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Nicholas VII Hahót

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hungarian baron and soldier
Nicholas (VII) Hahót
Ban of Slavonia
Reign1343–1346
1353–1356
PredecessorMikcs Ákos (1st term)
Stephen Lackfi (2nd term)
SuccessorNicholas Szécsi (1st term)
Leustach Paksi (2nd term)
Born1290s
Died1359
Noble familyHahót
IssueStephen I Bánfi
Francis
Nicholas VIII
John I Bánfi
Nicholas I Bánfi
Ladislaus I Bánfi
FatherStephen I
MotherNPéc

Nicholas (VII) from the kindred Hahót (Hungarian:Hahót nembeli (VII.) Miklós; died 1359) was a Hungarian baron and soldier, who served asBan of Slavonia from 1343 to 1346 and from 1353 to 1356; andBan of Croatia from 1345 to 1346 and from 1353 to 1356. In this capacity, he played a key role in the restoration of the Hungariansuzerainty overCroatia. Also known asNicholas of Alsólendva (Hungarian:alsólendvai Miklós), he was the progenitor of the powerful Bánfi de Alsólendva noble family.

Ancestry

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Nicholas was born into the Hahold branch of thegens Hahót in the 1290s, as the only son ofStephen I, who was mentioned asispán ofVaraždin County in 1297,[1] and an unidentified daughter ofPalatineDenis Péc. Stephen Hahót was a loyal supporter ofAndrew III of Hungary, participating in several military campaigns againstAustria and the rivalKőszegi family inTransdanubia andSlavonia.

Hahold I, ancestor of the Hahóts

According to theIlluminated Chronicle which was written in the 1350s, when Nicholas' political career reached its peak, the ancestor of the Hahót kindred was a certain German knightHahold I (Nicholas' great-great-great-grandfather) who was a descendant of theCounts of Weimar-Orlamünde and settled down in theKingdom of Hungary in 1163 upon the invitation ofStephen III of Hungary to fight against usurper uncleStephen IV of Hungary and his allies, theCsáks.[2]

Majority of the historians rejected this interpretation. Elemér Mályusz identified the two geographical names withWartburg andMeissen inThuringia (Margravate of Meissen), noting that none of them were part of the estates of the House of Weimar-Orlamünde, which ruled Meissen from 1046 to 1067.[3] Endre Tóth tried to reconstruct the origin of the kindred based on the spread of the name Hahold in German-speaking areas. NearFreising, the name was relatively frequently used since the 8th century, in addition, it appeared altogether with the name Arnold in the 13th century, which was also used for four generations in the Hahót kindred.[4] Hahold's theory of origin had a long tradition, as theIlluminated Chronicle only preserved the narrative of the so-calledgesta of the age of KingStephen V of Hungary (r. 1270–72), compiled bymagisterÁkos.[3]

Nicholas' grandfatherHahold IV (fl. 1251–75) already styled himself "lord ofAlsólendva" (today Lendava,Slovenia) in 1272, proving that he owned and possibly built the castle himself by then. Asispán of Varaždin County, Stephen represented the royal power in that territory against overwhelming Kőszegi forces in the last years of Andrew III. Following the extinction of theÁrpád dynasty in 1301, royal power collapsed and a dozen lords, or "oligarchs", who had by that time achievedde facto independence of the monarch to strengthen their autonomy. One of these oligarchs of the last generation,John Kőszegi besieged and occupied Alsólendva around 1314 (formerly historians János Karácsonyi and Erik Fügedi incorrectly identifiedIvan Kőszegi as belligerent and set 1292 for the date of the siege).[5] Whether Stephen was still alive during this act, it is unknown as he disappeared from the sources after 1297, but his son Nicholas was first mentioned by contemporary records only in 1317.[6]

Early career

[edit]

