Alexander Köcski
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Alexander (II) Köcski | |
|---|---|
Seal of Alexander Köcski | |
| Judge royal | |
| Reign | 1324–1328 |
| Predecessor | Lampert Hermán |
| Successor | Paul Nagymartoni |
| Died | January/February 1328 |
| Noble family | House of Köcski |
| Spouse(s) | 1, unidentified 2, Clara Nagymartoni |
| Issue | George |
| Father | Alexander I Köcski |
| Mother | Venis N |
Alexander (II) Köcski (Hungarian: Köcski (II.) Sándor; died January or February 1328) was an influential Hungarian nobleman and soldier, who served as Judge royal from 1324 until his death.
Initially, as a familiaris and possibly distant relative of the powerful Kőszegis, he did not involve in the conflicts of civil war which characterized the Hungarian kingdom in the first two decades of the 14th century. Ultimately, he took an oath of allegiance to Charles I of Hungary in 1316, therefore his lands were plundered and many of his relatives were massacred. Following that Köcski was a dedicated military general of the king in his war against the oligarchs. He belonged to Charles's "new aristocracy", who supported the king's efforts to restore royal power after half a century of feudal anarchy.
According to his 19th-century biographer Antal Pór, Alexander Köcski was born into a family of castle warrior origin, which resided in Köcsk, Vas County. For their military service, King Ladislaus IV granted nobility to the family in 1273.[1] Based on Alexander's seal, the Köcski family was presumably related to the local powerful Kőszegi family,[2] and was also a scion of the gens (clan) Héder, at least from maternal side.[3] Historian Pál Engel, however, considered that Alexander Köcski individually adopted his seal following his decisive victory over his ardent enemies, the Kőszegis, as a prominent general in Charles' unification war against the oligarchic domains.[4]
His parents were comes Alexander I Köcski and a certain Venis (or Venus) from an unidentified family. His father had a brother Thomas I, whose branch lived until the early 15th century.[4] His grandmother was Domenica from the neighboring Káld.[5] Alexander II had a sister, who married Ladislaus Nádasd, a member of his clan's Gerse branch. Their only daughter was Margaret, who married Paul Magyar, the first royal treasurer in the Kingdom of Hungary.[2] Alexander married twice; the name of his first wife is unknown. His second spouse was Clara Nagymartoni, the daughter of Simon Nagymartoni and sister of Paul Nagymartoni, his immediate successor in the position of Judge royal. Their only known child was George, who married a noblewoman from the Szabari family, and died without heirs sometimes between 1357 and 1361.[4]
Military career
Alexander Köcski was first mentioned by contemporary records in 1309,[3] when, near Köcsk, bought portions in Hetyesomlyó, Hetye and Peresztegalja from a local noble family. He was referred to as comes during the act.[6] As part of the dower of his grandmother Domenica and the daughters' quarter of his mother Venis, he was granted a land in the village of Sár (near present-day Győrvár) from his maternal relative Marcellus Káldi in 1312, where he already possessed lands.[6][7] It is possible that Marcellus was the maternal uncle of Köcski. According to a 1313 charter, he was involved in a long-lasting lawsuit with his cousins, Nicholas and Emeric, the sons of Marcellus over this heritage.[8] Köcski intended to expand and unite his estates around Köcsk in order to establish a coherent lordship. In 1314, he acquired another portions in Sár, along the stream Sárvíz in the southeastern part of Vas County. His acquisitions were concentrated in the area between present-day Gersekarát and Győrvár.[8]
During that time, he was considered a familiaris of the Kőszegi family, who de facto ruled significant parts of Transdanubia, including Vas County, independently from the royal power. Therefore, he did not participate any military campaign during the era of Interregnum, when a civil war between various claimants to the throne—Charles of Anjou, Wenceslaus of Bohemia, and Otto of Bavaria—followed Andrew's death and lasted for seven years from 1301 to 1308.[7]

