According to
František Palacký, the young Bohemian prince Bretislav, son of the Přemyslid duke
Oldřich of Bohemia, on his way to the court of Emperor
Conrad II in 1029 passed through Schweinfurt, where he met Judith and immediately fell in love with her. He also had been able to reconquer large
Moravian territories occupied by the
Polish duke
Bolesław I the Brave by 1019. Therefore, Oldřich was not averse to confirm his good relationship with the German nobility through a marriage to Judith. Beautiful Judith was a desirable bride, however, Oldřich's only son Bretislav was of illegitimate birth from his
misalliance with the farmer's daughter
Božena. Judith's relatives were very proud of their noble origins, thus complicating the prospect of Bretislav's marriage with the high-born Judith. The young man solved the problem in his own way by sneaking into the monastery and abducting Judith Their first son
Spytihněv was born after almost ten years (which led to the hypothesis that the kidnapping happened in 1029), although Judith may have given birth to daughters before her first son. ==Exile in Hungary==