Géza II of Hungary
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Géza II (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; Template:Langx; 1130Template:Spaced ndash31 May 1162) was King of Hungary and Croatia from 1141 to 1162. He was the oldest son of Béla the Blind and his wife, Helena of Serbia. When his father died, Géza was still a child and he started ruling under the guardianship of his mother and her brother, Beloš. A pretender to the throne, Boris Kalamanos, who had already claimed Hungary during Béla the Blind's reign, temporarily captured Pressburg (now Bratislava in Slovakia) with the assistance of German mercenaries in early 1146. In retaliation, Géza who came of age in the same year, invaded Austria and routed Henry Jasomirgott, Margrave of Austria, in the Battle of the Fischa.
Although the German–Hungarian relations remained tense, no major confrontations occurred when the German crusaders marched through Hungary in June 1147. Two months later, Louis VII of France and his crusaders arrived, along with Boris Kalamanos who attempted to take advantage of the crusade to return to Hungary. Louis VII refused to extradite Boris to Géza, but prevented the pretender from contacting his supporters in Hungary and managed to shepherd him to Constantinople with the rest of the crusaders. Géza joined the coalition that Louis VII and Roger II of Sicily formed against Conrad III of Germany and Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos.
Géza intervened at least six times in battles for control of Kiev on behalf of Iziaslav II either by sending reinforcements or by personally leading his troops to the Kievan Rus' between 1148 and 1155. He also waged war against the Byzantine Empire numerous times on behalf of his allies, including his cousins who ruled over Serbia, but could not prevent the Byzantines from restoring their suzerainty. Conflicts eventually emerged between Géza and his brothers, Stephen and Ladislaus, who both took flight from Hungary and settled in Emperor Manuel's court in Constantinople. Géza supported Frederick I between 1158 and 1160, against the Lombards by providing auxiliary troops. After the cardinals who supported Emperor Frederick I elected Victor IV as pope, Géza acknowledged his legitimacy in 1160, but within a year he had changed sides and concluded a concordat with Victor IV's opponent, Pope Alexander III. Before his death, Géza organized a separate appanage duchy for his younger son, Béla.
The ancestors of the Transylvanian Saxons came to Hungary during Géza's reign. Western European knights and Muslim warriors from the Pontic steppes also settled in Hungary during this period. Géza supposedly even allowed his Muslim soldiers to take concubines.
Early years
Géza was born the eldest son of Béla the Blind, a cousin of King Stephen II of Hungary, and Helena of Serbia in 1130.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza's father had been blinded, together with his rebellious father, Álmos, in the 1110s on the order of Stephen II's father, Coloman, King of Hungary, who wanted to ensure Stephen's succession.Template:Sfn When Géza was born, his parents lived on an estate that King Stephen had granted them in Tolna.Template:Sfn Géza's father succeeded King Stephen in the spring of 1131.Template:Sfn In the same year, Queen Helena took Géza and his younger brother, Ladislaus, to an assembly held at Arad, where she ordered the massacre of sixty-eight noblemen "by whose counsel the King had been blinded",[1] according to the Illuminated Chronicle.Template:Sfn
Reign
Minor king (1141–1146)
King Béla died on 13 February 1141 and Géza succeeded him without opposition.Template:Sfn The eleven-year-old Géza was crowned king on 16 February.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn During his regency, his mother and her brother, Beloš, ruled the kingdom in the first years of his reign.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
One of Géza's first charters, issued in 1141, confirmed the privileges of the citizens of Split in Dalmatia.Template:Sfn In the charter, Géza is titled by "By the Grace of God, King of Hungary, Dalmatia, Croatia and Rama".Template:Sfn According to historian Paul Stephenson, the towns of central DalmatiaTemplate:Mdashincluding Šibenik and TrogirTemplate:Mdashaccepted Géza's suzerainty after a Hungarian invasion around 1142.Template:Sfn Hungarian troops assisted Prince Volodimerko of HalychTemplate:Mdashwho had been the ally of Géza's father against the pretender BorisTemplate:Mdashwhen Great Prince Vsevolod II of Kyiv invaded Halych in 1144.