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Coloman of Galicia

Coloman of Halych (Hungarian: Kálmán; Ukrainian: Коломан; 1208 – 1241) was the ruler—from 1214 prince, and from 1215 or 1216 to 1221 king—of Halych, and duke of Slavonia from 1226 to his death. He was the second son of Andrew II of Hungary and Gertrude of Merania. His father and Leszek the White, Duke of Poland, concluded an agreement about the marriage of Coloman and Leszek's daughter, Salomea, and the division of Halych, allotting its western regions to Leszek, the remaining lands to Coloman. The Hungarian and Polish armies occupied the principality in late 1214. Andrew II appointed a Hungarian nobleman, Benedict the Bald, to administer it on Coloman's behalf. Coloman was crowned the first king of Halych with the pope's authorization in early 1216.

Coloman
Coloman's statue in Gödöllő
Prince/King of Halych
Reign1214–1219
1219–1221
Coronationearly 1216
PredecessorVladislav Kormilichich (regent)
Mstislav Mstislavich
SuccessorMstislav Mstislavich
Born1208
DiedMay 1241 (aged 32–33)
Čazma, Slavonia
SpouseSalomea of Poland
DynastyÁrpád
FatherAndrew II of Hungary
MotherGertrude of Merania

After the Hungarian troops occupied the western Galician territories, Leszek made an alliance with Mstislav Mstislavich, Prince of Novgorod. Mstislav invaded Halych, forcing Coloman and his supporters to flee to Hungary, most probably in early 1219. Mstislav supported his son-in-law, Daniel Romanovich—who had claimed Halych since 1205—to invade Polish territories, which brought about a reconciliation between Andrew II and Leszek. The Hungarians and Poles again occupied Halych and restored it to Coloman in the autumn of 1219. Mstislav and his Cuman allies defeated the Hungarians near Halych and captured Coloman and Salomea in August 1221. To secure their release, Andrew II renounced Halych and arranged a marriage alliance between his youngest son, Andrew, and Mstislav's daughter.

Coloman returned to Hungary in late 1221 or 1222. He settled in Szepes (now Spiš in Slovakia) where he had held large estates since the late 1210s. Andrew II made him duke of Slavonia, with jurisdiction also in Croatia and Dalmatia, in 1226. He cooperated with his eldest brother, Béla, in revising their father's donations already during Andrew II's lifetime.

Early life

Coloman was the second son of Andrew II of Hungary and his first wife, Gertrude of Merania.[1] Andrew's father (Coloman's grandfather), Béla III of Hungary, was the first king of Hungary to conquer the Principality of Halych in 1188.[2] Béla granted Halych to the teenager Andrew, but Andrew was unpopular, especially because his troops did not respect the Galicians' Orthodox faith.[2] The Galicians expelled him in 1189 or 1190, but he did not abandon his claim to Halych.[2][3] After Roman Mstislavich, who had united the principalities of Volhynia and Halych under his rule, died fighting against the Poles in 1205, Andrew launched a military campaign against Halych in almost each year.[4][5] He adopted the title of "King of Galicia and Lodomeria" in token of his claim to both principalities.[6][7] Initially, he supported Roman Mstislavich's minor sons, Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich, against Vladimir Igorevich and his brothers, who also claimed Halych.[4]

Coloman was born in 1208.[8] According to historians Márta Font and Gábor Barabás, he was named most probably for Coloman of Stockerau, an Irish pilgrim who had been martyred in Austria in 1012.[9] Coloman's mother showed blatant favoritism towards her German kinsmen and courtiers, which outraged the native lords.[6] She was murdered by a group of Hungarian noblemen in September 1213, shortly after her husband departed for a new military campaign against Halych.[10] Andrew returned to Hungary, but only after appointing a Galician boyar (or nobleman), Vladislav Kormilichich, to lead the Hungarian army to Halych.[11] Kormilichich took control of the principality on Andrew's behalf.[12] Leszek the White, Duke of Poland, granted asylum to Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich and made an alliance with princes Alexandr Vsevolodovich of Vladimir and Mstislav Yaroslavich of Peresopnytsia.[12] They invaded Halych and routed Kormilichich, but they could not capture the capital of the principality.[13][14]

In a letter to Pope Innocent III, Andrew stated that Galician boyars had proposed him to grant Halych to Coloman.[15] According to the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle, Leszek the White was the first to suggest the same idea, also proposing his daughter, Salomea, to Coloman.[16] Andrew and Leszek had a meeting in Szepes in the autumn of 1214.[note 1][16][17] They reached a compromise, which included the marriage of Coloman and Salomea and the cession of two western Galician towns, Przemyśl and Lubaczów, to Leszek.[18] The Hungarian and Polish armies invaded the principality and put an end to Vladislav Kormilichich's rule before the end of the year.[19]

[Andrew II] marched against [Leszek the White] whom [Daniel Romanovich] was visiting at that time. [Thereupon Leszek] sent his envoy Lestič and the boyar Pakoslav [to Andrew] with the [following] message: "It is not proper for a boyar to reign in [Halych]; marry my daughter to your son [Coloman] and let him rule in [Halych]. [Andrew] liked Pakoslav's [advice]. He held council with [Leszek] in [Szepes] and took [Leszek's] daughter for his son.

