Levente
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "other uses". Template:Infobox royalty Levente (between 1010 and 1015 – 1047) was a member of the House of Árpád, a great-grandson of Taksony, Grand Prince of the Hungarians. He was expelled from Hungary in 1031 or 1032, and spent many years in Bohemia, Poland and the Kievan Rus'. He returned to Hungary, where a pagan uprising was developing around that time, in 1046. Levente remained a devout pagan, but did not hinder the election of his Christian brother, Andrew I as king.
Childhood
Hungarian chronicles have preserved contradictory information of his parentage.Template:Sfn According to one variant, Levente and his two brothersTemplate:Spaced ndashAndrew and BélaTemplate:Spaced ndashwere "the sons of Ladislas the Bald"[1][2] and his "wife from Ruthania",[2] that is from the Kievan Rus'.Template:Sfn On the other hand, a concurring tradition has preserved that the three brothers were sons of Ladislas the Bald's brother, "Vazul by some girl from the clan"[2] of Tátony.Template:Sfn
Modern historians – since the research of Péter Váczy – agree that the latter report is more reliableTemplate:Sfn and unanimously write that Levente was born to Vazul and his concubine from the Tátony clan.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, historians still debate whether Levente was the eldest or a younger son of his father.Template:Sfn Late 19th-century historians – Gyula Pauler, Henrik Marczali and János Karácsonyi – considered Levente as the youngest since the contemporary chronicles unanimously name Andrew, Béla, and Levente in that order. Later historians, e.g. Bálint Hóman, Emma Bartoniek, György Györffy, Gyula Kristó and Márta Font, refer to an entry in the Illuminated Chronicle regarding the renunciation his claim to the throne and in accordance with the traditional principle of seniority, while arguing in favor of Levente as the oldest of the three.Template:Sfn Gyula Kristó, who says that Levente was Vazul's eldest son, writes that he was born between 1010 and 1015.Template:Sfn Péter Báling argues the authentic Chronicle of Zagreb explicitly says that Béla was the second son of Vazul, which rules out the possibility that Levente would have been the oldest.Template:Sfn Báling considers Levente was born around 1020.Template:Sfn
In exile and return
Levente, Andrew and Béla left Hungary after their father was blinded in 1031 or 1032.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They first settled in Bohemia.Template:Sfn They left Bohemia, where "their condition of life was poor and mean",[3]Template:Sfn according to the Illuminated Chronicle, and moved to the court of King Mieszko II of Poland in 1034 at the latest.Template:Sfn The youngest among them, Béla settled here, but Levente and Andrew moved to Kiev.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Andrew was baptized in Kiev, but Levente remained a devout pagan.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Dissatisfied with King Peter Orseolo, who succeeded Stephen I of Hungary, Hungarian lords persuaded Levente and Andrew to return to Hungary in 1046.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, a great pagan uprising had broken out in Hungary.Template:Sfn The rebels captured King Peter.Template:Sfn The Hungarian lords and prelates preferred a Christian monarch and offered the crown to Andrew,Template:Sfn while, as historian Sándor Tóth argues, leaders of the pagan revolt supported the claim of Levente, for he was not baptized, unlike his brothers.Template:Sfn The Illuminated Chronicle states that Levente "would beyond doubt have corrupted all Hungary with paganism and idolatry".[4]Template:Sfn However, the same chronicle also writes that Levente gave the crown, in the "simplicity of spirit",[5] to Andrew, suggesting that Levente voluntarily renounced the crown in favor of his brother.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Levente died in 1047 and was buried in a village on the Danube which was named after his great-grandfather, Taksony, who was "said to lie in a pagan grave" there, according to the Illuminated Chronicle.[2]Template:Sfn
References
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- ↑ Simon of Kéza: The Deeds of the Hungarians (ch. 2.44), p. 107.
- ↑ a b c d The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: (ch. 60.87), p. 113.
- ↑ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: (ch. 53.78), p. 110.
- ↑ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: (ch. 60.86), p. 113.
- ↑ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: (ch. 65.92), p. 115.
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Sources
Primary sources
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- Simon of Kéza: The Deeds of the Hungarians (Edited and translated by László Veszprémy and Frank Schaer with a study by Jenő Szűcs) (1999). CEU Press. Template:ISBN.
- The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: Chronica de Gestis Hungarorum (Edited by Dezső Dercsényi) (1970). Corvina, Taplinger Publishing. Template:ISBN.
Secondary sources
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