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although the Hungarian auxiliaries "were of no use whatsoever", according to the Hypatian Codex, the grand prince could not occupy Volodimerko's principality.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Boris was the son of Eufemia of Kyiv, King Coloman of Hungary's second wife, whom the king expelled on the charge of adultery before Boris's birth.Template:Sfn According to the chronicler Bishop Otto of Freising, Boris approached Conrad III of Germany to seek his assistance against Géza at the end of 1145.Template:Sfn Upon the recommendation of Vladislav II of Bohemia, the German monarch authorized Boris to muster an army of mercenaries in Bavaria and Austria.Template:Sfn Boris stormed Hungary and took the fortress of Pressburg (present-day Bratislava in Slovakia).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The royal forces soon imposed a blockade on the fortress and convinced Boris's mercenaries to surrender without resistance in exchange for compensation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The Hungarians blamed Conrad III for Boris's attack and decided to invade the Holy Roman Empire.Template:Sfn Before crossing the river Lajta (now Leitha in Austria), which marked the western border of Hungary, the sixteen-year-old Géza was girded with a sword in a token of his coming of age.Template:Sfn In the Battle of the Fischa on 11 September, the Hungarian army under the command of Géza and Beloš routed the German troops led by Henry Jasomirgott, Margrave of Austria.Template:Sfn
Crusaders' march across Hungary (1146–1147)
Géza married Euphrosyne, sister of Grand Prince Iziaslav II of Kiev, in the second half of 1146.Template:Sfn German–Hungarian relations remained tenseTemplate:Sfn as Boris attempted to take advantage of Conrad III's decision to lead a crusade to the Holy Land through Hungary.Template:Sfn However Géza, who knew that "he could conquer more easily by gold than by force, poured out much money among the Germans and thus escaped an attack from them,"[2] according to the chronicler Odo of Deuil.Template:Sfn The German crusaders marched across Hungary without major incident in June 1147.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The Illuminated Chronicle relates that some Hungarian noblemen promised Boris "if he could make his way into the kingdom, many would take him for their lord and, deserting the King, would cleave to him."Template:Sfn[3] Boris convinced two French noblemen to assist by hiding him among the French crusaders who followed the Germans towards the Holy Land.Template:Sfn King Louis VII of France and his crusaders arrived in Hungary in August.Template:Sfn Géza learnt that his opponent was with the French and demanded his extradition.Template:Sfn Although Louis VII rejected this demand, he held Boris in custody and "took him out of Hungary,"[4] according to Odo of Deuil.Template:Sfn Having left Hungary, Boris settled in the Byzantine Empire.Template:Sfn
Active foreign policy (1147–1155)
Disputes among European powers led to the formation of two coalitions in the late 1140s.Template:Sfn One alliance was formed by the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos and Conrad IIITemplate:Sfn against Roger II of Sicily who had invaded Byzantine territories.Template:Sfn Géza sided with Roger II and his allies, including the rebellious German prince, Welf VI and Uroš II of Serbia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza sent reinforcements to his brother-in-law, Grand Prince Iziaslav II, against Prince Vladimir of Chernigov in the spring of 1148.Template:Sfn The Grand Principality of Serbia rebelled in 1149, forcing Emperor Manuel I to interrupt his preparations for an invasion of Southern Italy and invade Serbia in 1149.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to the emperor's panegyrist Theodore Prodromus, Hungarian forces supported the Serbs during the emperor's campaign.Template:Sfn The Hypatian Codex says that Géza referred to his war against Emperor Manuel when excusing himself for refusing to send reinforcements to Iziaslav II whom Yuri Dolgorukiy, Prince of Suzdal, expelled from Kiev in August 1149.Template:Sfn Hungarian auxiliaries supported Iziaslav II to reoccupy Kiev in the early spring of 1150, but before long Yuri Dolgorukiy expelled Iziaslav from the town.Template:Sfn In autumn, Géza led his army against Volodimirko of Halych, who was Yuri Dolgorukiy's close ally.Template:Sfn He captured Sanok, but Volodimirko bribed the Hungarian commanders, who persuaded Géza to leave Halych before November.Template:Sfn
