Stephen II of Hungary

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Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Infobox royalty Stephen II (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; Template:Langx; 1101 – early 1131), King of Hungary and Croatia, ruled from 1116 until 1131. His father, King Coloman, had him crowned as a child, thus denying the crown to his uncle Álmos. In the first year of his reign, Venice occupied Dalmatia and Stephen never restored his rule in that province. His reign was characterized by frequent wars with neighbouring countries.

Early years (till 1116)

Stephen and his twin brother, Ladislaus, were sons of the Hungarian king Coloman by his wife, Felicia of Sicily.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to the Illuminated Chronicle, they were born "... in the year of our Lord 1101."[1]Template:Sfn Stephen was named after the first king of Hungary, who had been canonized in 1083, implying that he was his father's heir from birth.Template:Sfn A document written in Zadar in approximately 1105 AD makes mention of "Stephen, our most renowned king" along with Coloman, proving that the latter had his four-year-old son crowned king.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Álmos and Béla are blinded
Álmos and his son, Béla are blinded on Coloman's order (from the Illuminated Chronicle)
Coloman had Álmos seized
Coloman had the blind Álmos imprisoned before his death (from the Illuminated Chronicle)

By the time of Stephen's coronation, Coloman had demonstrated his intention to secure the succession for his son.Template:Sfn Coloman's ambitious brother, Álmos Template:Mdash who had already rebelled against the king in 1098 Template:Mdash opposed this plan and left Hungary.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He first sought the assistance of Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, followed by an appeal to Duke Boleslaw III of Poland.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn When all of his efforts ended in failure, Álmos submitted to Coloman and returned to Hungary,Template:Sfn although he made several abortive attempts to dethrone Coloman in the following decade.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In order to bring an end to the threat these plots presented to Stephen's succession, Coloman had Álmos and Álmos's young son, Béla, blinded.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

When he fell gravely ill in early 1116, Coloman also had his brother imprisoned.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Illuminated Chronicle narrates that the dying king "instructed his son and his great men" to invade Rus' in order to take vengeance for Coloman's failure in the 1099 siege of Peremyshl (Przemyśl), Poland.[2]Template:Sfn Coloman died on 3 February 1116.Template:Sfn

Reign

Wars and internal conflicts (1116–1127)

Stephen's coronation
Stephen is crowned king in February 1116 (from the Illuminated Chronicle)

Stephen was crowned king by Archbishop Lawrence of Esztergom in Székesfehérvár within thirty days of his father's death.Template:Sfn His peaceful succession showed the effectiveness of the measures Coloman had implemented to prevent Álmos from usurping the throne. Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Upon his councilor's advice, Stephen initiated a meeting with Vladislaus I, Duke of Bohemia, in order to improve the countries' relations, which had deteriorated in the previous decade.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The two monarchs met on the river Olšava, which marked the border of their realms.Template:Sfn However, the lack of mutual confidence hindered the opening of negotiations, leading to armed conflicts which evolved into a battle on 13 May.Template:Sfn On the battlefield, the Bohemian army inflicted a serious defeat on Stephen's troops.Template:Sfn The contemporaneous Cosmas of Prague blamed the young king's advisors for the fiasco, but later medieval Hungarian chronicles Template:Mdash all completed under kings descending from Stephen's opponent, Álmos Template:Mdash wrote that the king acted without consulting his advisors "for he was of an impetuous nature".[3]Template:Sfn

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The Hungarian people are prodigious in energy, mighty in strength, and very powerful in military arms, sufficient to fight with a king of lands anywhere. After the death of their king, Coloman, their princes sent to Duke Vladislav to renew and confirm with the new king, named Stephen, their ancient peace and friendship. Vladislav came to the River Olšava, which separates the realms of Hungary and Moravia. Immediately, the Hungarian people, innumerable as the sands or drops of rain, covered the whole surface of the land in the field of Lučsko, like locusts. But, as scripture says, "Woe to the land whose king is a child." Their princes, through their inborn pride in themselves, strayed from the duke's peaceful words and sent replies more to stir up strife than to bring the kiss of peace.

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Doge Ordelafo Faliero, who had conquered an island in the Gulf of Kvarner during the last year of Coloman's reign,Template:Sfn returned to Dalmatia at the head of the Venetian fleet in May 1116.Template:Sfn On 15 July, he vanquished the Hungarian troops which had arrived to relieve Zadar.Template:Sfn Thereafter all towns Template:Mdash including Biograd na Moru, Šibenik, Split, and Trogir Template:Mdash surrendered to Venice, terminating Stephen II's suzerainty along the coastline of the Adriatic Sea.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, in either 1117 or 1118, the Hungarian troops were able to defeat the Venetians, during which Ordelafo Faliero himself died at a battle near Zadar, enabling Biograd na Moru, Split, and Trogir to rejoin the sovereignty of the Hungarian monarch.Template:Sfn However, the new doge, Domenico Michele, invaded and reconquered all Dalmatia.Template:Sfn A five-year truce, which was concluded in 1117 or 1118, confirmed the status quo: the seizure of Dalmatia by Venice.Template:Sfn

