lunes, 10 de mayo de 2021

Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary ★ Ref: PH-845 |•••► #HUNGRIA 🏆🇭🇺★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


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31 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary is your 31st great grandfather and ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály Prince Michael of Hungary is your 25th great grandfather


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(Linea Paterna) 

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Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary is your 31st great grandfathof→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna 

your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar 

his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas 

her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar 

her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García 

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva 

his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero 

his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens 

his father →  Isabel de Requesens 

his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda 

her father →  D. Estefania de Requesens, III Condesa de Palamós 

his mother → Hipòlita Roís de Liori i de Montcada 

her mother →  Beatriz de Montcada i de Vilaragut 

her mother →  Pedro de Montcada i de Luna, Señor de Villamarchante 

her father → Elfa de Luna y de Xèrica 

his mother →  Pedro Martínez de Luna y Saluzzo, señor de Almonacid y Pola 

her father →  Pedro Martínez de Luna 

his father → Violante de Alagon 

his mother →  D. Teresa de Aragón 

her mother →  Pedro III el Grande, rey de Aragón 

her father →  Violante de Hungría, reina consorte de Aragón 

his mother →  Árpád(házi) II. András - Andrew II, King of Hungary 

her father →  Árpád(házi) III. Béla király, King of Hungary & Croatia 

his father → Geza II, king of Hungary 

his father →  Bela II "The Blind", king of Hungary 

his father →  prince Álmos Árpád(házi), Prince of Hungary & Duke of Croatia 

his father → Géza I of Hungary 

his father →  Béla I of Hungary 

his father →  Vazul "the Bald" 

his father →  ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály 

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father → Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians 

his father →  Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father 



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ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály Prince Michael of Hungary is your 25th great grandfather. You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina, Teniente Coronel

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo

her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel

her father → Sancha Manuel

his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes

her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona

his father → Elizabeth of Swabia

his mother → Philip of Swabia

her father → Friedrich I Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor

his father → Judith of Bavaria

his mother → Wulfhilda of Saxony

her mother → Sophia of Hungary

her mother → Béla I, king of Hungary

her father → Vazul "the Bald"

his father → ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father → Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians 

his father →  Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father 


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Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary MP 

Gender: Male

Birth: circa 845 

Etelköz, Kazár birodalom -

Death: July 907 (58-66) 

Óbuda (now part of Budapest), Magyarország - Hungary

Place of Burial: Fehéregyháza?, Magyarország - Hungary

Immediate Family:

Son of Álmos, Chief of the Magyars 

Husband of Abacil? of the Magyars 

Father of ÁRPÁD(házi) Üllő - Jeleg - Jelek, Prince of Hungary; ÁRPÁD(házi) Liüntika - Levente (?~907), Prince of Hungary; ÁRPÁD(házi) Tarhos - Tarhacsi - Tarkacsu; ÁRPÁD(házi) Jutas - Jutocsa; ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes and 4 others 

Brother of Kurszán Kende? of the Magyars and Szabolcs of the Magyars 

Added by: Ricky Patterson on June 26, 2007

Managed by:   Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 105 others

Curated by: FARKAS Mihály László

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Árpád (Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈaːrpaːd]; c. 845 – c. 907) was the head of the confederation of the Hungarian tribes at the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries. He might have been either the sacred ruler or kende of the Hungarians, or their military leader or gyula, although most details of his life are debated by historians, because different sources contain contradictory information. Despite this, many Hungarians refer to him as the "founder of our country", and Árpád's preeminent role in the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin has been emphasized by some later chronicles. The dynasty descending from Árpád ruled the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301. (Wikipedia)


MedLands

ÁRPÁD (-907). The Gestis Hungarorum Liber names "Arpad" as son of "Almus" & his wife, specifying that his father brought him "in Pannoniam"[206]. The Gesta Hungarorum records that "Hunni sive Hungari" divided into seven armies, each having 30,000 warriors and a single commander, and that "Arpad, filius Almi filii Elad filii Vger de genere Turul" was the most powerful of the seven Hungarian commanders[207]. As leader of part of the Magyar armies, he crossed the Verecke and other passes in 895 into the fields of the Carpathian basin[208]. The Gestis Hungarorum Liber records that "Arpad dux" invaded "terram…inter Thisciam et Budrug usque ad Ugosam" and besieged "castrum Borsoa"[209]. The Gesta Hungarorum records that Árpád was the first Hungarian commander to cross the Ruthenian Alps and settle by the river Ung before crossing the Danube and entering Pannonia where he set up his tent "ubi…Albensis civitatas [Székesfehérvár]" was founded[210]. The Gestis Hungarorum Liber records the death of "dux Arpad" in 807[211], presumably an error for 907. m ---. The name of Árpád's wife is not known.


http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HUNGARY.htm

Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81rp%C3%A1d

https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81rp%C3%A1d_magyar_fejedelem

Árpád-ház

Az Árpád-ház családfája

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%A9n%C3%A9alogie_des_%C3%81rp%C3%A1d

---


http://genealogy.euweb.cz/arpad/arpad1.html


Arpad family

The Magyars were a nomadic tribe who plundered Europe in late 9th/early 10th centuries


One Ügyek; m.Emese, dau.of Pr Önedbelia of Dentümoger; they had a son:


Álmos, *820, +Transylvania ca 895, had a son: Árpád, Prince of Hungary, +907; he settled in what is now Hungary in about 900, though they continued to ravage western Europe til their defeat by Emperor Otto I in 955.


