Nicholas I Kőszegi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reign1275
1276–1277
1284–1285
1289
1291
1294–1295
1296
1297–1298
Bornc. 1240
Died1299
Nicholas (I) Kőszegi
Palatine of Hungary
Reign1275
1276–1277
1284–1285
1289
1291
1294–1295
1296
1297–1298
Bornc. 1240
Died1299
Noble familyHouse of Kőszegi
IssueNicholas II
John Béri
FatherHenry I
MotherHenry's first wife

Nicholas (I) Kőszegi (Hungarian: Kőszegi (I.) Miklós, Croatian: Nikola Gisingovac; died 1299) was a Hungarian influential lord in the second half of the 13th century. He was a member of the powerful Kőszegi family. He served as Palatine of Hungary at various times between 1275 and 1298. He was also Ban of Slavonia three times. Albeit he participated in several rebellions against the royal power, he proved to be more moderate and conformist than his younger brothers. He swore loyalty to Andrew III of Hungary after their failed rebellion in 1292. In comparison to the other branches of the Kőszegi family, Nicholas' branch remained relatively insignificant, as he did not establish an oligarchic province independently of the king, unlike his brothers. Nicholas was ancestor of the Rohonci family, which flourished until the mid-15th century.

Nicholas I was born in the 1240s into the wealthy and influential Kőszegi family, originating from the gens (clan) Héder, as the eldest son of the powerful lord Henry I Kőszegi. His younger brothers were Ivan, Henry II – who were also elevated into high dignities during the age of the late Árpáds – and Peter, the Bishop of Veszprém from 1275 till his murder in 1289.[1]

His marriage to an unidentified noblewoman produced two sons. The elder one was Nicholas II (also "the Rooster"), who inherited his domains and became ancestor of the Rohonci family (then Ludbregi), which flourished until the middle of the 15th century, but was declared disgraced by King Sigismund in 1403. According to genealogist Pál Engel, Nicholas also had another son, John, whose only known son Nicholas was mentioned with the surname "Béri" by a single document in 1368.[2]

Early career

Nicholas Kőszegi first appeared in contemporary records in March 1265, when he participated in the Battle of Isaszeg alongside his father Henry and brother Ivan. During the civil war between Béla IV of Hungary and his son Duke Stephen, Nicholas' father was a staunch supporter of the king and led the royal army against the duke. However Stephen gained a decisive victory over his father's army, and Henry Kőszegi and his two sons were captured.[3] The Kőszegis were being held as prisoners and after the Battle of Isaszeg, Béla IV was forced to accept the authority of Stephen in the eastern parts of the kingdom. On 23 March 1266, father and son confirmed the peace in the Convent of the Blessed Virgin on 'Rabbits' Island and Henry and his two sons, alongside others, were released from captivity.[4] When Stephen V ascended the Hungarian throne in May 1270, following his father's death, several barons, including Henry and his sons handed over their castles along the western borders to Ottokar II. They had spent the next two years in exile at Ottokar's court in Prague.[5] Their departure caused a war between Hungary and Bohemia, which lasted until the conclusion of an agreement in Pressburg in July 1271.[6]

Henry Kőszegi and his sons returned from Bohemia to Hungary following Stephen's death in the summer of 1272. His ten-year-old son Ladislaus IV ascended the throne. During his minority, many groupings of barons fought against each other for supreme power. The arriving Henry Kőszegi brutally murdered Ladislaus' cousin, Béla of Macsó, the only adult male member of the Árpád dynasty. The Kőszegis entered alliance with the Gutkeleds and the Geregyes, forming one of the two main baronial groups (the other one was dominated by the Csák and Monoszló clans). Nicholas' father became a key figure in the early stage of the era of so-called feudal anarchy. When Henry extended his dominance in the royal council, Nicholas served as ispán of Szana County in Lower Slavonia, from 1273 to 1274, where his father acted as ban.[7] Nicholas participated in the Bohemian–Hungarian War in 1273, under the commandment of his father. He was present at Laa in August 1273, when Henry's army looted the surrounding town for two days.[8] Subsequently, Nicholas was styled as ispán of Rojcsa (today Rovišće, Croatia), which laid in the territory of Križevci (Kőrös) County, in the period between 1274 and 1279.[9] In late September 1274, Peter Csák defeated the united forces of the Kőszegis and the Gutkeleds at the Battle of Föveny. Henry Kőszegi was killed, but his sons Nicholas and Ivan managed to flee the battlefield, withdrawing their troops to the borderlands between Hungary and Austria. Thereafter Peter Csák and the young Ladislaus IV gathered an army against the Kőszegis' domain in the autumn of 1274; their troops marched into Western Hungary, pillaging the brothers' landholdings. Nicholas and Ivan barricaded themselves in the castle of Szalónak (present-day Stadtschlaining, Austria). The royal army besieged the fort, but failed to capture it because of the coming winter. Through his ambitious and unscrupulous sons, the Kőszegi family survived their paterfamilias' death.[10][11]

Powerful baron

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI