Sigismund Ernuszt | |
|---|---|
| Bishop of Pécs | |
Coat-of-arms of Sigismund Ernuszt | |
| Province | Esztergom |
| Diocese | Pécs |
| Appointed | 1473 |
| Term ended | 1505 |
| Predecessor | Janus Pannonius |
| Successor | George Szatmári |
| Personal details | |
| Born | |
| Died | summer 1505 |
| Buried | Pécs |
| Nationality | Hungarian |
| Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Sigismund Ernuszt (Hungarian:csáktornyai Ernuszt Zsigmond;c. 1445;– summer 1505) wasBishop of Pécs in the Kingdom of Hungary from 1473 to 1505. Ernuszt was alsoBan of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia from 1494 to 1498. He was the son ofJohn Ernuszt, a converted Jew, who started his career as a custom's duty collector during the reign ofMatthias Corvinus,King of Hungary. Sigismund studied at the universities of Vienna and Ferrara in the early 1470s. When the king made him bishop of Pécs, the Holy See confirmed him as the administrator of the diocese, but he was most probably neverordained bishop. Matthias Corvinus also tasked him with the administration of the newly conqueredArchduchy of Austria in 1486.
After Matthias's death, he was the only bishop to support the bid of Matthias's illegitimate son,John Corvinus, for the throne. After the united armies of Corvinus's supporters were defeated in thebattle of Bonefield, he swore fealty toVladislaus II Jagiellon. The new king made himroyal treasurer in 1494, but he was dismissed after being accused ofembezzlement at theDiet of Hungary in 1496. Pécs Cathedral and the castle atPécs were renovated during his tenure. His threeretainers strangled him to seize his wealth.
Sigismund was the elder son ofJohn Ernuszt (also known as John Hampó) and his wife, Catherine.[1] He was born around 1445.[1] His father was aJew from Vienna who moved toBuda.[2] He converted toRoman Catholicism by 1457.[3][4] Ten years later,Matthias Corvinus,King of Hungary, made him royal treasurer.[2]
Sigismund began his studies at theUniversity of Vienna in or shortly before 1470.[1] He was madeprovost of theBudafelhévíz Chapter around the same time.[1] He studied at theUniversity of Ferrara between 1471 and 1473.[1] One of his professors, Ludovico Carbone, published their conversations about Matthias Corvinus as a literary dialogue.[5] Ernuszt was famed for his erudition among theRenaissance humanist scholars who visited Hungary in the late 15th century.[1]
Matthias Corvinus appointed Ernusztbishop of Pécs in September 1473, although he had not beenordainedpriest.[1] The king also granted the royal castle inPécs to him.[1] Three months later, the Holy See made Ernusztapostolic administrator of the diocese.[1] His father, who died in 1476, urged him in his last will to achieve his ordination, but no documents evidence that he actually received the sacrament.[6] Ernuszt began the renovation of Pécs Cathedral at the request of his dying father.[7] He also fortified his castle atĐurđevac.[8]
TheSzékesfehérvár Chapter obstructed Ernuszt'scanonical visitations to its estates in theBishopric of Pécs and forbade the local priests from attending the episcopal synods.[9] The chapter emphasized that its estates were exempt from the jurisdiction of all bishops in Hungary, but Ernuszt persuaded the Holy See to strengthen his authority over the parishes in question in 1478.[9] He made one Anton (who was the titular Bishop of Megara) hiscoadjutor bishop in 1480 to secure the spiritual administration of the Pécsdiocese.[9]
Ernuszt was one of Matthias Corvinus' closest advisors.[10] He urged the Holy See to grant theZebegény Abbey in Baranya County to him in 1483.[11] The king gave him a precious bowl in 1486.[10] In the same year, Ernuszt (who spoke German) was made the captain-general or the deputy of the captain-general ofArchduchy of Austria, which had recently been occupied by the king.[12][10] Ernuszt loaned 1000 gold florins to Matthias's queen,Beatrice of Naples.[10]

Matthias Corvinus died on 6 April 1490.[13] Ernuszt seizedPécsvárad Abbey, which had been held by the absent CardinalAscanio Sforza,[14] but soon hurried to Buda to attend the Diet which assembled in late May to elect Matthias's successor.[15] He was the only bishop to be willing to support Matthias's illegitimate son,John Corvinus, in his bid for the throne.[16]
Ernuszt soon realized that most barons and prelates preferredVladislaus Jagiellon,King of Bohemia.[10][17] To prevent the coronation of Vladislaus, he andLawrence Újlaki left Buda taking theHoly Crown of Hungary and the royal treasury with them.[10][17]Đorđe Branković, Nicholas Hédervári, and other barons (mainly those who held estates along the southern borders) joined them.[18][19] However, Vladislaus's supporters,Stephen Báthory andPaul Kinizsi, assembled their troops and defeated the united armies of Ernuszt and his allies atGyönk on 4 July.[18][19]
