Lampert Hermán

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Reign1314–1324
PredecessorJohn Csák
Died4–5 July 1324
near Küküllő River (?), Transylvania, Kingdom of Hungary
Lampert Hermán
Seal of Lampert Hermán, 1322
Judge royal
Reign1314–1324
PredecessorJohn Csák
SuccessorAlexander Köcski
Died4–5 July 1324
near Küküllő River (?), Transylvania, Kingdom of Hungary
Noble familygens Hermán
FatherEmeric

Lampert from the kindred Hermán (Hungarian: Hermán nembeli Lampert; died 4–5 July 1324) was an influential Hungarian nobleman who served as Judge royal from 1314 until his death. He belonged to Charles I of Hungary's "new aristocracy", who supported the king's efforts to restore royal power in the first decades of the 14th century.

During the 10 years of his period in office, Lampert stabilised the royal judicial system and the more the armed unification of the kingdom expanded the local space of royal authority, the more the territorial jurisdiction of Lampert expanded. His tenure as Judge royal marked the gradual stabilization of the operation of the judicial institution.

Lampert was born into the gens (clan) Hermán. His parents are unidentified, as a result there is inability to connect his person to the three known branches of the clan. Perhaps his grandfather or other kind of direct relative was Rubinus, a successful soldier of Ladislaus IV of Hungary, who also elevated to the position of Judge royal in the 1280s.[1] A royal document from 1323 referred to Lampert as son of Emeric, whose identity is uncertain.[2] Lampert had a sister,[3] who married a certain Thomas, son of Ihon.[2] According to Simon Kézai's Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum, the ancestor of the Hermán kindred, knight Herman originated from Nuremberg, who escorted Gisela of Bavaria to Hungary in 996. She married Stephen I of Hungary, the future first King of Hungary. Following that Herman received land donations in Vas County. Both Simon of Kéza and the 14th-century Illuminated Chronicle described the Hermán kindred as "relatively poor".[4] Lampert was exclusively styled as "magister" in the contemporary documents, even when he held various ispánates ("comes") beside his dignity of Judge royal. This maybe reflects his lowborn origin, in comparison to the other barons of the royal court.[5]

His inherency to the Hermán kindred was proved by his seal which appeared in a document dated on 29 September 1313. His seal was first published by historian Imre Nagy in 1878. Previously Vilmos Fraknói claimed Lampert was a member of the Hont-Pázmány clan. Albert Nyári called him "Leszenyei", while Mór Wertner connected his person to the Csanád kindred, based on his last will and testament, where the historian identified his land property with locations in Krassó County, where the Csanáds owned the majority of the land.[4] Historian János Karácsonyi recognized the dragon depiction in Lampert's seal and proved his origin.[6] His degree of kinship to contemporary relative Lack Hermán, ancestor of the Lackfi family, is unknown, but their lands were located close to each other.[7] Lampert's lands laid in Temes County, belonging to the local nobility surrounding the provisional royal centre Temesvár (present-day Timișoara, Romania), as historian Ildikó Tóth considered.[8] However, it is also possible he acquired his possessions there only after Charles decided to move his seat to Temesvár, and had not interests in the region prior to that. According to a document issued in 1319, he bought Széphely (present-day Jebel, Romania) and Sajtos from Theodore Vejtehi sometimes earlier, and the king donated three other surrounding villages to Lampert, compensating the former oligarch Vejtehi with lands in Csanád County.[2]

Judge royal

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