domingo, 29 de agosto de 2021

Vazul the Bald ★ Ref: VB-0976 |•••► #HUNGRIA 🏆🇭🇺★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 Béla I King of Hungary is your 27th great grandfather of→    Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo AND is your 21st great grandfather

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

(Linea Paterna) (Linea Materna)

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

Béla I King of Hungary is your 27th great grandfather of→    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 

his father → Géza I of Hungary 

 his father →  Béla I King of Hungary

 his father

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


Vazul "the Bald" is your 21st great grandfather.

You

  → 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 → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

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 → Philipp von Schwaben

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


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

Vazul , o Vászoly , [1] (antes de 997-1031 o 1032) fue miembro de la Casa de Árpád , nieto de Taksony , Gran Príncipe de los húngaros . La única otra información cierta sobre su vida es que estuvo cautivo y cegado en la fortaleza de Nyitra (Nitra, Eslovaquia ) en los últimos años del reinado de su primo, el rey Esteban I de Hungría . Los historiadores modernos, incluido György Györffy , no excluyen que anteriormente había sido duque de Nyitra . Es el antepasado de casi todos los reyes de Hungría que reinaron después de 1046.



Contenido

1 Vida

2 Familia

3 Referencias

4 Fuentes

4.1 Fuentes primarias

4.2 Fuentes secundarias

Vida 

Vazul era un hijo [2] de Michael , que era el hijo menor del Gran Príncipe Taksony. [3] Se desconoce el nombre de su madre. [3] Según György Györffy, es "probable" que fuera una princesa búlgara , pariente de Samuel de Bulgaria . [4] Györffy también escribe que Vazul todavía era un niño alrededor de 997. [5] Su nombre deriva del griego Basileios, lo que implica que fue bautizado según el rito bizantino . [6]


Györffy dice que Vazul "aparentemente" tenía el " Nyitra ducate ", porque las crónicas no mencionan otros asentamientos en relación con su vida. [7] Según la Crónica Iluminada , el rey Esteban encarceló a Vazul y lo mantuvo cautivo en la fortaleza de Nyitra (Nitra, Eslovaquia) para instarlo a "enmendar su frivolidad y locura juvenil". [8] [9] En contraste con Györffy, su colega eslovaco , Ján Steinhübel no tiene ninguna duda de que Vazul era un duque de Nyitra, quien sucedió a su hermano, Ladislas el Calvo antes de 1030. [2]Steinhübel añade que Vazul, al igual que su hermano, aceptó la soberanía del rey Mieszko II de Polonia ; fue encarcelado en su antigua sede cuando el rey Esteban I de Hungría ocupó su ducado en 1031. [10] La teoría de que el "Ducado de Nyitra" estaba bajo la soberanía polaca en las primeras décadas del siglo XI, que se basa en la política polaca -Crónica húngara , Györffy rechaza rotundamente. [11]


Emeric , el único hijo del rey Esteban que sobrevivió a la infancia murió en un accidente de caza en 1031. [12] [13] Aunque Vazul, que era el pariente agnático más cercano de Esteban, tenía el reclamo más fuerte para sucederlo en el trono, el rey lo ignoró y nominó el hijo de su propia hermana, Peter Orseolo como su heredero. [14] Según los casi contemporáneos Anales de Altaich , [15] Vazul se ofendió amargamente por su omisión, pero fue cegado por orden del rey Esteban. [12] Según los informes contrastantes de crónicas húngaras posteriores, escritas bajo reyes descendientes de la línea de Vazul, [16]Esteban inicialmente planeaba nombrar a Vazul como su heredero, pero los enemigos de Vazul, incluida la reina de Esteban, Gisela [6], tramaron un complot para obstaculizar los planes del rey. [17] Enviaron un "hombre malvado" a Nyitra, quien "sacó los ojos de Vazul y llenó las cavidades de sus oídos con plomo" [8] antes de que llegaran los enviados del rey. [17]


Sintiendo que sus poderes se desvanecían, [el rey Esteban] envió mensajeros apresuradamente para que trajeran al hijo de su tío, Vazul, de la prisión en Nitra, para convertirlo en rey de los húngaros después de él. Sin embargo, tan pronto como la reina Gisela se enteró de esto, tramó un complot con un grupo de traidores y envió al ispán Sebus por delante del mensajero. Sebus hizo que le sacaran los ojos a Vazul y le vertieran plomo fundido en los oídos; luego huyó a Bohemia . Cuando Vazul fue finalmente traído de regreso por el mensajero del Rey, el Rey lloró amargamente por su destino.


-  Simón de Kéza : Las hazañas de los húngaros [18]

Familia 

La información sobre la familia de Vazul es contradictoria. Las crónicas húngaras posteriores tendieron a ocultar que los reyes que reinaban después de 1046 descendían de un príncipe que fue desheredado y sentenciado por el primer rey santo de Hungría. [19] En consecuencia, muchas de las crónicas escriben que el hermano de Vazul, Ladislas el Calvo, fue el antepasado de los monarcas húngaros. [17] Sin embargo, un informe registrado en la Crónica Iluminada ha conservado la memoria de la paternidad de Vazul de tres hijos llamados Andrew , Béla y Levente . [19] Asimismo, la Crónica Iluminada escribe que la esposa de Vazul era miembro del clan Tátony, pero su matrimonio carecía de legitimidad.[6] [19] Sus tres hijos fueron expulsados ​​de Hungría después de la muerte de Vazul en 1031 o 1032. [20]


Se dice que estos tres hermanos [Andrew, Béla y Levente] eran hijos del duque Vazul de una chica del clan de Tatun y no nacieron de un verdadero lecho matrimonial, y que a través de esta conjunción derivaron su nobleza de Tatun. . Sin duda, este es un cuento falso y de lo más malvado. No por eso son nobles, sino porque son los hijos de Ladislao el Calvo, de quien se dice que tomó una esposa de Rutenia de quien nacieron estos tres hermanos.


