Denis of Hungary
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Denis | |
|---|---|
| Comes de Cepeз | |
| Lord of Canals and Crespins | |
| Reign | 1249–1268/72 |
| Predecessor | creation |
| Successor | Amor Dionís |
| Born | c. 1210 |
| Died | 1268/72 |
| Noble family | Hungary: Ampud's kinship or gens Báncsa (?) Aragon: Dionís (Dionisii) |
| Spouse | Margarida de Cabrera |
| Issue | Amor Gabriel Gracia Charles Elizabeth Margaret Peter (Lodomer) Jordana |
| Father | Denis, son of Ampud or Orbász Báncsa (?) |
Denis of Hungary (Latin: Dionisius de Ungaria, Hungarian: Magyarországi Dénes, Aragonese: Dionís d'Hongría, Catalan: Dionís d'Hongria, Spanish: Dionisio de Hungría; c. 1210 – 1268/72), was a Hungarian-born Aragonese knight and nobleman in the 13th century. Born into a prominent family in the Kingdom of Hungary, he escorted Queen Violant of Hungary to the Kingdom of Aragon in 1235, where he settled down and faithfully served James I of Aragon during the Reconquista. Integrating into the local elite, Denis was the eponymous ancestor of the prominent Dionís (Dionisii) noble family. In Canals, Valencia, a street is named after him.
Hungarian genealogist Mór Wertner was the first scholar in the late 19th century, who connected "Denis of Hungary" with the prominent lord Denis, son of Ampud, who was responsible for the economy policy and acted as key architect of the large-scale financial reforms during the reign of Andrew II of Hungary. He identified them with each other. According to Wertner, after Andrew's son and main opponent, Béla IV ascended the Hungarian throne in 1235, Denis, who fell out of favor in the royal court, escorted his "relative" Violant (also Yolanda), Andrew's youngest daughter, to the Kingdom of Aragon in 1235, where she became the queen consort of King James I of Aragon.[1]
However, according to the contemporaneous Roger of Torre Maggiore's Carmen Miserabile, Denis, son of Ampud was blinded by Béla IV immediately after his coronation, and he died in captivity in the next year. That Denis, who served the Aragonese royal couple, was alive even in 1268, which is also made impossible to identify him with Denis, son of Ampud. Therefore, historian Szabolcs de Vajay claimed Denis had a namesake son, who served as ispán of Szepes County, possibly sometime between 1231 and 1234 or 1235, like previously his father (based on the inscription on the tombstone of his daughter Elizabeth, where Denis was styled as "comes de Cepeз"), who was the first known office-holder of that dignity in Hungary.[2] Vajay refused the former compliance efforts of "Cepeз" with the Csepel Island, a major royal residence and hunting forest.[3] Accordingly he expatriated to Aragon with his queen in 1235, and after his father became a victim of King Béla's political purges, there was no hope for him to return to Hungary. This "Comes Dionysius" was referred to as Queen Violant's relative (Latin: affinis domne regine) in contemporary Aragonese documents.[2] His alleged father Denis, son of Ampud was indeed a relative of the Hungarian royal family: he was a son of Ampud II and an unidentified daughter of Count Berthold III of Andechs, Margrave of Istria. Through the maternal lineage, Denis was the first cousin of Gertrude of Merania, a daughter of Berthold IV and the first spouse of Andrew II of Hungary. Although Violant was born from the second marriage of Andrew (her mother was Yolanda of Courtenay), thus there was no blood relationship between the queen and Denis of Hungary according to this theory, but the knight clearly belonged to a wider kinship of the royal family.[4] Hungarian and Catalan historiography overall accepted Vajay's theory.[5][6]
In his 2018 study, Hungarian historian Dániel Bácsatyai disputed the above identification based on archival research. A certain cleric Charles, who attended the University of Bologna, was referred to as a nephew of Cardinal Stephen Báncsa in 1264, then a son of "Count Denis of Hungary" in 1269.[7] Consequently, Bácsatyai considered this Denis belonged to the gens (clan) Báncsa and was not related to Denis, son of Ampud. Accordingly, Denis was the brother of Cardinal Stephen Báncsa and was also a son of Orbász Báncsa. Bácsatyai argued the inscription on the tombstone of his daughter Elizabeth, where Denis was styled as "comes de Cepeз" is not necessarily identifiable with Szepes County. He also claimed the mention of kinship relations between Violant and Denis first appear only in the works of 16th-century historian Jerónimo Zurita y Castro.[8] Historian Gergely Kiss, who had previously written the biography of Cardinal Báncsa, accepted Bácsatyai's argument. Kiss analyzed the composition of Báncsa's household (familia) in the Roman Curia, and observed an unusually large proportion of clergy of Spanish nationality, which is due in part to the fraternal relationship with Denis, according to the historian.[9]