He had issue:


A1. Liüntika (Levente), Pr of Hungary ?, living 895

A2. Tarkatzus (Tarhos) his son: B1. Teveli; his son: Tormás (Termatzus), lived in Byzantium, +k.a. VIII.955; his son: D1. Koppány, Duke in Somogy, +k.a.997/8

A3. Jelekh (Üllő) "the Epicure"

A4. Jutotzas (Jutas); his son: B1. Falitzi (Fajsz), Prince of Hungary (948-955), +ca 955 and B2. Tas, living 950

A5. Zaltas (Zoltán), Prince of Hungary (907-948); his son:

B1. Taksony, Prince of Hungary (955-ca 972), *ca 905, +ca 972 Taksony had two sons

C1. Géza, Great Prince of Hungary (ca 972-997), *ca 945, +1.2.997 and

C2. Mihály (Michael), Duke between March and Gran, +ca 978/before 997

and more Descendants


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Árpád

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Grand Prince of the Magyars


Statue of Árpád


Reign c. 895 – c. 907


Predecessor Álmos


Successor Zoltán


Father Álmos


Mother Unknown


Born c. 845


Died c. 907


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (Hungarians) (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


His life


Árpád and the six other chieftains of the Magyars. From the Chronicon Pictum, 1360.


Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos (Grand Prince of the Magyars), leader of the Hungarian tribal federation; his mother's name and descent is unknown[1].


The emergence of the Magyar tribes and their leaders is a specific period in the history of the Hungarian people that refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a people separate and identifiable from other Ugric speakers (1000-500 BC) up until their occupation and settlement of the Carpathian Basin around 896 AD (Hungarian: Honfoglalás)[2].


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor, Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria.


In the spring of next year, the Magyar tribes attacked the Bulgarian Empire and defeated Emperor Simeon I, obliging him to conclude peace with the Byzantine Empire. Emperor Simeon, however, entered into an alliance with the Pechenegs, who were the eastern neighbours of the Hungarian tribal federation, and he made an attack against the Magyar troops. In the Battle of Southern Buh, Emperor Simeon I defeated their army; shortly afterwards, the Pechenegs attacked and pillaged their territories. The Magyar tribes were obliged to leave Etelköz and move to the Carpathian Basin where they settled down (Honfoglalás).


The Magyars led by Árpád crossing the Carpathians - a detail of the Arrival of the Hungarians by Árpád Feszty et al. oil on canvas cyclorama (Ópusztaszer National Memorial Site, Hungary)


The circumstances of Álmos' death are unclear. The leaders of the seven Hungarian tribes proclaimed Árpád to Grand Prince of the Magyars[3]; therefore Árpád is considered traditionally to lead the Honfoglalás ("the occupation of the country")[4].


In 896 the Hungarian tribes occupied the Upper Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in 900/901 they moved to Pannonia[5]. The Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 may have represented about 200,000–250,000 people.


Based on Arabic sources, Árpád's title seems to have been kende[6] or gyula. In that time kende was the spiritual leader of the Magyar tribes, while the gyula led their military campaigns. According to legends, Árpád hold the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.


Children


* Levente

* Tarhos (Tarkacsu) (? – ?)

* Üllő (Jeleg) (? – ?)

* Jutocsa (Jutas) (? – ?)

* Zoltán of Hungary (? – c. 947)

Legacy


Monument of Árpád in Ópusztaszer, Hungary


Although the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary was not Árpád (as he lived a century earlier) - but his descendant Saint Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as our father Árpád (Hungarian: Árpád apánk). Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.


Sources


* Kristó, Gyula - Makk, Ferenc: Az Árpád-ház uralkodói (IPC Könyvek, 1996)

* Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó, Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel, Pál és Makk, Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)

* Kristó, Gyula: A Kárpát-medence és a magyarság régmúltja (1301-ig) (Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár, Szeged, 1993)

* Magyarország Történeti Kronológiája I. – A kezdetektől 1526-ig, főszerkesztő: Benda Kálmán (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1981)

See also


* Árpáds

* Hungarian prehistory

* History of Hungary

References


* Árpád Hungarian Wikipedia

1. ^ http://arpad.org/pages.php?&menuid=55&pageid=137

2. ^ Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század) (Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History - 9-14th centuries). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 753. ISBN 963 05 6722 9

3. ^ The Byzantine De administrando imperio says around 950: Prior to this Árpád, the Magyars did never have another ruling prince ('archont') and since then up to today the ruling prince of Hungary has been from that family. However, his father was probably proclaimed Grand Prince around 855.

4. ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_VII_Porphyrogenetos

5. ^ It is remarkable that Árpád was never mentioned by contemporary Western sources, which strengthens the idea that he was the spiritual ruler of the Magyars.

6. ^ Some scholars consider Kende to be the name of a person.

Árpád nagyfejedelem [szerkesztés]


Ez az utolsó megtekintett változat (összes); elfogadva: 2009. július 5.


A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából.


Családja és utódai [szerkesztés]


Felesége nevét nem őrizte meg a történetírás. Öt fiának neve maradt fenn:


Liüntika/Levente,

Tarhacsi/Tarhos,

Jelek/Üllő,

Jutocsa/Jutas és

Zolta.

Mind az ötöt Bíborbanszületett Konstantin hagyományozta ránk, azonban két különböző helyen. Az egyik helyen, ahol a honfoglalásról és a kalandozásokról van szó, említi Liüntikát, aki ekkor nyilván a legidősebb, felnőtt fiú lehetett. Egy másik helyen, ahol a fiait és az ő korabeli utódaikat sorolja fel, nem említi Liüntikát, csak a négy másikat, és azoknak is csak egy-egy fiát. Nyilván itt csak az utódlás szempontjából fontos utódokról van szó. Liüntikának, úgy tűnik nem maradt Konstantin idejére fiúutóda.


