Named for Czech prince Václav (c.908–c.929), Czech kings Václav I (1205–1253), Václav II (1271–1305) and his son Václav III (1289–1306), all from royal dynasty of Přemyslids {see planet
(7695)}, and Czech king and Roman emperor Václav IV of Luxembourg (1361–1419), the son of Charles IV. Prince Václav was killed by his brother, Boleslav I. Later he was worshipped as a saint and from the eleventh century he became patron of the Czech lands and the symbol of Czech statehood. King Václav III was also killed, and he was the last male descendant of the Přemyslids dynasty. Václav is still the most common Slavonic name in the Czech Republic. (M 34628) _ _.