-  La crónica iluminada de Hungría [21]

Györffy y Gerics afirmaron que el nombre Tatun , esposa de Vazul, es el error ortográfico de Catun , que era un título real entre las personas de origen turco desde Manchuria hasta Bulgaria. [22] [23] Su significado era "la primera esposa del khagan ". Según Györffy, una niña de la familia Tatun era hija de Tatun, la esposa de Kean (mencionada en las crónicas húngaras), es decir, el zar de Bulgaria, cuya familia huyó a Hungría cuando Basil II, El emperador bizantino puso fin a la existencia del estado búlgaro (996-1004, 1014-1018). Gerics afirmaba que Vazul y Tatun todavía eran paganos en el momento de su matrimonio, y esa es la razón por la que las crónicas húngaras declararon que Andrew, Béla y Levente, los hijos del duque Vazul, no nacieron de un verdadero lecho matrimonial. Gerics también afirmó que Tatun podría haber participado en el motín de Koppány , y posteriormente perdió su estatus de noble. Por esta razón, las crónicas húngaras declararon que los hijos de Vazul derivaban su nobleza de su padre, no de su madre. [ cita requerida ]


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



Consistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



prince Vazul "the Bald" house of Árpád MP 

Hungarian: ÁRPÁD (házi) Vászoly, Spanish: Dn. Vazul de Hungría, Croatian: knez Nitre Vazul Arpad, Russian: князь Ласло "Лысый" Арпад, French: Vazul de Hongrie, German: Herzog Vazul von Ungarn, Polish: ks. Władysław "Łysy" Arpad

Gender: Male

Birth: 976

Esztergom, Komárom-Esztergom, Hungary

Death: between 1031 and 1037 (54-62)

Frehjar, Poland

Immediate Family:

Son of ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály and Princess Adelajda von Ungarn, of Poland

Husband of princess Premislava

Partner of Unnamed woman from the Tátony Clan

Father of prince Bonuzlo; Levente, Grand Prince of the Hungarians; Andrew I of Hungary and Béla I, king of Hungary


Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 11, 2007

Managed by: Daniel Dupree Walton and 124 others

Curated by: FARKAS Mihály László

 0 Matches 

Research this Person

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (10)

Timeline

Discussions (1)

Sources

Revisions

DNA

About View in: 

English (default) history

Wikipedia:

A magyar nyelvű cikkből


Vazul Ellenőrizve: 2013. szeptember 17.

Élt: 970 körül–1037

Apa: Mihály, Taksony fejedelem fia

Anya: bizonytalan-vitatott

bolgár hercegnő ((Mihályról szóló angol cikk szerint a Komitopuli-ház tagja (vitatott) /member of the Cometopuli dynasty/ (debated)), vagy kún, vagy kazár-kabar, esetleg volgai bolgár származású

Adelaide da Polónia (a Mihályról szóló portugál Wikipedia cikk szerint, amit az EuWeb „Arpad family” leszármazási összeállítás is tartalmaz. . A Geni-ben Vazul anyjaként Adelajda - Adelheid Piastowna szerepel.

Feleség(ek):

Tátony nemzetségbeli nő

Gyermekek:


Levente

András

Béla

Testvér: Szár László

Egyéb neves rokoni kapcsolat: I. István unokatestvére

Вазул


translated by Google Translator: Vazul is the grandson of Hungarian prince Taksony <sic) Lasonc> and son of Michael. Vazul repeatedly involved in conspiracies against the first Hungarian Christian King István I, Vazul was excluded from the line of descendants of the Hungarian royal throne because he was pagan. However Arpad dynasty survived precisely through the sons of Vazul. Vazul has two marriages both in Bulgarian princesses:


Katun Anastasia, daughter of Tsar Samuil

Catalina granddaughter of Tsar Ivan Vladislav

From his first marriage he had three sons – (from them) two Hungarian kings


Andrew I and

Bela I and their brother

Levente.

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


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, since he was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. The assassination attempt failed. Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears; his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives

Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vazul"


unknown Arpád


M, #221309


Last Edited=7 Mar 2007


Children of unknown Arpád


-1. Béla I Arpád, King of Hungary+ d. Dec 1063


-2. Andreas I Arpád, King of Hungary+ d. 1060 (1)


Forrás Source:


http://www.thepeerage.com/p22131.htm#i221309


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


Vazul [szerkeszt%C3%A9s]


A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából.


Ez a szócikk a magyar hercegről szól.


Vazul magyar herceg, Mihály herceg fia, Taksony fejedelem unokája.


A Vazul (Vanzul vagy Wacilo) név magyarosan ejtve Vászoly lehetett. Életének körülményei ismeretlenek.


I. István unokatestvére volt, aki I. István fiának, Imre hercegnek halála után a trónra is igényt tarthatott.


Három fia volt, András, Béla és Levente, Andrásból és Bélából később király lett (I. András, I. Béla.


A krónikák szerint volt egy testvére, Szár László, akinek volt egy fia, Bogyoszló.


Forrás / Source:


http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vazul


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


Vazul


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Jump to: navigation, search


This article does not cite any references or sources.

Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2008)


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Prince of Nitra, with realm between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out at Nitra Castle and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled. [1]


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


[edit] Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Forrás / Source:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vazul


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


Vazul of Hungary King of Poland (-1038) [Pedigree]


Son of Michael of Hungary Regent of Poland (-978)


Duke between March and Gran

Prince of Hungary

b. 976, Esztergom, Komarom-Esztrergom, Hungary

d. BY 1038

d. 1037

Married possibly dau. of the Tsar of Bulgaria


Children:


Bela I of Hungary King of Hungary (-1063) m. Ryksa (Rixa) of Poland (1018-1059)


Andrew I of Hungary King of Hungary (1001-)


References: [RGD],[AR7],[Theroff]


Forrás / Source:


http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pmcbride/rfc/gw128.htm#I7315


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


VÁSZOLY [Vaz%C3%BAl], son of MIHÁLY of Hungary Duke between March and Gran & his wife Adelajda of Poland ([976/78]-early 1037). The Gesta Hungarorum names "Wazul et Zar Ladislaum" as the sons of "Mihal…frater Geichæ"[376]. The Kronika Węgiersko-Polska names "Stephanum, Mychl et Vanzul" as the three sons of "Geyza", adding that "Vanzul" was killed by "effosionem oculorem" by "reginam Gesla, consortem regis sancti Stephani"[377]. Duke between March and Gran. Representing the more conservative, traditional element of Hungarian society, he rebelled against King István I and his Catholic pro-western policies[378]. The Gesta Hungarorum records that, after the death of his son Imre, "rege Stephano" sent messengers to bring "Wazul filium sui patruelis" from his prison at "Nistriæ" to have him declared successor to the kingdom but that "Kysla regina" sent "comitem Sebus" to blind Vazúl and have moulten lead poured into his ears, after which Vazúl fled to Bohemia from where he was brought back to Hungary[379]. Bak dates this event to 1037, although this appears late if the events happened soon after Imre's death in 1031[380].


m (before [1012]%29 --- [of Bulgaria], daughter of [SAMUIL Tsar of the Bulgarians & his wife Agatha Chryselia]. The date of this marriage is estimated from the estimated birth date of the couple's eldest son. The primary source on which this marriage is based has not been identified. The Gesta Hungarorum reports claims that the three brothers Levente, András and Béla were "ex duce Wazul progenitos ex quadam virgine de genere Tatun [T%C3%A1tony]" rather than legitimate[381].