A legendák Árpádja [szerkesztés]


A Millenneumi emlékmű középső csoportja Árpádot és a hét vezért ábrázolja. Zala György szobrászművész alkotásai.


A krónikáink szerint a hun Aetilea/Attila/Atilla/Etele szépunokája; Ernák/Irnik ükunokája; Ed dédunokája; Ügyek és Emese unokája, Álmos vezér gyermeke.


Mivel Anonymus Árpád halálát 907-re teszi[5], örökösének pedig a legfiatalabb Zoltát nevezi meg, kialakult egy olyan elképzelés, amely szerint Árpád és három idősebb fia (Tarhos, Jelek/Üllő, Jutocsa/Jutas) a pozsonyi csatában estek el. Erre azonban nincs egyértelmű bizonyíték. A legenda szerint Óbudán temették el a honfoglaló hadvezért és fejedelmet.


Forrás:


http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81rp%C3%A1d_nagyfejedelem


Árpád


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


His life


Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos, leader of the Hungarian tribal federation; his mother's name and descent is unknown.


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor, Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria.


In the spring of next year, the Magyar tribes attacked the Bulgarian Empire and defeated Emperor Simeon I, obliging him to conclude peace with the Byzantine Empire. Emperor Simeon, however, entered into an alliance with the Pechenegs, who were the eastern neighbours of the Hungarian tribal federation, and he made an attack against the Magyar troops. In the Battle of Southern Buh, Emperor Simeon I defeated their army; shortly afterwards, the Pechenegs attacked and pillaged their territories. The Magyar tribes were obliged to leave Etelköz and move to the Carpathian Basin where they settled down (Honfoglalás).


The circumstances of Álmos' death are unclear. The leaders of the seven Hungarian tribes proclaimed Árpád to Grand Prince of the Magyars[1]; therefore Árpád is considered traditionally to lead the Honfoglalás ("the occupation of the country").


In 896 the Hungarian tribes occupied the Upper Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in 900/901 they moved to Pannonia[2]. The Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 may have represented about 200,000–250,000 people.


Based on Arabic sources, Árpád's title seems to have been kende[3] or gyula. In that time kende was the spiritual leader of the Magyar tribes, while the gyula led their military campaigns. According to legends, Árpád hold the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.


[edit]Children


Levente


Tarhos (Tarkacsu) (? – ?)


Üllő (Jeleg or Jeleg) (? – ?)


Jutocsa (Jutas) (? – ?)


Zoltan of Hungary (947 – ?)


[edit]Legacy


Although he is not considered the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary – that was his descendant Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as our father Árpád. Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.


[edit]Sources


Kristó, Gyula - Makk, Ferenc: Az Árpád-ház uralkodói (IPC Könyvek, 1996)


Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó, Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel, Pál és Makk, Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)


Kristó, Gyula: A Kárpát-medence és a magyarság régmúltja (1301-ig) (Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár, Szeged, 1993)


Magyarország Történeti Kronológiája I. – A kezdetektől 1526-ig, főszerkesztő: Benda Kálmán (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1981)


References


Árpád Hungarian Wikipedia


^ The Byzantine De administrando imperio says around 950: Prior to this Árpád, the Magyars did never have another ruling prince ('archont') and since then up to today the ruling prince of Hungary has been from that family. However, his father was probably proclaimed Grand Prince around 855.


^ It is remarkable that Árpád was never mentioned by contemporary Western sources, which strengthens the idea that he was the spiritual ruler of the Magyars.


^ Some scholars consider Kende to be the name of a person.


(I) Árpád 895-907

┌────────────┴───────────┐

Jutas (II) Sol

│ 907 - ?

│ │

│ │

(III) Fajsz/Felicsi (IV) Taksony

948 948 - 972

Short time │

┌───────────┴────────────────────────────────────────┐

(V) Géza 972-997 Mihály

│ │

│ │

┌──────────────┴─────┬───────────────┐ │

Vajk / I. (St.) István female female - - oo - - Aba Sámuel Vazul

(V) 997-1000 Orseolo Ottó : (3) r1041-1044 │

(1) r1000-1038 │ : │

│ │ Aba Sámuel │

St. Imre Princ Orseolo Péter (3) r1041-1044 │

(2) r1038-1041 │

(4) r1044-1046 │

┌───────────────────────────────┤

│ │

(5) I. András (6) I. Béla

1046-1060 1060-1063

│ │

│ │

│ ┌────────────┴────────┐

(7) Salamon (8) I. Géza (9) I. (St.) László

1063-1074 1074-1077 1077-1095

┌──────────────────────────┤

(10) (Könyves) Kálmán Álmos Prince

1095-1116 │

│ │

│ │

(11) II. István (12) II. (Vak) Béla

1116-1131 1131-1141

┌─────────────────────┬────────────────────┤

│ │ │

(13) II. Géza (15) II. László (16) IV. István

1141-1162 1162-1163 1163-1164

│ elected elected

┌───────────┴──────────┐

(14) III. István (17) III. Béla


1162-1172 1172-1196

┌───────────┴──────────┐

(18)Imre (20) II. András

1196-1204 1204-1235

│ │

│ │

│ ┌─┴──────────────────────┐

(19) III. László (21) IV. Béla István

1204-1205 1235-1270 │

│ │

│ │

(22) V. István │

1270-1272 │

│ │

│ │

(23) IV. (Kun) László (24) III. András

1272-1290 1290-1301

Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (Hungarians) (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


His life


Árpád and the six other chieftains of the Magyars. From the Chronicon Pictum, 1360.Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos (Grand Prince of the Magyars), leader of the Hungarian tribal federation; his mother's name and descent is unknown.