As he participated in the unification war ofCharles I of Hungary against the oligarchs according to a royal charter, historian Éva B. Halász considered Nicholas was born in the first half of the 1290s.[7] From 1319 to 1323, he was frequently mentioned as royal squire and royal youth (Latin:aule iuvenis) in the court of Charles, and was called "vir nobilis magister Nicolaus", proving his lackland social status after the Kőszegis' military campaign. A "brave soldier", Nicholas was a loyal supporter of the young king as he could hope the recovery of lost family landholdings and castles only from a successful restoration of the strong royal power by Charles. According to the afore-mentioned royal charter from 1319, Nicholas fought in the war againstStefan Milutin,King of Serbia across the riverSava, when Charles I retook control overBelgrade and seized the fortress ofMacsó (today Mačva, Serbia) to restore theBanate of Macsó.[6] For his merits, Nicholas regained Alsólendva Castle and its surrounding villages fromCharles I of Hungary in 1323, who, as one of his charters concluded, Charles had taken "full possession" of his kingdom by that year and consolidated the royal supremacy over the whole country.[5] In the same year, Nicholas was referred toispán (i.e. judge) of the Queen's subjects. As a magistrate, he supervised the recovery and legal arrangement of the queenly estates which were arbitrarily usurped by the provincial lords in the previous decades.[8]

Alsólendva Castle, seat of Nicholas Hahót

In 1324, Nicholas was madeispán ofZala County. After the collapse of the Kőszegi dominion and restoration of the administrative function, his main task asispán was to represent the royal authority and to ensure stability and military consolidation at the Western border. He held the dignity for almost twenty years until 1343.[9] Internal peace and increasing royal revenues strengthened the international position of Hungary in the 1320s. On 13 February 1327, Charles andJohn of Bohemia signed an alliance against theHabsburgs, who had occupiedPressburg (todayBratislava,Slovakia). WhenOtto the Merry sought assistance and protection from Charles against his own brothers,Frederick the Fair andAlbert the Lame, Hungarian and Bohemian troops jointly invaded Austria in the summer of 1228. The Hungarian royal army was led byStephen Lackfi. Meanwhile, Nicholas Hahót commanded a smaller auxiliary unit intoStyria to defeat Ulrich I ofWalsee, who had earlier annexed theMuraköz (now Međimurje in Croatia). There Nicholas besieged and seized two castles, Haburne andPertlstein, but the whole region only returned under Hungarian suzerainty in 1337.[10]

Nicholas was among those appointed noble judges in May 1330, who has ruled over the kindredZáh, which one of notable members,Felician Záh had attempted to assassinate the royal family on 17 April 1330 inVisegrád. Following the trial, several members of the clan were imprisoned, executed or exiled.[11] From 1333 to 1343, Nicholas served asMaster of the horse in the queenly court ofElizabeth of Poland, the fourth and last wife of Charles.[12] In the upcoming decade, he was appointed as an ad litem judge in various lawsuits on several occasions, residing permanently in Visegrád, thencapital of theKingdom of Hungary.[11]

Ban of Slavonia and Croatia

[edit]

First term

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Charles I died on 16 July 1342. His sixteen-year-oldLouis I succeeded him, inheriting a centralized kingdom and a rich treasury from Charles. On 18 May 1343, Louis appointed Nicholas Hahót as Ban of Slavonia (his proper title was "Ban of the Whole of Slavonia"), replacingMikcs Ákos who died in office. According to a royal charter, Nicholas started his journey from Visegrád to Slavonia on the next day.[13] During the appointment, Nicholas was also grantedcastrumLenti, a former estate of the disgraced Kőszegis.[14] In the previous decades, Charles unsuccessfully attempted to reinstate royal authority in Croatia and Slavonia. Although the dominion ofMladen II Šubić collapsed in 1322, his strongest rivalJohn Nelipić expanded his dominance over South Croatia.[15] Charles ordered BanNicholas Felsőlendvai andStephen II Kotromanić to launch a joint offensive against Nelipić, but their expedition eventually failed. Years later Felsőlendvai's successor Mikcs Ákos invaded Croatia to subjugate the local lords who had seized the former castles of Mladen Subić without the king's approval, but John Nelipić routed the ban's troops in 1326. Consequently, royal power remained only nominal in Croatia during Charles's reign, while Slavonia was integrated into the royal crown.[15]