Duke Vászoly had three sons:


1. ANDRÁS ([1014]-Zirc Autumn 1060, bur Tihany, Benedictine Abbey of St Anian).


2. BÉLA (1016-Kanisza creek Dec 1063, bur Szekszárd Abbey).


3. LEVENTE (-1047, bur Taksony).


Forrás / Source:


http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HUNGARY.htm#_Toc146273216


Vazul


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony by his father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) by his wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, since he was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. The assassination attempt failed. Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears; his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Vazul was een Hongaarse edele uit de Árpád-familie. Hij was de kleinzoon van Taksony, zijn vader was Michael. Zijn broer was Ladislaus de Kale. Hij was een neef van koning Stefan I van Hongarije. Hij nam deel aan een samenzwering met als doel Stefan I te vermoorden, aangezien hij uitgesloten was van troonopvolging ten gunste van Peter Orseolo. De moordpoging mislukte. Vazul werd blind gemaakt en zijn zoons werden verbannen.


Van Vazuls drie zonen, Andreas, Béla en Levente, zouden er twee de troon bestijgen na de dynastieke strijd na de dood van Stefan I. De lijn van Arpaden na koning Stefan wordt daarom de Vazul-lijn genoemd.


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


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Prince of Nitra, with realm between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out at Nitra Castle and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled. [1]


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Marriage: Unknown


General Notes:

He was blinded in 1038.


Noted events in his life were:


• He was a Prince of Hungary.


Wikipedia:

Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony . His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland . His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, since he was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. The assassination attempt failed. Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears; his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Prince of Nitra, with realm between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out at Nitra Castle and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Wikipedia


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony . His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland . His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Wikipedia


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony . His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland . His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between March and Gran or Prince of Nitra, with realm between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran).


He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, and as a result of the failed assassination attempt was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. As punishment for his treason, Vazul had his eyes gouged out at Nitra Castle and molten lead poured in his ears and his sons were exiled.[1]


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife N from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of Bulgaria, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


Wives


Katun Anastazya


Katalin


References


^ Denis Sinor, History of Hungary (London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd., 1959) 41.


Sources


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


Vazull var en ungarsk fyrste som ble blindet i 1038.


Kilder:


Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 160. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 19.


Vazul (Basil) (11th century – died 1037) was a Hungarian noble of the Árpád family, Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hran or Gran). He was the grandson of Taksony. His father Michael (Mihály), Duke between Morava (March) and Esztergom (Hron or Gran) (– ca 978 or bef. 997) and his mother was Michael's wife Adelajda of Poland (– aft. 997), daughter or sister of Mieszko I of Poland. His brother was Ladislaus the Bald. He was a cousin of Stephen I of Hungary. He took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of king Stephen, since he was excluded from the royal succession in favour of Pietro Orseolo. The assassination attempt failed. Vazul had his eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears; his sons were exiled.


Of Vazul's three sons (with his wife from Tátony family or a woman who may (or may not) have been daughter of Tsar Samuel of the Bulgarians, Katun Anastazya) András (Andrew I), Béla and Levente, two would ascend the throne after the dynastic struggle following the death of Stephen I. The line of Árpád kings following Stephen is therefore referred to as the Vazul line.


http://bg.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%92%D0%B0%D0%B7%D1%83%D0%BB


Translation: Vazul is the grandson of Hungarian prince Taksony <sic) Lasonc> and son of Michael. Vazul repeatedly involved in conspiracies against the first Hungarian Christian King István I, Vazul was excluded from the line of descendants of the Hungarian royal throne because he was pagan. However Arpad dynasty survived precisely through the sons of Vazul. Vazul has two marriages both in Bulgarian princesses:


Katun Anastasia, daughter of Tsar Samuil

Catalina granddaughter of Tsar Ivan Vladislav

From his first marriage he had three sons – (from them) two Hungarian kings


Andrew I and

Bela I and their brother

Levente.

VAZUL - przedstawiciel dynastii Arpadów . Był bratankiem pierwszego historycznego władcy Węgier , księcia Gejzy . Zabiegi Vazula o tron węgierski doprowadziły do zawiązania spisku przeciwko jego kuzynowi , królowi Stefanowi I Świętemu . Zamach na króla nie powiódł się i Vazul i inni spiskowcy zostali oślepieni . Vazul , Gejza i Stefan uważani są za potomków półlegendarnego władcy , Arpada , którego ród był pochodzenia najprawdopodobniej tureckiego .


http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HUNGARY.htm#Taksonydied970A

TAKSONY 955-970 ... m (947) ---, from the Kumans. Prince Taksony had [three] children:


1. GÉZA ([940/45]-1 Feb 997).

...

2. MIHÁLY ([940/45]-[976/78]). ... m ([970/75]%29 as her first husband, ADELAJDA [Adleta] of Poland, daughter of [ZIEMOMYS%C5%81 Duke in Poland] & his [second wife ---] ([950/60]-after 997). ... Duke Mihály & his wife had two known children:

a) LÁSZLÓ "Szár/the Bald" (-1029). The Gesta Hungarorum names "Wazul et Zar Ladislaum" as the sons of "Mihal…frater Geichæ"[267]. The Chronicon Varadiense names "ducem…Vazul et ducem Ladislaum calvum" as the two sons of "Michael dux"[268]. Duke between March and Gran. m ([1000]%29 PREMISLAVA Vladimirovna of Kiev, illegitimate daughter of VLADIMIR I "Velikiy/the Great" Sviatopolkovich Grand Prince of Kiev & his mistress --- (-[1015]). Baumgarten names the wife of Duke László and gives her origin but only cites one secondary source in support[269]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified. László & his wife had one child:

-i) BONUSLO (-1048). The Chronicon Varadiense names "Bonuzulo" as the son of "dux…Ladislaus calvus"[270]. Duke between March and Gran.

b) VÁSZOLY [Vaz%C3%BAl] (-early 1037).

Ladislas (Ladislau Ladislaw) The Bald' of HUNGARY


aka Ladislaus Calvus; av UNGERN

Born: abt. 982 Died: abt. 1038

HM George I's 17-Great Uncle. HRE Ferdinand I's 15-Great Uncle. HRE Charles VI's 18-Great Uncle. U.S. President's 23-Great Uncle. HM Margrethe II's 24-Great Uncle. Poss. Agnes Harris's 23-Great Uncle. Osawatomie' Brown's 26-Great Uncle.