The emergence of the Magyar tribes and their leaders is a specific period in the history of the Hungarian people that refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a people separate and identifiable from other Ugric speakers (1000-500 BC) up until their occupation and settlement of the Carpathian Basin around 896 AD (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor, Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria.


In the spring of next year, the Magyar tribes attacked the Bulgarian Empire and defeated Emperor Simeon I, obliging him to conclude peace with the Byzantine Empire. Emperor Simeon, however, entered into an alliance with the Pechenegs, who were the eastern neighbours of the Hungarian tribal federation, and he made an attack against the Magyar troops. In the Battle of Southern Buh, Emperor Simeon I defeated their army; shortly afterwards, the Pechenegs attacked and pillaged their territories. The Magyar tribes were obliged to leave Etelköz and move to the Carpathian Basin where they settled down (Honfoglalás).


The circumstances of Álmos' death are unclear. The leaders of the seven Hungarian tribes proclaimed Árpád to Grand Prince of the Magyars; therefore Árpád is considered traditionally to lead the Honfoglalás ("the occupation of the country").


In 896 the Hungarian tribes occupied the Upper Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in 900/901 they moved to Pannonia. The Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 may have represented about 200,000–250,000 people.


Based on Arabic sources, Árpád's title seems to have been kende or gyula. In that time kende was the spiritual leader of the Magyar tribes, while the gyula led their military campaigns. According to legends, Árpád hold the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.


Children


Levente


Tarhos (Tarkacsu) (? – ?)


Üllő (Jeleg) (? – ?)


Jutocsa (Jutas) (? – ?)


Zoltán of Hungary (? – c. 947)


Legacy


Although the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary was not Árpád (as he lived a century earlier) - but his descendant Saint Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as our father Árpád (Hungarian: Árpád apánk). Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin . The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


His life


Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos (Grand Prince of the Magyars), leader of the Hungarian tribal federation ; his mother's name and descent is unknown.


The emergence of the Magyar tribes and their leaders ("Hungarian prehistory ") (Hungarian : magyar őstörténet) is a specific period in the history of the Hungarian people that refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a people separate and identifiable from other Ugric speakers (1000-500 BC) up until their occupation and settlement of the Carpathian Basin around 896 AD (Hungarian : Honfoglalás).


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor , Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria .


In the spring of next year, the Magyar tribes attacked the Bulgarian Empire and defeated Emperor Simeon I, obliging him to conclude peace with the Byzantine Empire. Emperor Simeon, however, entered into an alliance with the Pechenegs , who were the eastern neighbours of the Hungarian tribal federation, and he made an attack against the Magyar troops. In the Battle of Southern Buh , Emperor Simeon I defeated their army; shortly afterwards, the Pechenegs attacked and pillaged their territories. The Magyar tribes were obliged to leave Etelköz and move to the Carpathian Basin where they settled down (Honfoglalás ).


The circumstances of Álmos' death are unclear. The leaders of the seven Hungarian tribes proclaimed Árpád to Grand Prince of the Magyars ; therefore Árpád is considered traditionally to lead the Honfoglalás ("the occupation of the country").


In 896 the Hungarian tribes occupied the Upper Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in 900/901 they moved to Pannonia . The Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 may have represented about 200,000–250,000 people.


Based on Arabic sources, Árpád's title seems to have been kende or gyula . In that time kende was the spiritual leader of the Magyar tribes, while the gyula led their military campaigns. According to legends, Árpád hold the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.


Children


Levente


Tarhos (Tarkacsu) (? – ?)


Üllő (Jeleg or Jeleg) (? – ?)


Jutocsa (Jutas) (? – ?)


Zoltan of Hungary (947 – ?)


Legacy

Although he is not considered the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary – that was his descendant Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as our father Árpád. Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (Hungarians) (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos (Grand Prince of the Magyars), leader of the Hungarian tribal federation; his mother's name and descent is unknown[1].


The emergence of the Magyar tribes and their leaders is a specific period in the history of the Hungarian people that refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a people separate and identifiable from other Ugric speakers (1000-500 BC) up until their occupation and settlement of the Carpathian Basin around 896 AD (Hungarian: Honfoglalás)[2].


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor, Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria.


In the spring of next year, the Magyar tribes attacked the Bulgarian Empire and defeated Emperor Simeon I, obliging him to conclude peace with the Byzantine Empire. Emperor Simeon, however, entered into an alliance with the Pechenegs, who were the eastern neighbours of the Hungarian tribal federation, and he made an attack against the Magyar troops. In the Battle of Southern Buh, Emperor Simeon I defeated their army; shortly afterwards, the Pechenegs attacked and pillaged their territories. The Magyar tribes were obliged to leave Etelköz and move to the Carpathian Basin where they settled down (Honfoglalás).


The circumstances of Álmos' death are unclear. The leaders of the seven Hungarian tribes proclaimed Árpád to Grand Prince of the Magyars[3]; therefore Árpád is considered traditionally to lead the Honfoglalás ("the occupation of the country")[4].


In 896 the Hungarian tribes occupied the Upper Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in 900/901 they moved to Pannonia[5]. The Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 may have represented about 200,000–250,000 people.


Based on Arabic sources, Árpád's title seems to have been kende[6] or gyula. In that time kende was the spiritual leader of the Magyar tribes, while the gyula led their military campaigns. According to legends, Árpád hold the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.


Children


Levente


Tarhos (Tarkacsu) (? – ?)


Üllő (Jeleg or Jeleg) (? – ?)


Jutocsa (Jutas) (? – ?)


Zoltán of Hungary (? – c. 947)


Legacy


Monument of Árpád in Ópusztaszer, HungaryAlthough the founder of the Kingdom of Hungary was not Árpád (as he lived a century earlier) - but his descendant Saint Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as our father Árpád (Hungarian: Árpád apánk). Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.