A "countless allied force of Hungarian cavalry as well as of the heterodox Chalisoi"[5] had supported the Serbs in the same year, according to the contemporaneous John Kinnamos, but the Byzantine army routed their united troops on the river Tara in September.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Byzantine victory forced Uroš II of Serbia to acknowledge the emperor's suzerainty.Template:Sfn Emperor Manuel launched a retaliatory campaign against Hungary and ravaged the lands between the rivers Sava and Danube.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Assisted by Byzantine troops, the pretender Boris also broke into Hungary and devastated the valley of the river Temes.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza, who had just returned from Halych, did not want to "involve the remaining Hungarian force in destruction"[6] and sued for peace.Template:Sfn The peace treaty was signed in late 1150 or early 1151.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Géza met Henry Jasomirgott which contributed to the normalization of their strained relations in 1151.Template:Sfn He sent reinforcements to Iziaslav II who again reoccupied Kiev before April 1151.Template:Sfn Three months later, Volodimirko of Halych routed a Hungarian army that was marching towards Kiev.Template:Sfn Frederick Barbarossa, the newly elected King of Germany, demanded the German princes' consent to wage war against Hungary at the Imperial Diet of June 1152, but the princes refused him "for certain obscure reasons",[7] according to Otto of Freising.Template:Sfn Géza invaded Halych in the summer of 1152.Template:Sfn The united armies of Géza and Iziaslav defeated Volodimirko's troops at the San River, forcing Volodimirko to sign a peace treaty with Iziaslav.Template:Sfn Pope Eugenius III sent his envoys to Hungary to strengthen the "faith and discipline" of the Hungarian church.Template:Sfn Géza forbade the papal envoys to enter Hungary, which shows that his relationship with the Holy See had deteriorated.Template:Sfn
Géza planned to invade ParistrionTemplate:Mdashthe Byzantine province along the Lower DanubeTemplate:Mdashin the spring of 1153.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to John Kinnamos, Géza sought vengeance for Manuel's invasion of 1150;Template:Sfn on the other hand, Michael of Thessalonica wrote that Géza prevented Emperor Manuel from invading Southern Italy.Template:Sfn However, the emperor, who had been informed of Géza's plan, marched to the Danube.Template:Sfn Géza sent his envoys to the emperor and a new peace treaty was signed in Sardica (now Sofia in Bulgaria).Template:Sfn In accordance with the peace treaty, the Byzantines released their Hungarian prisoners of wars, according to Abū Hāmid al-Gharnātī, a Muslim traveler from Granada who lived in Hungary between 1150 and 1153.Template:Sfn
Abū Hāmid stated that every country feared Géza's attack, "because of the many armies he has at his disposal and his great courage".[8]Template:Sfn The Muslim traveler observed that Géza employed Muslim soldiers who had been recruited from among the peoples of the Eurasian steppes.Template:Sfn Abū Hāmid even urged the soldiers to make "every effort to go on jihad" with Géza "for thus God [would] set down the merit of Holy War to [their] account".[9]Template:Sfn Géza allowed his Muslim subjects to take concubines, which stirred up the Hungarian clergy.Template:Sfn He also invited Western European (primarily German) knights to settle in Hungary.Template:Sfn For instance, he made a land grant to two knights, named Gottfried and Albert, who had "abandoned their homeland" upon his invitation in the 1150s.Template:Sfn Some years earlier, one Hezelo of Merkstein sold his patrimony in the region of Aachen before departing to Hungary from where he never returned to his homeland.Template:Sfn According to the Diploma Andreanum of 1224, which spelled out the privileges of the Transylvanian Saxons, their ancestors were invited by Géza to settle in southern Transylvania.Template:Sfn
Pope Anastasius IV declared Géza's rule in Dalmatia unlawful in October 1154.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Emperor Manuel's cousin, Andronikos Komnenos, who administered Belgrade, Braničevo and Niš sent a letter to Géza in 1154, offering to hand over those towns to Géza in exchange for Géza's support against the emperor.Template:Sfn Géza sent his envoys to Sicily to sign a new alliance with William I of Sicily around the end of the year, but William I was fighting with his rebellious subjects.Template:Sfn Although Andronius Komnenus's plot was discovered and he was captured, Géza invaded the Byzantine Empire and laid siege to Braničevo in late 1154.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After hearing of the imprisonment of Andronikus Komnenos, Géza abandoned the siege and returned to Hungary.Template:Sfn A Byzantine general, Basil Tzintziluces, launched an attack on the Hungarian army, but Géza annihilated the Byzantine forces before returning to Hungary.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In early 1155, the Byzantine and Hungarian envoys signed a new peace treaty.Template:Sfn In the same year, a Byzantine army expelled Géza's ally, Desa, from Serbia and restored Uroš II, who had promised that he would not enter into an alliance with Hungary.Template:Sfn