— Galician–Volhynian Chronicle

Halych

 
The Principality of Halych and its neighbors

Coloman was installed in Halych soon after the fall of Kormilichich.[18] Since Coloman was a minor, Benedict the Bald was appointed to administer the principality.[19] Another Hungarian nobleman, Demetrius Aba, was made the master of the stewards in Coloman's court before 1216.[20] Kormilichich's former ally, Sudislav, was one of the leading Galician boyars who supported Coloman.[21]

Andrew sent a letter to Pope Innocent, requesting him to authorize John, Archbishop of Esztergom to anoint Coloman as king.[19][22] In his next letter, Andrew thanked the pope for giving consent to Coloman's coronation, but also informed him that a riot had broken out against Coloman and the rebels laid siege to Halych.[23] Andrew urged Innocent to send a legate and a golden crown to Coloman to strengthen the legitimacy of his rule.[24] Pope Honorius III mentioned in a letter in 1222 that the Archbishop of Esztergom had crowned Coloman "with the blessing of the Holy See", but the circumstances of the ceremony are unknown.[25][26] Historians Font, Barabás and Karol Hollý inferred from the correspondence that Coloman was most probably crowned twice: first (in late 1214 or early 1215) with a provisional crown in Hungary, later (probably in early 1216) with the crown sent by the pope.[25][27] Other historians—including Tibor Almási, Nataša Procházková and Đura Hardi—conclude that Coloman was first anointed, and he was only once crowned, in early 1216.[1][28]

The relationship between Andrew and Leszek the White had meanwhile become tense.[19] Leszek granted Vladimir-in-Vohynia, which was the most prestigious princely seat in Volhynia, to Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich.[28] He also failed to support Coloman during the siege of Halych.[28] The Hungarian army invaded western Galicia and captured Przemyśl and Lubaczów in late 1215 or early 1216.[26] Leszek approached Mstislav Mstislavich, Prince of Novgorod, seeking his assistance against the Hungarians.[26] The reconstruction of the ensuing events is difficult, because their dating is uncertain.[26][29] Mstislav invaded Halych between 1215 and 1219—most probably in early 1219, according to Font and Barabás—and forced Coloman, Benedict the Bald and Sudislav to flee to Hungary.[30][31]

Mstislav gave his daughter, Anna, in marriage to Daniel Romanovich who soon occupied the lands between the rivers Wieprz and Bug from Leszek.[32] Outraged by Daniel's attack, Leszek made a new alliance with Andrew II.[33][34] Their united forces defeated Mstislav's army in three battles in October 1219.[35][36] Mstislav and Daniel were forced to abandon Halych and Coloman returned to the principality.[35][37] Andrew most probably made Sudislav's son-in-law, Philnius, the commander of the Hungarian army in Halych around this time, according to Font and Barabás.[38]

Mstislav hired Cumans and again invaded Halych in late 1220 or early 1221, but could not capture the capital.[33] Mstislav's fiasco encouraged Philnius to join Leszek's campaign against Volhynia, leaving Coloman and Salomea in the newly fortified Church of the Virgin Mary in Halych.[33][35] Taking advantage of the absence of the bulk of the Hungarian army, Mstislav and the Cumans laid siege Halych in August 1221.[note 2][36][39] Philnius hurried back from his campaign, but Mstislav defeated his army and he could only flee with the help of a Galician boyar, Zhiroslav on 14 August.[37][35] Coloman's retainers tried to resist in the fortified church, but the lack of water forced them to surrender.[35] The Polish chronicler, Jan Długosz, wrote that Coloman and Salomea were imprisoned in the fortress of Torchesk.[35]

Internal strifes in Hungary prevented Coloman's father from launching a military expedition against Mstislav.[33][40] Andrew entered into negotiations with Mstislav and they reached a compromise in late 1221 or early 1222.[41][40] According to the agreement, Coloman was to renounce the title of King of Halych, but Mstislav agreed to give his daughter, Maria, in marriage to Coloman's younger brother, Andrew, to whom Coloman's royal title would be transferred.[33][40]

[Princes] Mstislav and [ Volodimir ] went from Kiev to [Halych] against the King's son, and the men of [Halych] came out against them and [Czechs] and [Poles], Moravians and Hungarians, and the forces came together. And God helped Mstislav, and he entered the town of [Halych] and they took with their hands the King's son and his wife, and he took peace with the King, and let go his son, and himself took his seat in [Halych] and [Volodimir] in Kiev.