Høvding over ungarerne 896 - 907.


Arpad ble prins av Ungarn omkring 894. Han var den første ungarske storfyrste og magjarernes anfører da de ved år 900 erobret Ungarn. Fra ham nedstammer de senere konger av Ungarn like ned til Andreas III (1000 - 1301) som derfor kalles «Arpader».


Arpaderslekten var konger av Ungarn 997 - 1301.


Arpad betegnes som en noe dunkel historisk person. Han skal ha fullført magjarernes utbredelse til platået ved midtre Donau som begynte under Almos (800 - 844). Den siste kalles en halvt legendarisk person. Arpad skal stamme fra Attila som ble konge over hunnerne i 401.


Etter Ludvig «den Tyske»'s død ble ungarerne eller madjarene stadig farligere og mer pågående, og til slutt sto østfrankerne fullstendig vergeløse overfor dem. Ungarerne var et folk som var beslektet med hunnerne og tilhørte den finsk-ugriske folkestammen. Fra sine opprinnelige boplasser ved Volga hadde de på 800-tallet dratt vestover og slått seg ned på slettene omkring Donau og Theiss. Der ble de etterhånden mer og mer plagsomme for alle nabolandene, det østromerske rike, Tyskland og Italia. Ungarerne var et halvvilt nomadefolk som bodde i telt om sommeren og i sivhytter om vinteren, og det gikk de forferdeligste rykter om at de pleide å rive hjertet ut av brystet på sine falne fiender for å spise det og siden drikke blodet deres. Ypperlige ryttere og sikre skyttere som de var, pleide de å bringe forvirring i fiendens rekker ved lynsnare, overraskende angrep, for så å sende en skur av piler mot dem. Ved å late som om de flyktet, fikk de lokket fienden ut av sine faste stillinger, men så kunne plutselig en sterk reserve av ungarere bryte fram fra et bakhold og kaste seg over forfølgerne. Det var forferdelig å se disse hardbarkede krigerne når «synsranden med ett ble formørket av deres rytterskarer og tusenere av hjelmer dukket opp som av et avgrunnsdyp». Herjende, plyndrende og brennende stormet disse hordene fram og spredte død og fordervelse hvor de kom. Fra begynnelsen av 900-tallet var Tyskland i flere decennier fullstendig prisgitt dette halvville folket som ikke hadde noen forståelse for kulturelle verdier. Helt opp til Bremen i nord og til Roma og Syd-Italia i syd våget de seg. Flere ganger satte de til og med over Rhinen, på flåter som de bygget av tømmer fra Schwarzwald, og hjemsøkte Frankrike.


Tekst: Tore Nygaard


Kilder:


Carl Grimberg: Menneskenes liv og historie, bind 7, side 342-343. Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 164. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 19.


Árpád (c. 845 – c. 907), the second Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 895 – c. 907). Under his rule the Magyar people settled in the Carpathian basin. The dynasty descending from him ruled the Magyar tribes and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.


------------------------------------------------


http://www.amegoldas.eoldal.hu/cikkek/a-ma-elo-arpad-hazi-kiralyok-.html


Same as Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary


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Abacil? of the Magyars

wife


ÁRPÁD(házi) Üllő - Jeleg - ...

son


ÁRPÁD(házi) Liüntika - Leven...

son


ÁRPÁD(házi) Tarhos - Tarhacsi...

son


ÁRPÁD(házi) Jutas - Jutocsa

son


ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes

daughter


Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hun...

son


Tarhos (Levente)

son


Jelek (Üllő)

son


Jutas

son


Álmos, Chief of the Magyars

father


Kurszán Kende? of the Magyars

brother


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians ★ Ref: PH-896 |•••► #HUNGRIA 🏆🇭🇺★ #Genealogía #Genealogy

____________________________________________________________________________

30 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians is your 30th great grandfather and is your 24th great grandfather


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

(Linea Paterna) (Linea Materna) 

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians is your 30th great grandfathof→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna 

your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar 

his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas 

her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar 

her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García 

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva 

his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero 

his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens 

his father →  Isabel de Requesens 

his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda 

her father →  D. Estefania de Requesens, III Condesa de Palamós 

his mother → Hipòlita Roís de Liori i de Montcada 

her mother →  Beatriz de Montcada i de Vilaragut 

her mother →  Pedro de Montcada i de Luna, Señor de Villamarchante 

her father → Elfa de Luna y de Xèrica 

his mother →  Pedro Martínez de Luna y Saluzzo, señor de Almonacid y Pola 

her father →  Pedro Martínez de Luna 

his father → Violante de Alagon 

his mother →  D. Teresa de Aragón 

her mother →  Pedro III el Grande, rey de Aragón 

her father →  Violante de Hungría, reina consorte de Aragón 

his mother →  Árpád(házi) II. András - Andrew II, King of Hungary 

her father →  Árpád(házi) III. Béla király, King of Hungary & Croatia 

his father → Geza II, king of Hungary 

his father →  Bela II "The Blind", king of Hungary 

his father →  prince Álmos Árpád(házi), Prince of Hungary & Duke of Croatia 

his father → Géza I of Hungary 

his father →  Béla I of Hungary 

his father →  Vazul "the Bald" 

his father →  ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály 

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father → Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians 

his father


<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály Prince Michael of Hungary is your 24th great grandfather. You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina, Teniente Coronel