Last years (1155–1162)
Frederick Barbarossa, who had been crowned Holy Roman Emperor, received the envoys of Manuel I in Nuremberg in July 1156.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Byzantine envoys proposed a joint invasion of Hungary, but Barbarossa refused their offer.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On 16 September, Barbarossa stipulated that the dukes of Austria were to support the Holy Roman emperors during a war against Hungary in his charter by which he elevated Austria to a duchy, showing that the relationship between Hungary and the Holy Roman Empire was still tense.Template:Sfn Barbarossa's close advisor, Daniel, Bishop of Prague, visited Hungary in the summer of 1157.Template:Sfn On this occasion, Géza promised that he would support Barbarossa with auxiliary troops if the emperor invaded Italy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
According to the nearly contemporaneous Rahewin, Géza's youngest brother, Stephen, began conspiring with their uncle, Beloš, and other lords of the realm.Template:Sfn To avoid a civil war, Géza first ordered the persecution of Stephen's supporters, then had his rebellious brother expelled from the kingdom and later sentenced him to death.Template:Sfn Niketas Choniates also recorded that Stephen had been "forced to flee from the murderous clutches" of Géza.[10]Template:Sfn Géza's uncle, Beloš, was not mentioned in royal charters issued after March 1157, which suggest that he had left Hungary after that date.Template:Sfn During the summer of 1157, Stephen fled to the Holy Roman Empire, seeking Emperor Frederick's protection.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Frederick Barbarossa demanded to be made arbitrator in Géza's conflict with Stephen, he accepted the demand and sent envoys to Regensburg in January 1158.Template:Sfn However, Barbarossa "decided to defer the settlement to a more suitable time"[11] and departed for his campaign against the Lombards in Italy.Template:Sfn In accordance with his former promise, Géza sent a unit of between 500–600 archers to accompany the emperor on his campaign.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Before long, Géza's brother, Stephen, left for the Byzantine Empire and settled in Constantinople where he married Emperor Manuel's niece Maria Komnene.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Within two years, he was joined by his brother, Ladislaus, who also fled from Hungary around 1160.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Frederick Barbarossa forced the Italian towns to surrender in September 1158.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, Milan and Crema again rose up in open rebellion against the emperor's rule after the Diet of Roncaglia ordered the restoration of imperial rights, including the emperor's rights to levy taxes in the Northern Italian towns.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza sent his envoys to Barbarossa's camp and promised to dispatch further reinforcements against the rebellious towns.Template:Sfn
The death of Pope Adrian IV on 1 September 1159 caused a schism, because the college of the cardinals was divided: the majority of the cardinals was opposed to Barbarossa's policy, but a minority supported him.Template:Sfn The first group elected Alexander III pope, but Barbarossa's supporters chose Victor IV.Template:Sfn Emperor Frederick summoned a synod to Pavia to put an end to the schism.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza sent his envoys to the church council where Victor IV was declared the lawful pope in February 1160.Template:Sfn However, Lucas, Archbishop of Esztergom, remained loyal to Alexander III and persuaded Géza to start negotiations with the representatives of Alexander III.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Géza only decided to change sides after most European monarchs, including the kings of Sicily, England and France, joined Alexander III.Template:Sfn Géza's envoys announced his decision to Alexander III in early 1161, but Géza only informed the emperor of his recognition of Alexander III in the autumn of the same year.Template:Sfn