Wife/Partner: Prbemieslawa WLADIMIROWNA

Child: Andrew I (King) of HUNGARY [alt ped]

______ ______ ______ ______ _____ _____ _____ _____ ____ ___ ___


/ -- Almos (Chief Prince) of the MAGYARS + ====> [ 182 ,,V,&]


/ | OR: Almos II of the MAGYARS [alt ped] + ====> [ 180 ,,x,&]


/ -- Arpad (Arpa Arpadius) (Duke) of HUNGARY


/ \ -- (Miss) av UNGERN


/ -- Zoltan (Zsolt) MAGYAR (Duke) of HUNGARY


/ -- Takson (Taksony Toxus) MAGYAR (Grand Prince) of HUNGARY


| \ / -- Maroth (Mariot) von/av BIKAR


/ \ -- Maen (Men; Khayar) von/av BIKAR (BIHAR)


/ -- Michael (Mihaily; Mihaly) (Duke) of HUNGARY


/ \ -- (Miss) von KUMANIEN (932 - 972?)


- Ladislas (Ladislau Ladislaw) The Bald' of HUNGARY


\ / -- Ziemowit av PIAST of POLAND + ====> [ 1]


| / -- Leszek (Lestek Lestko) PIAST (Duke/King) of POLAND


| / -- Ziemonislaw PIAST (Duke/King) of POLAND


| / -- Mieszko (Burislaf ?) I PIAST (Duke/Prince) of POLAND


| | \ | (skip this generation?)


| / \ -- Gorka


\ -- Adelaide (Adelajda) the White' PIAST of POLAND


\ / -- Benno von HALDENSLEBEN + ====> [ 190 ,,pt,&]


| / -- Dietrich (Lord) of (the) HALDENSLEBEN (? - 985)


\ -- poss. Oda von HALDENSLEBEN


| OR: poss. Dubrawka (Princess) of BOHEMIA + ====> [ 197 ,g,&]


His (poss.) Great Grandchildren: Maurice (Mauritz) DRUMMOND ; Judith (Judita I) PRZEMYSLIDE of BOHEMIA ; Ludmilla (Princess) of BOHEMIA ; Adelajada von POLEN ; Sophia of HUNGARY

read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text View

Showing 12 of 15 people


Unnamed woman from the Tátony Clan

partner


Levente, Grand Prince of the Hun...

son


Andrew I of Hungary

son


Béla I, king of Hungary

son


princess Premislava

wife


prince Bonuzlo

son


ÁRPÁD(házi) Mihály

father


Princess Adelajda von Ungarn, of...

mother


Géza ÁRPÁD(házi), Grand Prin...

stepfather


N.N. of Hungary

stepsister


Mechtild Hedwig? Gepa von Itter ...

stepsister


Saint Stephen, 1st King of Hungary

stepbrother

 


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


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


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




Béla I King Of Hungary ♛ Ref: KH-1016 |•••► #HUNGRIA 🏆🇭🇺★ #Genealogía #Genealogy


 


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

Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Béla I, king of Hungary is your 20th great grandfather and your  your 26th great grandfather

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

(Linea Paterna) (Linea Materna)

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

Béla I King of Hungary is your 26th great grandfather of→ 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 

his father → Géza I of Hungary 

 his father →  Béla I King of Hungary

 his father

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

 (Linea Materna)

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

Béla I, king of Hungary is your 20th great grandfather.of→ 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 → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

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 → Philipp von Schwaben

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 fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

You might be connected in other ways.


Show Me



Béla Arpad MP 

English (default): Béla, Hungarian: Béla Magyar király, Spanish: Bela, Croatian: kralj Ugarske Bela I. Arpad, Russian: Бела I Арпад

Gender: Male

Birth: 1016

Esztergom, Komárom-Esztergom, Hungary

Death: September 11, 1063 (46-47)

Dömös, Komárom-Esztergom, Hungary (Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed -comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident-)

Place of Burial: Szentséges Megváltó bencés apátság, Szekszárd, Hungary

Immediate Family:

Son of Vazul "the Bald" and Unnamed woman from the Tátony Clan

Husband of Concubine of Béla I; Tuta von Formbach, magyar királyné / Königin von Ungarn and Richeza of Poland

Father of ÁRPÁD(házi) Sophia - Szépa; Lampert Árpád, Duke of Hungary; Géza I of Hungary; Ladislaus I of Hungary; Sophia of Hungary and 6 others

Brother of Levente, Grand Prince of the Hungarians and Andrew I of Hungary

Half brother of prince Bonuzlo 


Added by: "Skip" Bremer on June 11, 2007

Managed by: Daniel Dupree Walton and 123 others

Curated by: FARKAS Mihály László

 5 Matches 

 0  5   0 

Research this Person

 2 Inconsistencies

 Contact Profile Managers

 View Tree

 Edit Profile

Overview

Media (42)

Timeline

Discussions (1)

Sources

Revisions

DNA

Abouthistory

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


BÉLA I 1060-1063, GÉZA I 1074-1077, LÁSZLÓ I 1077-1095


BÉLA, son of VÁSZOLY [Vaz%C3%BAl] Prince of Hungary, Duke between March and Gran & his wife --- of the Bulgarians (1016-Kanisza creek Dec 1063, bur Szekszárd Abbey). The Chronicon Varadiense names "dux Andreas postea rex, secundus…dux Bella demum rex, tertius dux Levente" as the three sons of "dux Vazul"[460]. The Gesta Hungarorum names (in order) "Andrea, Bela et Luenta, filiis Zarladislai" when recording that King István advised them to flee to Bohemia after the mutilation of Vazúl, the commentary suggesting that their father's name was changed by the compiler of the Gesta to disguise the fact that later Hungarian kings were descended from the blinded Vazúl[461]. In a later passage, the Gesta reports claims that the three brothers were "ex duce Wazul progenitos ex quadam virgine de genere Tatun" rather than legitimate[462]. The Gesta records that the brothers moved from Bohemia to Poland during the second reign of King Péter and that Béla defeated "Pomoramiæ ducem" in single combat and married "filia Miskæ [Polonorum duce]"[463]. He was baptised in [1037/39] at Gnesen [Gniezno] as ADALBERT[464]. Béla returned to Hungary with his brothers in 1046, and was invested as Duke between March and Gran in 1048, but at some stage returned to Poland. When his brother King András crowned his infant son Salamon as associate king in 1057, Béla was provoked into taking action to secure his own rights of succession. He left Poland with his family and in 1060 invaded Hungary with a large force, with Polish support, captured King András who died a few days later, and assumed power as BÉLA I "Benin" King of Hungary, crowned at Székesfehérvár. The Chronicon Posoniense records bitter disputes in 1060 between "Andream et fratrem eius Bela" and that "Andreas rex" died[465], which suggests that the death may have been violent. The Annales of Berthold record that in 1060 "Belo fratrum suum Andream…expulit" in Hungary[466]. The Gesta Hungarorum records the accession of "Benyn Bela", commenting that the Hungarians abandoned the faith and baptism for a year before returning to the faith[467]. Hungarian forces conquered and settled Syrmium in [1060][468]. German forces invaded Hungary in support of ex-King Salamon, but King Béla died soon afterwards in his summer palace of Dömös after his throne toppled on him[469]. The Gesta Hungarorum records the death of King Béla in the third year of his reign and his burial at "monasterio…Sceugzard [Szeksz%C3%A1rd]"[470]. The Chronicon Varadiense records the death "III Id Sep" in 1063 of "Bela dictus Belin secundus filius Vazul" and his burial "in suo monasterio Sexardiensi"[471].