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo

her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel

her father → Sancha Manuel

his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes

her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona

his father → Elizabeth of Swabia

his mother → Philip of Swabia

her father → Friedrich I Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor

his father → Judith of Bavaria

his mother → Wulfhilda of Saxony

her mother → Sophia of Hungary

her mother → Béla I, king of Hungary

her father → Vazul "the Bald"

his father → ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father → Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians 

his father


<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


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Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians MP 

Gender: Male

Birth: circa 896 

Pannonia, Hungary

Death: 949 (49-57) 

Pannonia, Hungary

Immediate Family:

Son of Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary and Abacil? of the Magyars 

Husband of Szalóka of Bihar, Daughter of Menmarót of Bihar 

Father of Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

Brother of ÁRPÁD(házi) Üllő - Jeleg - Jelek, Prince of Hungary; ÁRPÁD(házi) Liüntika - Levente (?~907), Prince of Hungary; ÁRPÁD(házi) Tarhos - Tarhacsi - Tarkacsu; ÁRPÁD(házi) Jutas - Jutocsa; ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes and 3 others 

Added by: Ricky Patterson on June 26, 2007

Managed by:   Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 103 others

Curated by: FARKAS Mihály László

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Zoltán of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Zoltán of Hungary Grand Prince of the Magyars Predecessor Árpád Successor Fajsz Spouse Unnamed daughter of Menmarót Issue Taksony Full name Zoltán or Zaltas or Zolta Father Árpád Mother Unknown Born ? Died c. 947


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars.


He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád[1]. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian conquest (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád.


In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Child


* Taksony, Grand Prince of the Magyars (? – before 973)

Sources


* Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó, Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel, Pál és Makk, Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994) * Kristó, Gyula: A Kárpát-medence és a magyarság régmúltja (1301-ig) (Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár, Szeged, 1993)

References


1. ^ Kōnstantinos Porhyrogennētos: De Administrando Imperio.

Zolta [szerkesztés]


A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából. Zolta (másnéven: Solt, Zsolt vagy Zoltán) Árpád legkisebb fia volt azok közül, akiknek nevét a krónikák megőriztek számunkra. A későbbi krónikák szerint ő volt Árpád utóda, mint nagyfejedelem, azonban ez nagy valószínűséggel nem igaz, azért gondolták ezt a későbbi krónikások, mert fia, Taksony nagyfejedelem lett, és a későbbi primogenitúra elv alapján akkor „nyilvánvalóan” Zoltának is annak kellett lennie. [1]


Forrás: http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zolta


English: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zolt%C3%A1n_of_Hungary

Árpád was the son of Grand Prince Álmos (Grand Prince of the Magyars), leader of the Hungarian tribal federation; his mother's name and descent is unknown[1].

The emergence of the Magyar tribes and their leaders is a specific period in the history of the Hungarian people that refers to the time starting from when the Magyars were considered a people separate and identifiable from other Ugric speakers (1000-500 BC) up until their occupation and settlement of the Carpathian Basin around 896 AD (Hungarian: Honfoglalás)[2].


In 894, Árpád and Kurszán negotiated together with the representatives of the Byzantine emperor, Leo VI the Wise the terms under which the confederation of the Magyar tribes was willing to assist the Byzantine Empire against Emperor Simeon I of Bulgaria.


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars.


He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád[1]. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian conquest (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád.


In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars.

He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian conquest (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád.


In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Zoltán of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars. He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád[1]. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian occupation (Hungarian: Honfoglalás). Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád. In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Child


Taksony, Grand Prince of the Magyars (? – before 973)


Sources


Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó, Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel, Pál és Makk, Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994) Kristó, Gyula: A Kárpát-medence és a magyarság régmúltja (1301-ig) (Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár, Szeged, 1993)


References


^ Kōnstantinos Porhyrogennētos: De Administrando Imperio.


Zoltan (Zsolt) var høvding over ungarerne fra 907. Han etterfulgte sin far som hertug i 907. Zoltan herjet i omtrent alle sentraleuropeiske land, i Sveits og Norditalien, Han trengte også frem til Reims i Frankrike.

Tekst: Tore Nygaard


Kilder: Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 163. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 19.


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars.

He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád[1]. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian conquest (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád.


In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Zoltán (? – 947), also known as Zaltas, according to the mediaeval chronicles, was the third Grand Prince of the Magyars.

He was the youngest (fifth) son of Árpád[1]. The Gesta Hungarorum names Zolta as the successor of his father, and also mentions that he married a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian conquest (Hungarian: Honfoglalás).


Latest researches questioned his position as a ruler and prefer other sons of Árpád.


In any case, his leadership meant much less than with previous leaders, as during his time, tribal leaders had most of the powers. In this era, the raids of Hungarians (kalandozások) were common in much of Europe.


Child


* Taksony, Grand Prince of the Magyars (? – before 973)

Sources


* Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó, Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel, Pál és Makk, Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994) * Kristó, Gyula: A Kárpát-medence és a magyarság régmúltja (1301-ig) (Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár, Szeged, 1993)

References


1. ^ Kōnstantinos Porhyrogennētos: De Administrando Imperio.

