Slezské Rudoltice (German: Rosswald) is a municipality and village in Bruntál District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic.
It was one of the settlements that were founded in the area shortly before at the initiative of the bishop Bruno von Schauenburg.
In 1630, after the Rudoltice fief was shortly owned by Maximilian, Prince of Dietrichstein, it was acquired by the Counts of Hodice.
He had rebuilt the castle in the Baroque style and turned Rudoltice a cultural centre of Silesia.
Rudoltice began to be nicknamed "Silesian Versailles" and among the guests at the castle were the composer Carl Ditters von Dittersdorf or the Prussian king Frederick the Great.
However, Albert of Hodice indebted the estate, and therefore it had to be divided and sold out in order to pay off debts.
After World War II, the German population was expelled and the village was resettled by Czechs.