When Charles launched a campaign against the Kőszegis in Transdanubia and Slavonia in the first half of 1316, Köcski and his kinship took an oath of allegiance to the king.[9] Andrew Kőszegi, the head of the family responded it with a cruel revenge: he sent his familiaris Solomon the Red with a marauding army to Gerse, where Köcski's brother-in-law Ladislaus Nádasd and his three servants were killed in the local church, which was burnt down too. Ladislaus's brother Denis barricaded himself in the manor along with his wife, Ladislaus' widow (i.e. Köcski's unnamed sister) and six other relatives, including their children. The building was set on fire by the Kőszegi troops, where all but one of Köcski's relatives burned to death. Only his niece, the child Margaret managed to survive the massacre and fled the village with her nanny. In the same time, Köcski's lands and mills were also plundered and destroyed. Köcski left Vas County and joined Charles' royal army as a penniless nobleman, who thereafter could hope the recovery of lost family landholdings only from a successful restoration of the strong royal power.[10]

When Stefan Uroš II Milutin captured the Hungarian-proxy ruler Vladislav and invaded the Syrmia, Charles I launched a counter-campaign across the river Száva and seized the fortress of Macsó (present-day Mačva, Serbia) in the winter of 1317. Köcski and his servants, the Gencsi family participated in the campaign,[11] where Köcski was seriously injured by falling rocks during the siege.[12] Former historiography put this campaign to the year of 1319, but Pál Engel corrected the date, distinguishing two campaigns in a direction to Syrmia.[11] By 1318, Köcski was made castellan of Pannonhalma (or Szentmárton), following its castle was recovered from the Kőszegis in the previous year. He held the position until 1323.[13] On 3 May 1318, when Köcski was first referred to as castellan, he was granted the lands of Sebes, Takács and Egered in Sopron and Győr counties by Charles I, as a compensation for his earlier heavy losses.[14] 1319 was a turbulent year for Köcski; following the rebellion of Andrew Kőszegi, Alexander Köcski and Nicholas Felsőlendvai led a royal campaign against the Kőszegi dominion in the first half of 1319. Fulfilling his vengeance, Köcski seized the Kőszegis' six fortresses within months; he overcame Andrew Kőszegi's army at Szalafő, also defeating the Austrian auxiliary troops, thereafter besieged and captured the forts of Kőszeg and Kapronca (present-day Koprivnica, Croatia).[15] During the siege of Kőszeg, Köcski was wounded by an arrow.[12] After the fall of Andrew Kőszegi, his relative, the pro-Charles Nicholas II Kőszegi ("The Rooster") was granted the ispánates of Zala and Vas. However, by early 1321, he became disgraced too at the royal court. Alexander Köcski and Lawrence Csornai again led a royal campaign in Transdanubia. At first, they captured Pölöske. Following its fall, the army seized Kabold, Rohonc (present-day Kobersdorf and Rechnitz in Austria, respectively) and Kanizsa (from which Csornai took his new family name). It is plausible that the two generals also occupied the castles of Tátika (located near Zalaszántó) and Szigliget in the same time. Nicholas Kőszegi could retain only Léka (present-day Lockenhaus in Austria).[16]
Köcski and other castellans, for instance Alexander Ozorai, led a Hungarian auxiliary contingent, which consisted of 2200 Hungarian cavalry and 4000 mounted Cuman archers, to support Frederick the Fair and the Austrian army in the war for the throne of Germany against his Bavarian rival Louis of Wittelsbach. In the Battle of Mühldorf, which took place on 28 September 1322, the Austrians suffered a heavy defeat, while Frederick was captured.[17] During the battle, the Hungarian troops were neglected and sent to a secluded hill. Köcski lost only a few dozen people, while more than 1000 nobles from Austria were captured or killed.[18] For his loyal military services in the previous campaigns, Köcski was granted Nagyécs and Pázmánd in Győr County in 1323, which act was confirmed by the cathedral chapter of Győr on 31 October, still in that year.[19] The death of Matthew Csák in March 1321 resulted the collapse of his oligarchic domain within months. One of his unlawfully acquired castles, Várna (or Óvár, present-day Starhrad, Slovakia) in Trencsén County was returned to its original owners, the Zólyom kinship. However, Charles I took the castle back to royal property in early 1323. Following that Köcski was made castellan of the fortress, mentioned in that capacity in April 1323.[20] Sometimes after 1321, Charles also donated the castle of Beszterce (today Považský hrad in Slovakia) to Köcski, who was first referred to its castellan in early 1324, few months before his appointment as Judge royal. Thereafter the castle was considered an income accessory (honor) to that dignity until 1382.[21] In this capacity, Köcski was entrusted to establish a separate administrative division separating from Trencsén County. Under his control, the royal ispánate of Beszterce along the river Vág (Váh) was formed gradually in the 1320s. He hired schultheiß (soltész) officials to populate German settlers in the region.[22]