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Szalóka of Bihar, Daughter of M...

wife


Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary

son


Abacil? of the Magyars

mother


Arpad I Grand Prince of Hungary

father


ÁRPÁD(házi) Üllő - Jeleg - ...

brother


ÁRPÁD(házi) Liüntika - Leven...

brother


ÁRPÁD(házi) Tarhos - Tarhacsi...

brother


ÁRPÁD(házi) Jutas - Jutocsa

brother


ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes

sister


Tarhos (Levente)

brother


Jelek (Üllő)

brother


Jutas

brother


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->


 

Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary ★ Ref: PH-920 |•••► #HUNGRIA 🏆🇭🇺★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 ____________________________________________________________________________

29 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary is your 29th great grandfather and is your 23th great grandfather


____________________________________________________________________________



<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

(Linea Paterna) (Linea Materna) 

<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary is your 29th great grandfathof→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→   Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna 

your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar 

his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas 

her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar 

her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García 

her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva 

his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero 

his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens 

his father →  Isabel de Requesens 

his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda 

her father →  D. Estefania de Requesens, III Condesa de Palamós 

his mother → Hipòlita Roís de Liori i de Montcada 

her mother →  Beatriz de Montcada i de Vilaragut 

her mother →  Pedro de Montcada i de Luna, Señor de Villamarchante 

her father → Elfa de Luna y de Xèrica 

his mother →  Pedro Martínez de Luna y Saluzzo, señor de Almonacid y Pola 

her father →  Pedro Martínez de Luna 

his father → Violante de Alagon 

his mother →  D. Teresa de Aragón 

her mother →  Pedro III el Grande, rey de Aragón 

her father →  Violante de Hungría, reina consorte de Aragón 

his mother →  Árpád(házi) II. András - Andrew II, King of Hungary 

her father →  Árpád(házi) III. Béla király, King of Hungary & Croatia 

his father → Geza II, king of Hungary 

his father →  Bela II "The Blind", king of Hungary 

his father →  prince Álmos Árpád(házi), Prince of Hungary & Duke of Croatia 

his father → Géza I of Hungary 

his father →  Béla I of Hungary 

his father →  Vazul "the Bald" 

his father →  ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály 

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father


<-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->

ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály Prince Michael of Hungary is your 23TH great grandfather. You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesus Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina, Teniente Coronel

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo

her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel

her father → Sancha Manuel

his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes

her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona

his father → Elizabeth of Swabia

his mother → Philip of Swabia

her father → Friedrich I Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor

his father → Judith of Bavaria

his mother → Wulfhilda of Saxony

her mother → Sophia of Hungary

her mother → Béla I, king of Hungary

her father → Vazul "the Bald"

his father → ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály

his father →  Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary 

his father

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Taksony, Grand Prince of Hungary MP 

Gender: Male

Birth: between 920 and 931 

Székesfehérvár, Fejér, Magyarország, Hungary

Death: between 971 and circa 972 (40-52) 

Székesfehérvár, Fejér, Hungary

Immediate Family:

Son of Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hungarians and Szalóka of Bihar, Daughter of Menmarót of Bihar 

Husband of N.N. 

Father of ÁRPÁD(házi) Sophia, Princess of Sweden; Géza von Werl-Arnsberg, II, Grand prince of the Hungarians; ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály; ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes, Princess of Hungary and ÁRPÁD(házi) Beatrix, Princess of Hungary 

Added by: Ricky Patterson on June 26, 2007

Managed by:   Guillermo Eduardo Ferrero Montilla and 108 others

Curated by: FARKAS Mihály László

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Az Árpád-ház családfája - Family tree of Árpád dynasty


Taksony of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Taksony of Hungary Grand Prince of the Hungarians Taksony in Chronicon Pictum Reign c. 955 - before 972 Predecessor Fajsz Successor Géza Issue -1. Géza of Hungary -2. Michael, Duke between Morava and Esztergom Father Zoltán Mother Unknown daughter of Menmarót Died before 972


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 955 - before 972).


Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Hungarians. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman[1].


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Hungarians. After the defeat the Hungarians stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Hungarians just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Hungarians. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Hungarians[2], but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania. [edit] Marriage and children


c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans"

* Géza of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 945 – 997) * Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland, and had:

-1. Vazul -2. László (Ladislas "the Bald"), Duke between March and Gran (d. 1029), married c. 1000 Premislavna (d. c. 1015), daughter of Great Prince Vladimir I of Kiev, and had: -2.1 Bonuslo, Duke between March and Gran (d. 1048)


Sources


* Kristó Gyula - Makk Ferenc: Az Árpád-ház uralkodói (IPC Könyvek, 1996) * Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel Pál és Makk Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)

References


1. ^ The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that he married a woman "of the territories of the Cumans", but the Cumans had not crossed the Volga River before the 11th century. 2. ^ Liutprand of Cremona: Liber de rebus gestis Ottonis magni imperatoris.

Another name for Taksony was Toxun.


General Notes:


I hans tid kom hunnerne i 909 inn i Thüringen, i 910 helt til Augsburg, 932 til Merseburg og 955 atter til Augsburg.


Taksony førte krig mot tyskerne og de bysantiske keisere.


Han var farfar til Stefan den Hellige (979 - 1038). Selv ble han ikke døpt, men ga sin sønn og etterfølger, Geza, en kristen hustru, Sarolte.


Noted events in his life were:


• Acceded: 3rd Duke of Hungary, 944.


• Acceded: Prince of Magyars, 947.


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 955 - before 972).


Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Magyars. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman.


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Magyars. After the defeat the Magyars stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Magyars just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Magyars. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Magyars, but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania.


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 955 - before 972). Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád , the second Grand Prince of the Magyars. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian : Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman. In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia , and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian : augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Magyars . After the defeat the Magyars stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe , but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire . Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Magyars just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Magyars. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary. In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Magyars, but he probably never visited them. Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt , the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania . Marriage and children

c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans "

Géza of Hungary , Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 945 – 997)

Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland , and had Vazul.