m (in Poland [1039/42]%29 [RYKSA] of Poland, daughter of MIESZKO II LAMBERT King of Poland & his wife Richeza [Ezzonen] ([1018]-after 1059). The Gesta Hungarorum records the marriage of Béla and "filia Miskæ [Polonorum duce]" while he was in exile in Poland but does not name her[472]. The Kronika Węgiersko-Polska records that "Bela" married "rex Polonie filiam"[473]. Ryksa is shown as her possible name in Europäische Stammtafeln[474], but the primary source on which this is based has not been identified.


King Béla & his wife had eight children:


1. GÉZA ([in Poland] [1044/45]-25 Apr 1077, bur Vac). ... He succeeded his cousin in 1074 as GÉZA I King of Hungary. - see below.

2. LANKA ([1045]-1095). ... m (before 1064) ROSTISLAV Vladimirovich Prince of Rostov, Novgorod and Vladimir in Volynia, son of VLADIMIR Iaroslavich of Kiev Prince of Novgorod & his wife Oda von Stade ([1045]-3 Feb 1067).

3. SOPHIA ([1045/50]-18 Jun 1095, bur Lüneburg St Michaelis). ... m firstly ([1062/63]%29 ULRICH I Marchese of Carniola and Istria, son of POPPO I [von Weimar] Marchese of Carniola and Istria & his wife Hadamut of Istria (-6 Mar 1070). m secondly (after 6 Mar 1070) MAGNUS of Saxony, son of ORDULF Duke in Saxony [Billung] & his first wife Wulfhild of Norway (-Erthensburg 25 Aug 1106, bur Lüneburg St Michaelis).

4. LÁSZLÓ (in Poland [1046/50][486]-Nitra 20 Jun 1095, bur Somogyvár, transferred 1192 to Nagyvárad Cathedral[487]). ... He succeeded his brother in 1077 as LÁSZLÓ I King of Hungary. ... m ([1077 or after]) ADELHEID von Rheinfelden, daughter of RUDOLF Graf von Rheinfelden Duke of Swabia [anti-King of Germany] & his second wife Adelaide de Savoie ([1063/65]-3 May 1090, bur St Blasius). ... King László I & his wife had two daughters:

5. LUDMILLA [Euphemia] (-2 Apr 1111). ... m (before 1073) OTTO I "der Schöne" Duke of Brno and Olmütz, son of BŘETISLAV Duke of the Bohemians & his wife Judith von Schweinfurt (-9 Jul [1087], bur Graditz).

6. daughter. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not so far been identified. She adopted the name MARIA in Byzantium. m (1068) ANDRONIKOS Dukas, son of Emperor KONSTANTINOS X & his second wife Evdokia Makrembolitissa ([1057]-after 1081). He was crowned co-Emperor by his brother Emperor Mikhael VII after the latter assumed sole rule in Oct 1071.

7. LAMBERT (after 1050-[1095]). ...

8. ILONA [Lepa] (-before 1095). ... In [1090], she assumed power as ILONA Queen of Croatia. ... m ([1064]%29 ZVONIMIR DMITAR Ban of Slavonia, son of --- (-after 1089). He was crowned [late 1075/early 1076] as ZVONIMIR DMITAR King of Croatia.

King Béla had one [probably illegitimate] child by [an unknown mistress]:


9. SOPHIA (-after 1116). ... m ([1077/95]) Count LAMBERT, of the Hont-Pázmány family (-1132).

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


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9la_I_of_Hungary


http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9la_I._(Ungarn)


Nachkommen [Bearbeiten]


Aus der Ehe mit Ryksa von Polen:

Géza I. (* 1044/45, † 1077), König von Ungarn (1074–77)

Ladislaus I., der Heilige (* 1048, † 1095), König von Ungarn (1077–95)

Maria, ∞ Andronikos Dukas Mitka von Byzanz

Helene (Ilona) († 1095), ∞ König Zvonimir von Kroatien

eine Tochter, ∞ Graf Lambert von Hontpázmány

Euphemia († 1111), ∞ Fürst Otto I. von Mähren

Aus der Ehe mit Tuta von Formbach:

Lambert († 1095), Herzog in Südungarn

Sophia († 1095), 1. ∞ Ulrich I., Markgraf von Krain, 2. ∞ Magnus, Herzog von Sachsen

Béla I Arpád, King of Hungary (1) M, #7966, d. December 1063 Last Edited=8 Mar 2007


Béla I Arpád, King of Hungary was the son of unknown Arpád. He died in December 1063. (1) Béla I Arpád, King of Hungary gained the title of King Béla I of Hungary in 1060.