John Nelipić ruled almost whole Croatia beyondMount Gvozdde facto independently fromKnin until his death in 1344.[16] Following that Louis ordered Nicholas Hahót to launch a campaign to Croatia in the autumn of 1344 (Nicholas did not issue any diploma from August to November because of his military mandate). His army unhindered marched until the fortress Knin which was defended by Nelipić's widow Vladislava in the name of their minor son and heirJohn II. Nicholas did not attempt to besiege the castle, instead plundered surrounding lands and villages. Fearing from possibility of a prolonged siege, Vladislava asked for peace and swore allegiance to Louis.[16] TheRepublic of Venice which took advantage of the Croatian feudal anarchy for decades, and gained control overSplit andNin, acquiring most of the coast fromZrmanja River to the mouth of theCetina since the 1320s, tried to prevent the Hungarian expansion with diplomatic means.[16] The Venetians persuaded the widow not to hand over Knin to Nicholas' army, while aimed to establish an anti-Hungarian coalition among the Croatian lords and the Dalmatian coastal cities.[16] As a result, Louis personally marched acrossBihać to Croatia in July 1345 and forced Vladislava and her son to surrender without any military action took place.Gregory Kurjaković, Count of Corbavia and other Croatian noblemen also yielded to him during his stay inZagreb. In the name of his king, Nicholas Hahót negotiated with Vladislava on the terms of surrender, when she agreed to hand over four castles.[17] Thus Louis restored royal power in Croatia and pacified the country by the end of 1345.[6][18]

Image ofZadar (Zara) in theLate Middle Ages byConrad Grünenberg

Since August 1345, Nicholas Hahót styled himself Ban of Slavonia, Croatia and Dalmatia, merging the two positions and extending his influence to the Croatian territories as well to represent the royal authority.[19] This meant the restoration of the dignity of Ban of Croatia, which title was arbitrarily held for decades by theŠubići. Before Nicholas, the last person who served as Ban of Croatia, wasJohn Babonić for a short time in 1322.[20] The last one who was appointed by a Hungarian monarch and had actual function, wasNicholas Gutkeled in 1275.[21] Nicholas Hahót is the only known 14th-century ban, who concluded a chamber rental contract. He issued such a document on 11 November 1344 in Zagreb, when he leased the Slavonian chamber for 300banovac to five burghers: James, son of Vlfardus from Zagreb, in addition to brothers Nicholas, Raphael and Michael, sons of Paul, and Zuetk, son of Staulen, all four originated fromKoprivnica. Nicholas Hahót also signed a contract with them to transmit the banate's share of the collection of taxes for one-year deadline.[22]

The citizens ofZadar rebelled against the Republic of Venice and accepted Louis' suzerainty.[23] The city also sent its delegation to Zagreb, but delayed and Louis meanwhile returned to Visegrád. Venice decided to protect its interests in Dalmatia, obtained support or neutral positions of other Dalmatian – such as Nin,Dubrovnik,Trogir andRab – ports, gathered troops and unexpectedly started tobesiege the city and the surrounding castles on 12 August 1345.[18] According to reports, Nicholas Hahót personally mediated between Louis and Zadar, and encouraged the burghers to actively revolt.[24] Louis dispatched Stephen Kotromanić to assist the burghers of Zadar, but his army did not fight against the Venetians. According to a chronicle written by an anonymousMinorite friar, Venice bribed the Hungarian commanders, Stephen Kotromanić and Nicholas Hahót not to interfere in the skirmish.[25] Louis's brother,Andrew, Duke of Calabria, was murdered inAversa on 18 September 1345, which caused the emergence of theNeapolitan issue, marginalizing the Dalmatian campaign. In April 1346, Louis marched to Dalmatia to relieve Zadar, but the Venetians again bribed his commanders, Kotromanić, Lackfi and Hahót, according to the above-mentioned chronicle. When the citizens broke out and attacked the besiegers on 1 July, the royal army failed to intervene, and the Venetians overcame the defenders outside the walls of the town. Although the king commissioned Nicholas to organize the city's food supply, the ban belatedly and slowly fulfilled the task. As a result, the citizens considered him as a traitor. Lacking military support from Louis, Zadar surrendered to the Venetians on 21 December 1346.[26]