— The Chronicle of Novgorod

Kingdom of Hungary

Szepes

After his release in late 1221 or early 1222, Coloman returned to Hungary.[33] His father soon approached Pope Honorius III, asking him to invalidate his agreement with Mstislav.[40] The pope only cancelled the provision about the transfer of Coloman's royal title to his younger brother, because the pope preserved the right to decide about coronations.[40][42] Coloman styled himself "King of Galicia" till the end of his life, although he never returned to Halych.[40] He and his wife settled in Szepes, near the Hungarian-Galician border.[40][43] Font and Barabás say that Coloman had received estates in the region already in the late 1210s.[44] A late source (a 1279 letter of Elizabeth the Cuman) mentioned that Coloman had held Szepes till the end of his life.[40][44]

Coloman's activities in Szepes are poorly documented.[45] He granted privileges to the "guest settlers" in Szepesolaszi (now Spišské Vlachy in Slovakia).[46] He made donations to the Cistercian monastery which was established in the 1220s in Szepes.[47] Coloman also supported the establishment of the Premonstratensian provostry at Jászó (now Jasov in Slovakia).[48] According to a scholarly theory, the tower of the Szepes Castle was built on Coloman's order.[49]

Slavonia

Andrew II entrusted Coloman with the government of Slavonia, Croatia and Dalmatia in 1226.[50] The three provinces had been administered by Coloman's elder brother, Béla, who was appointed to administer Translyvania.[50] Coloman's jurisdiction also included counties located in Hungary proper, such as Baranya, Pozsega, Somogy, Valkó, Varasd and Zala.[51]

In the summer of 1226, Coloman visited Dalmatia where he was ceremoniously received in the towns.[52] He made donations to the Bishopric of Trogir and confirmed his mother's grant to the Hájszentlőrinc Chapter.[52] His following extant diplomas were issued in 1229.[53] Estates located in Szepes were the subjects of both diplomas, implying that Coloman had mostly stayed in Szepes from 1226 to 1229, according to Font and Barabás.[54]

Coloman supported Béla's attempts to revise their father's grants already during Andrew II's lifetime.[54] The two brothers jointly confirmed a grant made by a previous ban of Croatia in 1231.[55] Coloman ignored the privileges of the Knights Templar and wanted to collect taxes on their estates.[56] The pope appointed Bartholomew le Gros, the bishop of Pécs, to arbitrate in the dispute together with the abbot of Pécsvárad Abbey and the provost of Pécs Chapter, but also forbade them to excommunicate Coloman without his special authorization.[56] The three prelates persuaded Coloman to confirm the knights' privileges on 31 July 1231, but a full reconciliation was reached only after lengthy negotiations in 1239.[56]

Coloman granted liberties to the German, Saxon, Hungarian and Slavic "guest settlers" of Vukovar in 1239.[57] He also confirmed the right of the "guest settlers" of Varaždin to elect their judges and put their obligations in writing.[58]

Coloman initiated the merger of the Archbishopric of Split and the Bishopric of Zagreb, but Pope Gregory IX reminded him in 1240, that the two dioceses could not be united without the consent of the archbishop of Kalocsa and the chapters of their sees.[59]

In 1231, Coloman granted privileges to Vukovar (Hungarian: Valkóvár). Coloman, similarly to his brother, opposed his father's third marriage with Beatrice d'Este and following the death of King Andrew II (21 September 1235) they accused their young stepmother of adultery.[citation needed]

Pope Gregory IX persuaded him to pursue the heretics in his provinces and in the adjacent territories; therefore he invaded and occupied Bosnia and Zachlumia but he could not wind up the Bosnian Church. He supported the establishment of the Diocese of Bosnia and he granted Đakovo (Hungarian: Diakóvár) to its bishop. When he was informed that the Mongols invaded the kingdom, he joined his brother's troops. However, their troops were defeated at the Battle of Mohi (11 April 1241). Coloman suffered serious wounds and died of his injuries a few weeks after the battle.[citation needed]

Titles

Coloman was styled "by the Grace of God, king of the Ruthenians, and by his glorious father's generosity, duke of Dalmatia and Croatia" in his first extant charter in 1226.[60] Göncöl, Archbishop of Split, referred to Coloman as "king and duke of Slavonia" in 1229.[61] The first document mentioning Coloman's rule in "whole Slavonia" was issued by the Zagreb Chapter in 1230.[61] He was consequently styled as "king, and duke of whole Slavonia" from the late 1230s.[61]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ The Galician–Volhynian Chronicle is the most important source of Coloman's rule in Halych; its variants narrate the events without a precise chronology, thus most dates of this period are un certain (Font & Barabás (2017), p. 13.
  2. ^ Historian Martin Dimnik writes, Mstislav captured Coloman in both 1219 and 1221. (Dimnik (2003), pp. 290–291.