Children of Béla I Arpád, King of Hungary

Sophia of Hungary+ d. 1095

Ladislas I 'the Saint' Arpád, King of Hungary+ d. 1095 (1)

Euphemia Arpád d. 1111 (1)

Geisa I Arpád, King of Hungary+ b. c 1044, d. 1077 (1)

Helen Arpád b. b 1063 (1)

Forrás / Source: http://www.thepeerage.com/p797.htm#i7966


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


I. Béla A Wikipédiából, a szabad enciklopédiából. I. Béla (* 1016; † 1063. szeptember 11., Dömös) Árpád-házi magyar király 1060-1063 között. I. Béla Magyarország királya Uralkodása 1060-1063 Megkoronázása 1060. december 6-án Székesfehérvár Született 1016 körül ? Elhunyt 1063 Dömös, a trónja halálosan megsebesíti Nyughelye Az általa alapított szekszárdi Szentséges Megváltó bencés apátságban temették el. Elődje I. András Utóda Salamon Felesége Richeza lengyel hercegnő, II. Mieszko Lambert lengyel fejedelem leánya (Piast-ház) Gyermekei


I. Géza magyar király;

I. (Szent) László magyar király;

Lampért herceg;

Zsófia – Weimari Ulrich, isztriai őrgróf majd Magnus szász herceg felesége

Eufémia – I. Ottó morva herceg felesége;

Ilona – Zvonimir horvát király felesége;

Ismeretlen nevű lány

Dinasztia Árpád-ház Édesapja Vazul (Vászoly) Édesanyja Tátony nembeli nő


Forrás: http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/I._B%C3%A9la


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian : I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until hsi death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland . He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Early years Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul , a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs. In exile After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev . In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country. Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen 's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles, whom the Emperor Henry III , in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba , when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter 's rule. Duke of Tercia pars Regni In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I . However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war. That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer. In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars Regni ) in appanage to Béla. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon . Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court. In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Boleslaw II of Poland, nephew of his wife. King of Hungary In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom. Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon. Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again. Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077)

King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095)

Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095)

Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony

Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia

Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia

Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her:

Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány

Béla I of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla, Slovak: Belo I) (c. 1016 – 11 September 1063), King of Hungary (1060-1063). He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession.


Early years


Béla was the second[1] son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs[2]. On September 2, 1031, King Stephen I's only surviving son Imre was killed by a boar while hunting. King Stephen I wanted to secure the position of the Christianity in his semi-converted kingdom; therefore he was planning to name his sister's son, Peter Urseolo as his successor. However, Duke Vazul, who was suspected to be following pagan customs, took part in a conspiracy aimed at the murder of the king. But the assassination attempt failed and Duke Vazul had is eyes gouged out and molten lead poured in his ears and his three sons were exiled. [edit]In exile


After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev. In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter[3] in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country. Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles [4], whom the Emperor Henry III, in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba, when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter's rule. [edit]Duke of Tercia pars Regni


In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I. However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. King Andrew sent an embassy to the imperial court and offered to accept the Emperor's supremacy, but Henry III refused the peace; therefore the new King of Hungary had to make preparations for the approaching war. That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer. In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars Regni) in appanage to Béla.[5]. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon. Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court. In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Knowing that choosing the crown would mean his life, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Bolesław II of Poland, nephew of his wife. [edit]King of Hungary


In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on December 6, 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom. Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon. Béla died in an accident when his throne's canopy collapsed. After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again.


[edit]Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown[6] (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[7] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Unnamed girl (after 1050 – befor 1132), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány [edit]Sources


Engel, Pat. Realm of St. Stephen : A History of Medieval Hungary, 2001 Kosztolnyik, Z.J., Five Eleventh Century Hungarian Kings, 1981 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) Magyarország Történeti Kronológiája I. – A kezdetektől 1526-ig, főszerkesztő: Benda, Kálmán (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1981) [edit]References


^ Wincenty Swoboda, Bela I, In: Słownik Starożytności Słowiańskich, vol. 7. ^ Some modern sources claim that duke Vazul married Katun Anastazya of Bulgaria who bore Bela and his brothers, Levente and Andrew. ^ Her name is unknown. Some authors, without sources, gave her name Rixa. Nowadays it is supposed that she was called Adelaide, see K. Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa (1992). ^ Annales Altahenses maiores; Annales Hildesheimenses maiores; Hermann of Reichenau: Chronicon de sex ætatibus mundi. ^ Some modern authors claim that Béla was Duke of the alleged Principality of Nitra, but contemporary sources only mentioned "Tercia pars Regni". ^ Kazimierz Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa 1992. ^ Włodzimierz Dworzaczek, Genealogia, Warszawa 1959, tabl. 84.


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian : I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until hsi death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland . He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Early years Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul , a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs. In exile After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev . In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country. Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen 's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles, whom the Emperor Henry III , in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba , when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter 's rule. Duke of Tercia pars Regni In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I . However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war. That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer. In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars Regni ) in appanage to Béla. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon . Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court. In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Boleslaw II of Poland, nephew of his wife. King of Hungary In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom. Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon. Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again. Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her: Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla) (c. 1016 – 11 September 1063), King of Hungary (1060-1063). He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs. Marriage and children Richa, daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[7] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Unnamed girl (after 1050 – befor 1132), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until his death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession.

Early years


Béla was the second[1] son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs[2].


In exile


After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev. In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter[3] in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country.


Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles [4], whom the Emperor Henry III, in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba, when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter's rule.


Duke of Tercia pars Regni


In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I. However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war.[5] That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer.


In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars regni) in appanage to Béla.[6]. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon. Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court.


In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Bolesław II of Poland, nephew of his wife.


King of Hungary


In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom.


Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon.


Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again.


Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown[7] (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her:


Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány [1] References


^ Wincenty Swoboda, Bela I, In: Słownik Starożytności Słowiańskich, vol. 7. ^ Some modern sources claim that duke Vazul married Katun Anastazya of Bulgaria who bore Bela and his brothers, Levente and Andrew. ^ Her name is unknown. Some authors, without sources, gave her name Rixa. Nowadays it is supposed that she was called Adelaide, see K. Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa (1992). ^ Annales Altahenses maiores; Annales Hildesheimenses maiores; Hermann of Reichenau: Chronicon de sex ætatibus mundi. ^ http://megyeszele.cityblog.hu/uploads/megyeszele/2008114.pdf ^ Some modern authors claim that Béla was Duke of the alleged Principality of Nitra, but contemporary sources only mentioned "Tercia pars Regni". ^ Kazimierz Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa 1992. ^ Włodzimierz Dworzaczek, Genealogia, Warszawa 1959, tabl. 84. Sources


Engel, Pat. Realm of St. Stephen : A History of Medieval Hungary, 2001 Kosztolnyik, Z.J., Five Eleventh Century Hungarian Kings, 1981 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) Magyarország Történeti Kronológiája I. – A kezdetektől 1526-ig, főszerkesztő: Benda, Kálmán (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1981)


Another name for Béla was Béla I Arpád.

General Notes:


Bela nevnes første gang i 1031 som "parvulus". Han vokste opp i Polen, men vendte tilbake til Ungarn ca. 1050 hvor han ble konge i 1061.


Han minsket skattene, innførte ensartet mål og vekt, og arbeidet for kristendommens utbredelse i sitt land.


Bela falt på sensommeren i 1063 i en krig mot tyskerne.


Noted events in his life were:


• Acceded: King of Hungary, 1061.


Béla married Richiza of Poland, daughter of Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and Richeza of Palatine, circa 1040. (Richiza of Poland was born circa 1020 and died after 1052.)


Béla I (rond 1020 - 1063) was koning van Hongarije van 1061 tot 1063 en behoorde tot het huis van Árpád. Hij was een zoon van hertog Vazul van Hongarije en van Katun van Bulgarije en dus een jongere broer van koning Andreas I. Hij versloeg zijn broer in de strijd om de kroon en volgde hem op als koning.


Béla was gehuwd met de Poolse koningsdochter Richezza, dochter van Mieszko II Lambert. Zij hadden volgende kinderen:


Géza I van Hongarije, koning in 1074-1077 Ladislaus I van Hongarije koning in 1077-1095 Lampert, hertog van Nitra in 1077-1095 Sophia (-1095), huwde een eerste maal rond 1062 met Ulrich I van Weimar, markgraaf van Carniola, graaf van Istrië (-1070) en een tweede maal rond 1071 met Magnus van Saksen Euphemia (-1111), huwde met prins Otto I de Schone van Moravië-Olmütz (-1087) Helena, huwde met de koning van Kroatië Dmitar Zvonimir (1075-1089) Maria, (rond 1053/55-); huwde met Andronicus Dukas, medekeizer van Byzantium, zoon van Constantijn X van Byzantium Adelheid (1050-), huwde met Ferderik II van Bogen.


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until his death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession.


Early years Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs.


In exile After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev. In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country.


Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles , whom the Emperor Henry III, in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba, when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter's rule.


Duke of Tercia pars Regni In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I. However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war. That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer.


In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars regni) in appanage to Béla. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon. Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court.


In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Bolesław II of Poland, nephew of his wife.


King of Hungary

In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom.


Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon.


Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again.


Marriage and children


1039-1043: Richenza (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077)

King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095)

Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095)

Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony

Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia

Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia

Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her:

Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány

Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian : I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until hsi death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland . He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Early years Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul , a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs. In exile After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev . In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country. Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen 's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles, whom the Emperor Henry III , in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba , when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter 's rule. Duke of Tercia pars Regni In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I . However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war. That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer. In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars Regni ) in appanage to Béla. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon . Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court. In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Boleslaw II of Poland, nephew of his wife. King of Hungary In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom. Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon. Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (comtemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again. Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her: Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%A9la_I_of_Hungary#Marriage_and_ch... Béla I of Hungary From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search Béla I Bust of Béla at the National Historical Memorial Park in Ópusztaszer King of Hungary Reign 1060 – 1063 Predecessor Andrew I of Hungary Successor Solomon of Hungary Issue Géza I of Hungary Ladislaus I of Hungary House Árpád dynasty Father Vazul Born 1016 Died 11 September 1063 (aged 46–47)

Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla; c. 1016 – 11 September 1063) was King of Hungary from 1060 until his death. He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Contents [hide]


* 1 Early years * 2 In exile * 3 Duke of Tercia pars Regni * 4 King of Hungary * 5 Marriage and children * 6 References * 7 Sources

[edit] Early years


Béla was the second[1] son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs[2]. [edit] In exile


After their father's tragic death, the three brothers were obliged to leave the country. Fleeing first to Bohemia, they continued to Poland where Béla settled down, while his brothers, Levente and Andre continued on, settling in Kiev. In Poland, Béla served King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and took part in the king's campaigns against the pagan Pomeran tribes. He became a successful military leader, and the king gave his daughter[3] in marriage to him. He may have been baptized just before his marriage, and his Christian name was Adalbert. After his marriage, he probably lived in Poland even during the time of interregnum when his brother-in-law, King Casimir I of Poland was obliged to leave the country.


Some authors claim that during the interregnum in Poland, Béla fled to Bohemia and they identify Béla with "King Stephen's cousin", mentioned in medieval chronicles [4], whom the Emperor Henry III, in 1043, assigned to govern the parts of Hungary he had occupied from King Samuel Aba, when the Hungarians refused to accept King Peter's rule. [edit] Duke of Tercia pars Regni


In the meantime, after a sanguine pagan revolt which ended the rule of King Peter, Béla's brother ascended the throne in Hungary as King Andrew I. However, his relations with the Holy Roman Empire remained tense, because King Peter had been not only a close ally of the Emperor Henry III, but he also had become a vassal of the Holy Roman Empire. Andrew refused to accept the suzerainty of the Emperor, ruled Hungary independently and prepared for the approaching war.[5] That was the reason he invited his younger brother, the successful military leader, Béla to his court, and Béla accepted his offer.


In 1048, Andrew conceded one third of Hungary (Tercia pars regni) in appanage to Béla.[6]. The two brothers shared power without incident until 1053, when King Andrew fathered a son, Solomon. Thereafter, Andrew became determined to secure the throne for his son and to displace his brother. Andrew, therefore, had his son (Béla's nephew) crowned "junior king" (rex iunior) in 1057, despite an earlier agreement between tha brothers according to which Béla was the heir to András. Hungarian custom would also dictate that the senior male member of the family inherit the kingdom. Following the coronation, Béla left his brother's court.


In two years later, according to legend, King Andrew called back Béla to his court, and placed before him a crown and a sword, representing royal and ducal power, respectively, and asked Béla to take his choice. Having been forewarned by a court official that choosing the crown would mean his death, Béla instead selected the sword. Shortly afterwards, Béla fled to Poland where he was received by King Bolesław II of Poland, nephew of his wife. [edit] King of Hungary


In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I to become the new king. After his brother's death and Béla's victory at the Theben Pass, Béla was crowned king on 6 December 1060. During his brief reign he concerned himself with crushing pagan revolts in his kingdom.


Hungarian chroniclers praised Béla for introducing new currency, such as the silver denarius, and for his benevolence to the former followers of his nephew, Solomon.


