Demetrius Nánabeszter
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Demetrius Nánabeszter | |
|---|---|
| Died | between 1270 and 1277 |
| Buried | St. John monastery in Buda |
| Noble family | gens Nánabeszter |
| Father | Beszter |
Demetrius from the kindred Nánabeszter (Hungarian: Nánabeszter nembeli Demeter; died between 1270 and 1277) was a Hungarian nobleman in the 13th century.
Demetrius was born into the gens (clan) Nánabeszter, which possessed landholdings along the river Danube in Central Hungary, in the surrounding area of royal capitals Esztergom and Buda. His father was Beszter (or Bezter), who was mentioned as a living person by a single document in 1228. Demetrius had a brother Mérk (or Merkh) and a sister Maria, who married Andrew Hont-Pázmány from his clan's Forgách branch.[1] Demetrius and his unidentified wife had no male descendants.
Career
It is plausible that Demetrius was a skilled soldier, who participated in various campaigns during the reign of Béla IV of Hungary. According to his last will and testament (see below), he possessed four coats of armor in an unknown composition and quality, which he once used in battles.[2] Demetrius possessed landholdings in Sóskút, the kindred's ancient estates Nána and Berki (which laid in the territory of present-day Érd), and, furthermore, a land called Teremecs in Nyitra County (present-day Chrenová, a borough of Nitra in Slovakia) as a royal endowment, which he may have been received after his faithful military service.[3]
His relative (cousin?), the childless Nana III entered the Dominican friars shortly before 1266 and donated his portion in Sóskút to the Dominican nuns at Rabbits' Island in that year.[1] Demetrius – who also owned a portion in Sóskút – filed a lawsuit against the donation in 1266, because, being the closest living relative, he should have inherited the estate after the death of the childless Nana.[3] In his royal charter, King Béla IV ensured the rights of the Dominican nuns, but he prescribed an agreement between the two parties. Demetrius and the nunnery concluded an arrangement in 1270.[4] Accordingly, Demetrius could retain the estate until his death as a usufructuary, but if he dies without a legitimate heir, the portion would automatically fall into the possession of the Dominican nuns.[3] Demetrius ought to try to keep the inherited estates within the clan and endeavor to for their possessions into single coherent areas in Central Hungary, similarly to his contemporaries.[3]