Ernuszt was forced to return the Holy Crown to the Estates of the realm.[18] He also attended Vladislaus's coronation in Székesfehérvár in September.[20] The new king granted him John Corvinus's two former estates, Futak and Cserög (nowFutog andČerević in Serbia).[21]
Maximilian of Habsburg, who had also laid claim to Hungary after Matthias Corvinus's death, invaded Hungary in November.[22] He borrowed 30,000 gold florins from the wealthy Ernuszt and offered theArchbishopric of Salzburg to him.[23] Ernuszt entered into negotiations with Reinprecht von Reichenburg, the commanders of Maximilian's army in Hungary, but refrained from providing military assistance to him against Vladislaus' troops.[23] Instead, he stayed at Pécs and Đurđevac and came to an agreement withLadislaus Egervári, Ban of Croatia, over the mutual defense of their estates.[23]

Maximilian of Habsburg renounced his claim to Hungary in thePeace of Pressburg on 7 November 1491.[22] Ernuszt was one of the bishops who ratified the peace treaty at the Diet on 7 March 1492.[23] Vladislaus made him royal treasurer in 1494.[21] In the same year, Ernuszt and Ladislaus Kanizsai were jointly appointedBans of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia.[24]
Ernuszt and his younger brother,John Ernuszt, made several attempts to regain the estates that Matthias Corvinus had confiscated from their father in the early 1470s.[25] They persuaded him to give them their father's former copper mines at Besztercebánya (nowBanská Bystrica in Slovakia) in 1494.[25] Soon after, they leased the mines toJohn and George Thurzó for 10 years.[25] They also regained Szklabonya (Sklabiná in Slovakia) from Anton Poki, a retainer of John Corvinus.[25] The Ernuszt brothers, who held more than 3,500 peasant households, were among the wealthiest landowners in Hungary in 1494.[25]
Ernuszt also rented out the royal copper mines at Besztercebánya to theThurzós for 12 years on 26 December 1494.[26] The Thurzós and the bankerJakob Fugger established a joint venture, namedUngarischer Handel ("Hungarian Trade"), to exploit the mines.[27] According toAntonio Bonfini, Ernuszt persuaded the king to launch a campaign against Lawrence Újlaki who had captured Futak and Cserög.[28] Újlaki was forced to pay homage to the king at Pécs on 27 March 1495, and to return the two estates to Ernuszt.[21]
At the Diet in 1496, Ernuszt was accused of havingembezzled royal tax revenues.[24][29] The king dismissed him and his deputy, Emeric Dombai, at the demand of the Estates.[21] They were imprisoned atSiklós.[21] He was released only after he paid a large ransom, amounting to 400,000 or 320,000 gold florins, according to Bonfini andLudovicus Tubero, respectively.[21] Ernuszt remained Ban of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia until 1498 and continued to preserve his seat at the Royal Council.[21][24] He ordered the renovation and modernization of the castle in Pécs in late 1490.[8] Thebarbican was built in this period.[8] He sponsored the publication ofmissals for his priests in 1487 and 1499.[9] He also employed aPauline monk to copy old codices in his palace.[9]
Ernuszt was strangled in the summer of 1505[14] by his three retainers (including Albert Cupi, Dean of Baranya) who wanted to seize his wealth.[14] His brother, John Ernuszt, brought charges against the assassins, but they were never sentenced.[14] Cupi was even employed by Ernuszt's successor,George Szatmári.[14] During the investigation which followed his murder, 300,000 gold florins were found and confiscated for the royal treasury.[24]
Ernuszt's accounts of his activity as royal treasurer have been preserved.[30] The accounts cover the period between 1 February 1494 and 31 December 1495.[31] The document is an important source of demographic, economic, and cultural research of late medieval Hungary.[31] The accounts contain a detailed record of the one-florin tax assessed in Hungary proper,Transylvania and Slavonia in 1494 and 1495 which was to be paid by each peasant household.[32] They do not contain data for the fourteen southerncounties in Hungary proper, because theispán (or head) ofTemes County, who was responsible for the defence of the southern border, was entitled to spend the royal income from the one-florin tax assessed in this region.[32] The peasants in southern Slavonia were also exempt from the one-florin tax because of the frequent Ottoman raids in this region.[32]
Sigismund Born: c. 1445 Died: Summer 1505 | ||
| Catholic Church titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Bishop of Pécs 1473–1505 | Succeeded by |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Royal treasurer 1494–1496 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia alongsideLadislaus Kanizsai (1494–1495) andJohn Corvinus (1495–1498) 1494–1498 | Succeeded by |
| Ban of Slavonia alongsideLadislaus Kanizsai (1494–1495) andGeorge Kanizsai (1497–1498) 1494–1498 | Succeeded by | |