Béla died when his throne's canopy collapsed (contemporaries suspected that the collapse may not have been an accident). After Béla's death, King Henry IV of Germany installed Solomon as the new king and Béla's male progenies had to flee to Poland again. [edit] Marriage and children


1039-1043: unknown[7] (b. unknown, d. after 1052), daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia

* King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[8] – 25 April 1077) * King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) * Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) * Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony * Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia * Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia * Anna Lanke (? – 1095), wife of Rostislav of Tmutarakan[9]

Béla I probably had unknown mistress and he had a daughter with her:


* Sophia (after 1050 – after 1116), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány [1]

[edit] References


1. ^ Wincenty Swoboda, Bela I, In: Słownik Starożytności Słowiańskich, vol. 7. 2. ^ Some modern sources claim that duke Vazul married Katun Anastazya of Bulgaria who bore Bela and his brothers, Levente and Andrew. 3. ^ Her name is unknown. Some authors, without sources, gave her name Rixa. Nowadays it is supposed that she was called Adelaide, see K. Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa (1992). 4. ^ Annales Altahenses maiores; Annales Hildesheimenses maiores; Hermann of Reichenau: Chronicon de sex ætatibus mundi. 5. ^ http://megyeszele.cityblog.hu/uploads/megyeszele/2008114.pdf 6. ^ Some modern authors claim that Béla was Duke of the alleged Principality of Nitra, but contemporary sources only mentioned "Tercia pars Regni". 7. ^ Kazimierz Jasiński, Rodowód pierwszych Piastów, Wrocław - Warszawa 1992. 8. ^ Włodzimierz Dworzaczek, Genealogia, Warszawa 1959, tabl. 84. 9. ^ Rostislav of Tmutarakan at hrono.ru (Russian)

[edit] Sources


* Engel, Pat. Realm of St. Stephen : A History of Medieval Hungary, 2001 * Kosztolnyik, Z.J., Five Eleventh Century Hungarian Kings, 1981 * 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) * Magyarország Történeti Kronológiája I. – A kezdetektől 1526-ig, főszerkesztő: Benda, Kálmán (Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest, 1981)

Béla I of Hungary House of Árpád Born: c. 1016 Died: 11 September 1063 Regnal titles Preceded by Andrew I King of Hungary 1060–1063 Succeeded by Solomon This page was last modified on 23 July 2010 at 12:26.


Konge av Ungarn 1061 - 1063. Bela nevnes første gang i 1031 som «parvulus». Han vokste opp i Polen, men vendte tilbake til Ungarn ca. 1050 hvor han ble konge i 1061.

Han minsket skattene, innførte ensartet mål og vekt, og arbeidet for kristendommens utbredelse i sitt land.


Bela falt på sensommeren i 1063 i en krig mot tyskerne.


Tekst: Tore Nygaard


Kilder: Erich Brandenburg: Die Nachkommen Karls des Grossen. Leipzig 1935. Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 372. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 19, 32.


Béla I the Champion or the Bison (Hungarian: I. (Bajnok/Bölény) Béla) (c. 1016 – 11 September 1063), King of Hungary (1060-1063). He descended from a younger branch of the Árpád dynasty and spent seventeen years in exile, probably in the court of the Kings of Poland. He came back to Hungary at the request of his brother, King Andrew I who assigned him the government of one third of the kingdom. However, Béla did not want to accept the hereditary rights of his brother's son, Solomon to the throne and he rebelled against his brother. Although, he managed to ascend to the throne after defeating King Andrew, he could not strengthen his reign and ensure his sons' succession. Béla was the second son of Duke Vazul, a cousin of Stephan I, the first King of Hungary. His mother was probably the concubine (a daughter of a member of the Hungarian gens Tátony) of his father, who still followed pagan customs. Marriage and children Richa, daughter of King Mieszko II Lambert of Poland and his wife, Richeza of Lotharingia


King Géza I of Hungary (c. 1044[7] – 25 April 1077) King Ladislaus I of Hungary (c. 1048 – 29 July 1095) Duke Lampert of Hungary (after 1050 – c. 1095) Sophia (after 1050 – 18 June 1095), wife firstly of Markgraf Ulrich I of Carniola, and secondly of Duke Magnus I of Saxony Euphemia (after 1050 – 2 April 1111), wife of Prince Otto I of Moravia Ilona (after 1050 – c. 1091), wife of King Dmitar Zvonimir of Croatia Unnamed girl (after 1050 – befor 1132), wife of Comes (count) Lampert de genere Hont-Pázmány


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bela_I_of_Hungary

Béla I era el hijo del noble Vazul (primo de San Esteban I de Hungría), descendiente de la dinastia de Árpád y hermano menor de Andrés I, de quién tomaría el poder, puesto que Salomón, el hijo del fallecido monarca, era aún muy joven para reinar. En 1060 se sucedería la Batalla junto al río Tisza, donde Béla condució tropas polacas de su suegro el Príncipe Miecislao II.

Tras el ataque, Andrés I moriría durante su huida hacia Moson, y Salomón se vería obligado a escapar al Sacro Imperio romano germánico, donde reinaba el hermano de su esposa Judit, Enrique IV. Béla I debería enfrentar alzamientos de paganos conducidos por Juan, el hijo del líder Vata, quien habría impulsado la Revuelta de Vata en 1046. Béla I disiparía la gente reunida frente a la ciudad de Székesfehérvár y luego de ésto no volverían a haber alzamientos paganos en elt erritorio húngaro. En el 1063 regresaría Salomón con ejércitos germánicos y recuperaría el trono de Hungría tras la muerte de Bela I en durante ese mismo acontecimiento.


Existen varias teorías sobre su muerte, pero la tradicional es que murió cuando el respaldar de madera de su trono se derrumbó sobre él en su propia corte, mientras su sobrino Samuel regresaba con las tropas germánicas para recuperar su trono.


A Képes Krónika szerint, a koronázása során a "Esto dominus fratrum Tuorum" ének hangzott (Gerics József szerint ez az ének az Egbert-ordóhoz tartozik, amelyet valószínűleg használtak Salamon koronázásában), és a tolmácsolástól félreértés keletkezett: Béla azt értette, hogy a "Légy ura a testvéreidnek" egyházi ének Salamonra vonatkozott, és ezzel Béla urává válna. Ellenségei azonban elhitették Endrével, hogy Béla a korona után áhítozik. Hűségét és önzetlenségét Endre Várkonyban egy, a költészet által később kiszínezett jelenetben tette próbára. Béla, nem érezvén magát biztonságban, Lengyelországba menekült, hol sógorától, II. Boleszlávtól segélyt kért, 1060-ban[forr%C3%A1s?] seregével Magyarországba tört. Endre a csatában elesett; Béla a csatatérről Székesfehérvárra ment, ahol 1060. december 6-án királlyá választották és megkoronázták.[


read more

View All

Immediate Family

Text View

Showing 12 of 21 people


Richeza of Poland

wife


Lampert Árpád, Duke of Hungary

son


Géza I of Hungary

son


Ladislaus I of Hungary

son


Sophia of Hungary

daughter


Anna Lanka Arpad, Princess of Hu...

daughter


Euphemia of Hungary

daughter


ÁRPÁD(házi) Adelhaid

daughter


ÁRPÁD(házi) N►Maria

daughter


Helena of Hungary

daughter


Kalman I of Hungary

son


Tuta von Formbach, magyar királ...

wife


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


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


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