According to a charter, Nicholas wounded in the clashes against Venice at Zadar.[25] Few days after the failure in July, Louis dismissed him as Ban of Slavonia and Croatia and replaced withNicholas Szécsi, one of the most influential barons in the second half of the 14th century.[20][24] That fact could confirm the information of the Minorite friar in connection with the bribery. While historiansGyula Kristó,Pál Engel and Antal Pór accepted the friar's theory, B. Halász argued, Nicholas did not lost his political influence, as appeared as ad litem judge in several times atBuda throughout 1347, and also received land donations from Louis during that time. For Louis, theKingdom of Naples became a more important scene than Dalmatia and Zadar, where Nicholas Hahót, who had decades of military experience, could have provided a much greater service to the king, B. Halász emphasized.[25]

Second term

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The anonymous Minorite friar narrated in his work that Nicholas was among those barons who escorted Duke Andrew'sposthumous son, the infantCharles Martel, who was transferred from Naples to Visegrád in February 1348. Louis recognised his nephew as the legitimate ruler of Naples and also laid claim to the regency of the kingdom during the minority of Charles Martel. The king appointed Nicholas as the tutor of little duke, but Charles Martel died only three months after his arrival on 10 May 1348.[19] Around August 1349, Nicholas was madeispán of Zala County for the second time. He held that position until December 1351.[27]

In 1351, Louis made his youngest brotherStephen asDuke of Croatia and Dalmatia, before finally trusting him with the government of Slavonia in 1353. Stephen's political role was nevertheless rather insignificant, despite that he washeir presumptive after Charles Martel, his nephew's death. Louis reinstated Nicholas to the combined dignity of Ban of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia to administer the province on behalf of Duke Stephen in April 1353, replacing Stephen Lackfi, who died in office.[28] In the summer of 1354, both Duke Stephen and Ban Nicholas participated in Louis' military campaign against theSerbian Empire, forcingStefan Dušan to withdraw from the region along the river Sava. Duke Stephen died in a pandemic during the expedition on 9 August 1354.[19] The new-bornJohn was installed Duke of Slavonia after his father's death, with his motherMargaret as nominal regent, but in reality, Nicholas governed the province, Margaret and her son even resided in Buda until mid-1355.[19]

Taking advantage of the inner war within the Šubić clan, Louis determined to acquire the remaining Dalmatian cities. After the death ofMladen III Šubić in 1348,Klis andSkradin were ruled by his widowJelena, in the name of their son Mladen IV. She was unable to defend the cities from the many pretenders, she asked her brother Stefan Dušan for aid, who sent an army, led by knightPalman andĐuraš Ilijić, to defend Klis and Skradin, respectively. Louis entrusted Nicholas to launch a campaign against the forts in 1355. The Serbians were not able to hold out the pressure of the Hungarian army. Upon the king's order, Nicholas Hahót besieged and captured Klis andOmiš.[19][29] Following that Serbia started to disintegrate after the death of Stefan Dušan in December 1355.[30] A new war broke out between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Republic of Venice over Dalmatia in the spring of 1356 and the royal court decided to end the duchy of Slavonia's autonomy, Margaret was thus deprived of nominal regency. Despite his military success a few weeks ago, Nicholas was also dismissed from his dignity, replaced byLeustach Paksi.[28] In the next year, he was appointedMaster of the treasury in the court ofElizabeth of Bosnia, the second queen consort to Louis I.[31] Beside that he also functioned asispán of theSegesd queenly estate, laid inSomogy County.[32] Nicholas Hahót died in 1359.[22]

Family

[edit]
Ancestors of Nicholas VII Hahót[33][34]
16. Hahold II Hahót
8.Hahold III Hahót
17. Hahold II's first wife
4.Hahold IV Hahót
2.Stephen I Hahót
1.Nicholas VII Hahót
24.Lucas I Péc
12.George Péc
6.Denis Péc
3. N Péc

Nicholas Hahót had six sons and a daughter from his marriage to an unidentified noblewoman. His sons entered political service only in the 1360s, after their father's death. They started to call themselves Bánfi (or Bánffy) meaning the "son of a Ban" in reference to their influential and deeply respected father who had been the Ban of Dalmatia and Croatia and thus restored royal power over the country after seven decades. Two of Nicholas' sons, Stephen I and John I Bánfi themselves also served as Bans of Croatia jointly from 1381 to 1385, while the latter one was Ban of Macsó too between 1386 and 1387.[35] The powerful Bánfi family, which flourished until 1645, descended directly from John, as Stephen's branch became extinct after two generations.[33] Nicholas Hahót's other two sons, Francis and Nicholas VIII predeceased their father without issue, while Nicholas I Bánfi had three daughters, leaving no male heir. The sixth son Ladislaus' branch also died out after three generations, as his son Sigismund had at least six daughters but no son. Nicholas' only unidentified daughter married Henry Rohonci, a descendant of the Hahóts' archenemy, the Kőszegi family.[33]

