Nicholas Kán

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Installed1273
1276
Term ended1273
1278
PredecessorPhilip Türje (1st)
Benedict (2nd)
SuccessorBenedict (1st)
Lodomer (2nd)
Nicholas Kán
Archbishop-elect of Esztergom
Installed1273
1276
Term ended1273
1278
PredecessorPhilip Türje (1st)
Benedict (2nd)
SuccessorBenedict (1st)
Lodomer (2nd)
Other post(s)Provost of Transylvania
Personal details
DiedDecember 1279
NationalityHungarian
DenominationRoman Catholic
ParentsLadislaus I Kán

Nicholas from the kindred Kán (Hungarian: Kán nembeli Miklós; died December 1279) was a Hungarian prelate in the second half of the 13th century, who served as Archbishop-elect of Esztergom in 1273, and from 1276 until 1278. Simultaneously, he held various posts in the royal chancellery. As a loyal partisan of queen regent Elizabeth, he was an active participant in the feudal anarchy, when groupings of barons fought against each other for supreme power during the minority of king Ladislaus IV. For which, papal legate Philip of Fermo excommunicated him.

Nicholas was born into the Transylvanian branch of the gens (clan) Kán, as the son of Ladislaus I Kán, Palatine of Hungary and unidentified noblewoman.[1] His grandfather was Julius I Kán, the founder of the branch. Nicholas had two brothers, Ladislaus II, who functioned as Voivode of Transylvania and Judge royal twice,[2] and Julius III, who possibly was killed in the 1260s civil war.[3] Nicholas also had a sister, name unknown, who married Alexander Aba. They were the parents of Demetrius Nekcsei and ancestors of the Nekcsei family.[4]

In contemporary records, his name is referred to with the honorary title of "magister", demonstrating his education and skills in science.[5] By the early 1260s, he joined the court of the king's eldest son Duke Stephen, who governed Transylvania and adopted the title of junior king. Stephen's relationship with his father Béla IV deteriorated by the early 1260s. While Nicholas' brothers Ladislaus and Julius betrayed Stephen and defected to the royal court in 1264,[6] Nicholas remained loyal to the duke, even after the emerging civil war between father and son.[7] For his service, Duke Stephen appointed him provost of Transylvania in 1265, holding the office until 1276.[1] In the next year, when Smaragd of Kalocsa died, Nicholas succeeded him as chancellor of Stephen's court.[8] He issued two royal charters in this capacity.[9] However, as a royal charter issued in 1267 narrates, Nicholas soon left Stephen's province to join Béla's partisans.[7] Although confidence was never restored between Béla and Stephen, the political situation has stabilized by the last regnal years of the old monarch. Soon, Nicholas became a confidant of Stephen's spouse, Queen Elizabeth the Cuman. In 1272, he is referred to as her vice-chancellor, but it is possible that he already held the office under the direction of chancellor Philip, Bishop of Vác in the queenly court since 1270, when Stephen V ascended the Hungarian throne.[10]

In the feudal anarchy

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI