Canon Václav Vilém Václavíček (Ukrainian: Вацлав Вілем Вацлавічек; Polish: Wacław Wilhelm Wacławiczek; 19 December 1788 – 19 September 1862) was a Czech Roman Catholic priest and theological writer, who a short time served as a Metropolitan Archbishop-elect of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lviv and Primate of Galicia and Lodomeria from 17 December 1847 until his resignation on 29 May 1848.
In 1829 he was appointed as a canon of the Metropolitan Chapter of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Prague and simultaneously as a Czech language preacher in the St. Vitus Cathedral.
In 1831 he became a Dean of Faculty of Theology in the Charles University and in 1838, for one year, become a Rector.
[3] On 17 December 1847, he was appointed as a Metropolitan Archbishop of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lviv and a Primate of Galicia and Lodomeria, but shortly resigned, before the episcopal ordination on 29 May 1848,[2] justified this with the resistance of the Polish population living in the Archdiocese.
[3] He also was a theologian and a spiritual writer, one among the founders of the "Časopis katolického duchovenstva" (Magazine of a Catholic Clergy) and it chief redactor in 1831–1832.