References

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  1. ^Zsoldos 2011, p. 222.
  2. ^Tóth 2003, p. 267.
  3. ^abTóth 2003, p. 268.
  4. ^Tóth 2003, p. 280.
  5. ^abEngel 1996, p. 266.
  6. ^abcMarkó 2006, p. 451.
  7. ^B. Halász 2010, p. 7.
  8. ^Zsoldos 2005, p. 77.
  9. ^Engel 1996, p. 234.
  10. ^Kristó 1988, p. 74.
  11. ^abB. Halász 2010, p. 8.
  12. ^Engel 1996, p. 57.
  13. ^Engel 1996, p. 16.
  14. ^Engel 1996, p. 357.
  15. ^abFine 1994, p. 213.
  16. ^abcdKristó 1988, p. 99.
  17. ^Kristó 1988, p. 100.
  18. ^abKristó 1988, p. 101.
  19. ^abcdeB. Halász 2010, p. 10.
  20. ^abEngel 1996, p. 22.
  21. ^Zsoldos 2011, p. 48.
  22. ^abB. Halász 2010, p. 11.
  23. ^Fine 1994, p. 339.
  24. ^abMarkó 2006, p. 452.
  25. ^abcB. Halász 2010, p. 9.
  26. ^Kristó 1988, p. 105.
  27. ^Engel 1996, p. 235.
  28. ^abEngel 1996, p. 17.
  29. ^Engel 1996, p. 380.
  30. ^Fine 1994, p. 345.
  31. ^Engel 1996, p. 55.
  32. ^Engel 1996, p. 174.
  33. ^abcEngel:Genealógia (Genus Hahót 1.)
  34. ^Engel:Genealógia (Genus Péc 1., Zala branch)
  35. ^Markó 2006, p. 438.

Sources

[edit]
  • B. Halász, Éva (2010). "Hahót Miklós szlavón báni működése (1343–1356) [Nicholas Hahót as Ban of Slavonia (1343–1356)]". In G. Tóth, Péter; Szabó, Pál (eds.).Középkortörténti tanulmányok 6 (in Hungarian).University of Szeged. pp. 7–12.ISBN 978-963-306-006-3.
  • Engel, Pál (1996).Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1301–1457, I.[Secular Archontology of Hungary, 1301–1457, Volume I] (in Hungarian). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete.ISBN 963-8312-44-0.
  • Fine, John V. A (1994).The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. The University of Michigan Press.ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
  • Kristó, Gyula (1988).Az Anjou-kor háborúi[Wars in the Age of the Angevins] (in Hungarian). Zrínyi Kiadó.ISBN 963-326-905-9.
  • Markó, László (2006).A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig: Életrajzi Lexikon[Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days: A Biographical Encyclopedia] (in Hungarian). Helikon Kiadó.ISBN 963-208-970-7.
  • Tóth, Endre (2003). "Hoholt – Hahót: A jövevény nemzetségek eredetéhez [Hoholt – Hahót: On the Origin of the Foreign Kindreds]".Századok (in Hungarian).137 (2). Magyar Történelmi Társulat:265–296.ISSN 0039-8098.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2005).Az Árpádok és asszonyaik. A királynéi intézmény az Árpádok korában[The Árpáds and their Women: The Institution of Queenship in the Era of the Árpáds] (in Hungarian). MTA Történettudományi Intézete.ISBN 963 8312 98 X.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2011).Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1000–1301[Secular Archontology of Hungary, 1000–1301] (in Hungarian). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete.ISBN 978-963-9627-38-3.
Nicholas VII
Born:  ? Died: 1359
Political offices
Preceded byBan of Slavonia
1343–1346
Succeeded by
VacantBan of Croatia
1345–1346
Preceded byBan of Slavonia
1353–1356
Succeeded by
Ban of Croatia
1353–1356
Succeeded by
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