Bořivoj II's tomb
Tomb of Bořivoj II, Duke of BohemiaTemplate:Mdashhe fought against Hungary, but died in exile in Stephen II's court

Stephen's troops launched a plundering raid into Austria in 1118, provoking a counter-attack by Leopold III, Margrave of Austria, later that same year.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bořivoj II, Duke of Bohemia, supported Leopold and pillaged the northwestern regions of the Kingdom of Hungary.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Despite this, when Vladislaus I dethroned his brother Bořivoj in 1120, Bořivoj fled to Hungary and settled at Stephen's court.Template:Sfn

Stephen married a daughter of Robert I of Capua, in the early 1120s.Template:Sfn Historian Paul Stephenson wrote that Stephen's marriage alliance with the Normans of Southern Italy "must have been partly directed against the Venetians."Template:Sfn The Norman princes of Capua had been the pope's staunch supporters during the Investiture Controversy, suggesting that his marriage also continued his father's pro-Papal foreign policy.Template:Sfn According to Włodzimierz Dworzaczek, Stephen in 1121 married Adelhaid, daughter of Heinrich, burgrave of Regensburg.[5][6]

Stephen's cousin and the daughter of his uncle Álmos, Adelaide, whose husband Soběslav had been expelled from Moravia, arrived in Hungary in early 1123.Template:Sfn According to Cosmas of Prague, Stephen "kindly received her, acknowledging her as his relative",[7] which implies that his relations with his uncle were cordial around that time.Template:Sfn In the same year, the young king launched a military expedition against the Principality of Volhynia in order to assist its expelled prince, Iaroslav Sviatopolkovich, regain his throne.Template:Sfn Even though Sviatopolchich was assassinated at the beginning of the siege of his former seat, Volodymyr-Volynskyi,Template:Sfn Stephen decided to continue the war.Template:Sfn However, according to the Illuminated Chronicle, his commanders threatened to dethrone him if he continued the aggression, forcing Stephen to lift the siege and return to Hungary.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

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Cosma, of the line of Paznan, stood up before the King and said: "Lord, what is this thing which you are doing? If with the death of a multitude of your soldiers you take the castle, whom will you appoint as its lord? If you choose one among your nobles, he will not remain here. Or do you wish to abandon your kingdom and yourself have the dukedom? We barons will not storm the castle. If you wish to storm it, storm it alone. We are returning to Hungary and we will choose for ourselves a king." Then by order of the nobles the heralds announced throughout the camp that the Hungarians should return as speedily as possible to Hungary. When the King thus saw himself justly deprived of the help of his people, he returned to Hungary.

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Stephen's seal
Seal of Stephen II

Taking advantage of the absence of the Venetian fleet from the Adriatic Sea because of a naval expedition in the Levant, Stephen invaded Dalmatia in the first half of 1124.Template:Sfn His charter confirming the liberation of Split and Trogir in July 1124 is evidence that the central regions of Dalmatia returned to his rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, upon the return of the Venetian armada the Dalmatian towns once again surrendered, one after another.Template:Sfn According to the Historia Ducum Veneticorum, only the citizens of Biograd na Moru "dared resist the doge and his army", but "their city was razed to its foundations."Template:Sfn

According to the Illuminated Chronicle, the blind Álmos, "fearing death at the hands of King Stephen",[9] fled to the Byzantine Empire.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Many of his partisans followed him, and Emperor John II Komnenos settled them in a town in Macedonia.Template:Sfn The Byzantine historian John Kinnamos confirmed that the emperor looked upon Álmos "favorably and received him with kindness."[10] He added that Stephen "sent his envoys to the emperor and demanded that [Álmos] be expelled from the Byzantine Empire",[11] but his request was rejected.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The sources do not specify the date which Álmos's fled, but it likely occurred circa 1125.Template:Sfn Historian Ferenc Makk wrote that Álmos was forced to flee from Hungary because he had taken advantage of Stephen's failures in Volhynia and Dalmatia, and conspired against Stephen.Template:Sfn

Stephen met Soběslav, the new duke of Bohemia, in October 1126.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Their meeting brought an end to the hostilities between their two states.Template:Sfn Around the same year, Stephen also concluded an agreement with Archbishop Conrad I of Salzburg.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Last years (1127–1131)

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Emperor John II Komnenos
Mosaic portrait of the Byzantine Emperor John II Komnenos in the Hagia Sophia (Istanbul, Turkey)

Stephen broke through the Byzantine border in the summer.Template:Sfn His troops sacked Belgrade, Braničevo and Niš, and plundered the regions around Serdica (Sofia, Bulgaria) and Philippopolis (Plovdiv, Bulgaria), before returning to Hungary.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In response, Emperor John II marched against Hungary in 1128, where he defeated the royal troops in a battle at Haram, and "captured Frangochorion, the richest land in Hungary" (now in Serbia).Template:Sfn Stephen was unable to participate in the fighting because "he happened to be sickly in body and was recuperating someplace in the midst of his land",[14] according to John Kinnamos.Template:Sfn The Illuminated Chronicle said that his illness was so serious that "all expected his death."Template:Sfn[15] The chronicle added that "traitors" went so far as to elect two kings, the "Counts Bors and Ivan".[16]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Upon regaining his health, Stephen had Ivan executed and expelled Bors from his kingdom.Template:Sfn

