September 1496 on Henry the Elder"s castle in Kladsko.
He was not married and had no children.
There he was buried, in the church of the Franciscan monastery that Henry the Elder had built. In 1558, Boček and eight relatives who had also been buried there, were reburied in main church in Glatz.
Since he also was not a Duke of Münsterberg, he could claim that, by title, he was the last member of the noble family of Poděbrady.