Career in Aragon

The wedding of James I and Violant took place in the Saint Eulalia Cathedral in Barcelona on 8 September 1235.[10] Vajay considered Denis was entrusted by the elderly king Andrew II shortly before his death to escort and protect his youngest daughter in the Iberian Peninsula.[11] Denis is appeared as leader of that Hungarian contingent, consisted of knights and young nobles, which escorted the queen to the Kingdom of Aragon. According to the records of the Llibre del Repartiment, several Hungarian knights served faithfully the royal couple beside "Count Denis", including certain Andreas Ungarus, Martinus Ungarus, R. Dungria, Johannes de Ongría, Egidius de Hungaria, Jacobus de Pilis and Simon de Stregonia [Esztergom], who all belonged to the queenly court.[5][12]
Queen Violant had an important political role and was one of the most valuable advisors of the king, on whom she had a strong influence. Shortly after the wedding, James I granted fiefdoms in "Beo" and "Ayn" to Denis. Historians identified these lands with Alcudia de Veo and Aín (present-day in the Province of Castellón) which laid on the northern slope of the Serra d'Espadà, and both lordships functioned as the king's preparations for the war along the borders of Aragon and Valencia.[2] Denis and the other Hungarian knights actively participated in the reconquest of Valencia and the surrounding areas after 1235. Finally, Valencia capitulated to Aragonese rule on 28 September 1238, following an extensive campaign against the Moors. James triumphantly entered the city with his wife Violant on 9 October 1238.[2] Denis' fiefdoms were confirmed in a perpetual and inheritance right (with tax exemption and free usage of local furnace and mill) on 24 January 1244.[13] After the reconquest, several members of the Hungarian contingent were granted landholdings, houses and orange groves in Valencia and the surrounding settlements, according to the Llibre del Repartiment. Most of them married Aragonese lady-in-waitings, integrating into the local nobility.[12]
After the capture of Valencia, Denis himself was granted a palace opening onto two streets in the city, near the residence of the Bishop of Valencia.[14] On 24 March 1249, King James donated the estate Canals, receiving the local tower and the small village, while the king created a new lordship, the Señorío de Torre de Canals for Denis and his kinship. Denis also became the lord of Crespins and owner of some estates in Xàtiva, in exchange for Alcudia de Veo and Aín, which the king took back for the Crown of Aragon, as it was recorded in the Llibre del Repartiment.[13] Canals and Crespins laid in the fertile valley of the river Cànyoles. In the latter place, Denis built a fortified turreted mansion.[14] Vajay considered the repossessed estates were of strategic importance in military terms, but were less profitable after the end of the war, thus, the exchange occurred in Denis' favor, and his new lordships were not mere compensation. The historian argued since then the signs of royal benevolence in favor of Denis continue to multiply, the beneficiary being designated for the most part as the "Count of Hungary", as he also names, very often, the many documents which, in the Crown Archives of Aragon, reflects his power and influence in the Aragonese royal court.[13] Despite Denis pursued a successful court and military career in Aragon, he did not renounce his old titles which referred to his former homeland, and still adorned himself more frequently as "count [...] from Hungary" than his new fiefdoms in the kingdoms of Valencia and Aragon.[15] Denis outlived his patron and lady, Queen Violant for decades, who died in 1251. He was still alive in 1265 and 1268, but was mentioned as a deceased person in 1272.[14] The issue of agreements concerning his inheritance with his widow and children appeared in contemporary records in 1276.[15]