John Kinnamos wrote of a second campaign by Stephen against the Byzantines.Template:Sfn The Hungarian troops, supported by Czech reinforcements under the command of Duke Vaclav of Olomouc, took Braničevo by storm and destroyed its fortress.Template:Sfn Emperor John II Komnenos was forced to retreat and sue for peace.Template:Sfn Historian Ferenc Makk writes that the resulting peace treaty was signed in October 1129.Template:Sfn

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Going to Branitshevo for a second time, [Emperor John] made haste to rebuild it. Since some time elapsed in the task, the army, suffering from winter weather and lack of necessities, was in severe distress. When he learned this, the Hungarians' king decided to cross the Danube as quickly as possible and attack them unexpectedly. In the Hungarians' land, however, there was a woman, a Latin by birth, outstanding in wealth and other distinction. Sending to the emperor, she revealed what was being planned. Since he was unable to engage them with an equivalent force, because as stated his army had already been overcome by disease and lack of necessities, he fortified the city where possible and withdrew.

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For many years, Stephen believed that his cousin, Béla, had died after being blinded on the orders of Stephen's father.Template:Sfn[9] Having learnt, around 1129, that Béla was alive, the king "rejoiced with great joy",[9] according to the Illuminated Chronicle.Template:Sfn He even granted Béla the town of Tolna and arranged Béla's marriage with Helena of Rascia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

The Illuminated Chronicle recounts that Stephen showed blatant favoritism towards the "Comans", identified as Pechenegs or Cumans by historians, who had arrived in Hungary in the 1120s.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In his last years, he even tolerated the crimes they committed against his subjects, a policy which eventually lead to a revolt.Template:Sfn Before his death, Stephen "laid aside his royal state and took the habit of a monk".[18]Template:Sfn He died of dysentery in the spring of 1131.Template:Sfn No source recorded the exact date of his death, but most of his biographies state that he died on 1 March.Template:Sfn He was buried in the Várad Cathedral (Oradea, Romania).Template:Sfn

Family

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According to the Illuminated Chronicle, Stephen had no "wish to marry a lawful wife but took to himself concubines and harlots".[19]Template:Sfn However, his advisors, "grieving that the kingdom was in a sorry state and the King without an heir",[20] persuaded him to marry.Template:Sfn They chose a daughter of the late Robert I of Capua as their monarch's wife,Template:Sfn although her name was not recorded.Template:Sfn Stephen died childless.Template:Sfn

The following family tree presents Stephen's ancestors and some of his relatives who are mentioned in the article.Template:Sfn Template:Tree chart/start Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Script error: No such module "Tree chart". Template:Tree chart/end *Whether Géza's first or second wife was his children's mother is uncertain.

References

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Sources

Primary sources

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  • Cosmas of Prague: The Chronicle of the Czechs (Translated with an introduction and notes by Lisa Wolverton) (2009). The Catholic University of America Press. Template:ISBN.
  • Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (Translated by Charles M. Brand) (1976). Columbia University Press. Template:ISBN.
  • O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniatēs (Translated by Harry J. Magoulias) (1984). Wayne State University Press. Template:ISBN.
  • The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: Chronica de Gestis Hungarorum (Edited by Dezső Dercsényi) (1970). Corvina, Taplinger Publishing. Template:ISBN.

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Secondary sources

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  • Template:The Early Medieval Balkans
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  • Template:A History of the Byzantine State and Society
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Template:S-endTemplate:Hungarian kingsTemplate:Croatian kingsTemplate:Authority controlTemplate:Sister project
Stephen II of Hungary
Born: 1101 Died: March 1131
Regnal titles
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check King of Hungary and Croatia
1116–1131 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
  1. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 146.104), p. 132.
  2. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 151.107), p. 133.
  3. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 153.109), p. 134.
  4. Cosmas of Prague: The Chronicle of the Czechs (3.42.), pp. 230–231.
  5. Włodzimierz Dworzaczek: Genealogia. Warszawa 1959. Table 84.
  6. Wincenty Swoboda: Stefan II. In: Słownik Starożytności Słowiańskich. Vol. 8. Part 2. 1996, p. 575.
  7. Cosmas of Prague: The Chronicle of the Czechs (3.51.), p. 238.
  8. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 155.110–111), p. 134.
  9. a b c The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 157.112), p. 135.
  10. Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (1.4), p. 17.
  11. Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (1.4), pp. 17–18.
  12. O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (1.17), p. 11.
  13. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 158.112), p. 135.
  14. Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (1.4), p. 18.
  15. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 158.112–113), p. 135.
  16. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 158.113), p. 135.
  17. Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus by John Kinnamos (1.5), p. 19.
  18. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 159.113), p. 135.
  19. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 154.109–110), p. 134.
  20. The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 154.110), p. 134.