Géza's and Alexander III's envoys signed a concordat in the summer of 1161.Template:Sfn According to that treaty, Géza promised that he would not depose or transfer prelates without the consent of the Holy See; on the other hand, the pope acknowledged that no papal legates could be sent to Hungary without the king's permission and the Hungarian prelates were only allowed to appeal to the Holy See with the king's consent.Template:Sfn He also signed a truce for five years with the Byzantine Empire.Template:Sfn Shortly before his death, Géza granted Dalmatia, Croatia and other territories to his younger son, Béla, as an appanage duchy.Template:Sfn Géza died on 31 May 1162 and was buried in Székesfehérvár.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Family
Géza's wife, Euphrosyne of Kiev, was a daughter of Grand Prince Mstislav I of Kiev.Template:Sfn She survived Géza and died around 1193.Template:Sfn Their first child, Stephen, was born in the summer of 1147; he succeeded Géza in 1162.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His younger brother, Béla, was born in about 1148; he inherited Hungary after the death of Stephen in 1172.Template:Sfn Géza's third son and namesake, Géza, was born in the 1150s.Template:Sfn The youngest son of Géza and Euphrosyne, Árpád, did not survive childhood.Template:Sfn Géza's and Euphrosyne's oldest daughter, Elizabeth, was given in marriage to Frederick of Bohemia, who was the heir to Vladislaus II, Duke of Bohemia, in 1157.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The second daughter, Odola, married Vladislaus II of Bohemia's younger son, Sviatopluk, in 1164.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The third daughter of Géza and Euphrosyne, Helena, became the wife of Leopold V of Austria in 1174.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
References
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- ↑ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 160.114), p. 136.
- ↑ Odo of Deuil: De Profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem: The Journey of Louis VII to the East, p. 35.
- ↑ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 166.120), p. 138.
- ↑ Odo of Deuil: De Profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem: The Journey of Louis VII to the East, p. 35.
- ↑ Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (3.8), p. 86.
- ↑ Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (3.11), p. 94.
- ↑ The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa (2.6), p. 119.
- ↑ The Travels of Abū Hāmid al-Andalusī al-Gharnātī, 1130–1155, pp. 82–83.
- ↑ The Travels of Abū Hāmid al-Andalusī al-Gharnātī, 1130–1155, p. 81.
- ↑ O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (4.126), p. 72.
- ↑ The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa (3.13), p. 188.
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Sources
Primary sources
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- Archdeacon Thomas of Split: History of the Bishops of Salona and Split (Latin text by Olga Perić, edited, translated and annotated by Damir Karbić, Mirjana Matijević Sokol and James Ross Sweeney) (2006). CEU Press. Template:ISBN.
- O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniatēs (Translated by Harry J. Magoulias) (1984). Wayne State University Press. Template:ISBN.
- Odo of Deuil: De Profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem: The Journey of Louis VII to the East (Edited with an English Translation by Virginia Gingerick Berry) (1948). Columbia University Press.
- Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (Translated by Charles M. Brand) (1976). Columbia University Press. Template:ISBN.
- The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa by Otto of Freising and his Continuator, Rahewin (Translated and annotated with an introduction by Charles Christopher Mierow with the collaboration of Richard Emery) (2004). Columbia University Press. Template:ISBN.
- "The Travels of Abū Hāmid al-Andalusī al-Gharnātī, 1130–1155". In Ibn Fadlān: Ibn Fadlān and the Land of Darnkess: Arab Travellers in the Far North (Translated with an Introduction by Paul Lunde and Caroline Stone) (2012). Penguin Books. Template:ISBN.
Secondary sources
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Template:Hungarian kings Template:Croatian kings Template:Authority control
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- 1130 births
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- 12th-century Hungarian monarchs
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