Wikipedia


Taksony of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia • Interested in contributing to Wikipedia? • This article is about the 10th century Hungarian ruler. For information about the town of Taksony, Hungary, see Taksony. Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 955 - before 972). Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Magyars. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman[1]. In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Magyars. After the defeat the Magyars stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire. Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Magyars just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Magyars. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary. In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Magyars[2], but he probably never visited them. Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania. [edit]Marriage and children

c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans"

Géza of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 945 – 997)

xMichael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland


Sources


Kristó Gyula - Makk Ferenc: Az Árpád-ház uralkodói (IPC Könyvek, 1996) Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel Pál és Makk Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)


References


^ The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that he married a woman "of the territories of the Cumans", but the Cumans had not crossed the Volga River before the 11th century. ^ Liutprand of Cremona: Liber de rebus gestis Ottonis magni imperatoris.


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 955 - before 972).

Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Hungarians. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman.


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Hungarians. After the defeat the Hungarians stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Hungarians just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Hungarians. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Hungarians, but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania.


Marriage and children

c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans"

Géza of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 945 – 997) Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland, and had Vazul


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 955 - before 972).


Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Hungarians. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman[1].


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Hungarians. After the defeat the Hungarians stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Hungarians just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Hungarians. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Hungarians[2], but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania.


[edit] Marriage and children


c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans"

Géza of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Hungarians (c. 945 – 997) Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland, and had Vazul


Taksony (Toxun) var den tredje hertug av Ungarn 944 - 972. I hans tid kom hunnerne i 909 inn i Thüringen, i 910 helt til Augsburg, 932 til Merseburg og 955 atter til Augsburg.


Taksony førte krig mot tyskerne og de bysantiske keisere.


Han var farfar til Stefan den Hellige (979 - 1038). Selv ble han ikke døpt, men ga sin sønn og etterfølger, Geza, en kristen hustru, Sarolte.


Tekst: Tore Nygaard


Kilder: Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 162. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 19, 23.


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 955 - before 972).

Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Magyars. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman.


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Magyars. After the defeat the Magyars stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Magyars just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Magyars. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Magyars, but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania.


10th century Hungarian ruler.

This article is about the 10th century Hungarian ruler. For information about the town of Taksony, Hungary, see Taksony. Taksony of Hungary Grand Prince of the Magyars Reign c. 955 - before 972 Predecessor Fajsz Successor Géza Issue Géza of Hungary Michael, Duke between Morava and Esztergom Father Zoltán Mother Unknown daughter of Menmarót Died before 972


Taksony (? – before 972), Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 955 - before 972).


Taksony was the son of Zoltán (Zaltas), the fourth son of Árpád, the second Grand Prince of the Magyars. The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that his mother was a daughter of Menmarót, the local military leader in the region of Bihar (Romanian: Biharea) at the time of the Hungarian settlement occupation (Honfoglalás). Taksony married a Pecheneg or Bulgar woman[1].


In 947, Taksony lead a raid to Italy till Apulia, and King Berengar II of Italy had to buy the peace by paying a large amount of money to him and his followers. He might have taken part in the Battle of Lechfeld (Hungarian: augsburgi csata) where King Otto I of Germany won a decisive victory over the Magyars. After the defeat the Magyars stopped their raids (kalandozások) in Western Europe, but they began to pillage the Byzantine Empire.


Taksony became the Grand Prince of the Magyars just or shortly after the Battle of Lechfeld, but his authority must have been only nominal over some regions of the Carpathian Basin inhabited by the Magyars. During his rule a large number of Pechenegs and Khalyzians immigrated to the territory of the future Hungary.


In 963, Pope John XII ordained the first Roman Catholic missionary bishop, Zacheus for the Magyars[2], but he probably never visited them.


Taksony arranged the marriage of his son Géza of Hungary to Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania.


[edit] Marriage and children


c. 945: Unnamed "of the territories of the Cumans"

* Géza of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 945 – 997) * Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava and Esztergom (– ca 978 or bef. 997). Married Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland, and had Vazul

[edit] Sources


* Kristó Gyula - Makk Ferenc: Az Árpád-ház uralkodói (IPC Könyvek, 1996) * Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon (9-14. század), főszerkesztő: Kristó Gyula, szerkesztők: Engel Pál és Makk Ferenc (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1994)

[edit] References


1. ^ The Gesta Hungarorum mentions that he married a woman "of the territories of the Cumans", but the Cumans had not crossed the Volga River before the 11th century. 2. ^ Liutprand of Cremona: Liber de rebus gestis Ottonis magni imperatoris.

Preceded by Fajsz Grand Prince of the Magyars c. 955 - before 972 Succeeded by Géza


Named after the last pagan ruling prince, Taksony of Hungary, Taksony is a village of roughly 6,000 inhabitants roughly 23 kilometers south of Budapest, on the bank of the Ráckeve branch of the Danube known as Kisduna (Little Danube). Taksony is known for its many natural springs and tranquil scenery and serves as a haven for fishermen, boaters and summer vacationers.


[edit] History


Taksony was named after the reigning prince Taksony of Hungary, Prince Árpád's grandson. After the invasion of the Mongols, the settlement was destroyed several times by fire. Maria Theresa settled Germans here. Relocation of families occurred after World War II and shortly thereafter, a new phase of development began. The Saint Anna Roman Catholic Church, devastated by an earthquake, was rebuilt in 1958. The foundation stone of the Calvinist church was laid on September 6, 1987. The early 20th century life of the ethnic Germans is presented in the House of Regional Traditions which is a traditional home with relics of German settlers, from early the years of the 20th century. Taksony's Catholic parish is famous for its Saint Anna feasts.


* Taksony, Hungary official municipal website

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N.N.

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ÁRPÁD(házi) Sophia, Princess ...

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Géza von Werl-Arnsberg, II, Gra...

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ÁRPÁD(házi) Ágnes, Princess ...

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ÁRPÁD(házi) Beatrix, Princess...

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Zoltán, Grand Prince of the Hun...

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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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