References

  1. ^ a b Almási 1994, p. 316.
  2. ^ a b c Engel 2001, p. 54.
  3. ^ Font 1991, p. 120.
  4. ^ a b Font 1991, pp. 121–122.
  5. ^ Engel 2001, pp. 54, 89.
  6. ^ a b Engel 2001, p. 90.
  7. ^ Font 1991, p. 122.
  8. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 11.
  9. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 12.
  10. ^ Engel 2001, p. 91.
  11. ^ Barabás 2016, pp. 90–91.
  12. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 27–28.
  13. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 28.
  14. ^ Hollý 2007, p. 11.
  15. ^ Hollý 2007, pp. 11–12.
  16. ^ a b Hollý 2007, p. 12.
  17. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 32–33.
  18. ^ a b Barabás 2016, p. 92.
  19. ^ a b c d Font 1991, p. 126.
  20. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 55.
  21. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 61–62.
  22. ^ Hollý 2007, p. 15.
  23. ^ Hollý 2007, p. 16.
  24. ^ Hollý 2007, pp. 16–17.
  25. ^ a b Hollý 2007, p. 17.
  26. ^ a b c d Font 1991, p. 127.
  27. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 41–44, 74.
  28. ^ a b c Font & Barabás 2017, p. 43.
  29. ^ Hollý 2007, pp. 20–22.
  30. ^ Hollý 2007, pp. 20–21.
  31. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 67.
  32. ^ Hollý 2007, p. 21.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Font 1991, p. 128.
  34. ^ Dimnik 2003, p. 290.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Hollý 2007, p. 22.
  36. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 68, 74.
  37. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, p. 68.
  38. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 62, 68.
  39. ^ Dimnik 2003, p. 291.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h Hollý 2007, p. 23.
  41. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 69, 74.
  42. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 76.
  43. ^ Barabás 2016, p. 96.
  44. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, p. 75.
  45. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 76–80.
  46. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 79.
  47. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 79–80.
  48. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 80–81.
  49. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 78.
  50. ^ a b Hollý 2007, p. 26.
  51. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 94.
  52. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, p. 85.
  53. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 82.
  54. ^ a b Font & Barabás 2017, p. 84.
  55. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 89.
  56. ^ a b c Font & Barabás 2017, p. 109.
  57. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 120.
  58. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, pp. 120–121.
  59. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 117.
  60. ^ Font & Barabás 2017, p. 95.
  61. ^ a b c Font & Barabás 2017, p. 96.
  62. ^ Kristó & Makk 1996, pp. 246, 248, 257, Appendices 4–5.
  63. ^ Almási 1994, p. 234.
  64. ^ Runciman 1989, p. 345, Appendix III.

Sources

  • Almási, Tibor (1994). "Kálmán 2.". In Kristó, Gyula; Engel, Pál; Makk, Ferenc (eds.). Korai magyar történeti lexikon (9–14. század) [Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History (9th–14th centuries)] (in Hungarian). Akadémiai Kiadó. p. 316. ISBN 963-05-6722-9.
  • Barabás, Gábor (2015). "Viola opolei hercegnő és Kálmán szlavón herceg: Egy historiográfiai vita margójára [Duchess Viola of Opole and Coloman, Duke of Slavonia: Contribution to a Historiographical Dispute]". Világtörténet (in Hungarian). 37 (1): 5–28. ISSN 0083-6265.
  • Barabás, Gábor (2016). "Coloman of Galicia and his Polish Relations. The Duke of Slavonia as Protector of Widowed Duchesses". In Bagi, Dániel; Barabás, Gábor; Máté, Zsolt (eds.). Hungaro–Polonica: Young Scholars on Medieval Polish–Hungarian Relations. Történészcéh Egyesület. pp. 89–117. ISBN 978-963-12-7382-3.
  • Barabás, Gábor (2017). "Kálmán szlavón herceg és IX. Gergely pápa: Magyar királyi herceg az Apostoli Szentszék szolgálatában? [Coloman, Duke of Slavonia and Pope Gregory IX: Hungarian Royal Prince in the Service of the Holy See?]". Aetas (in Hungarian). AETAS Könyv- és Lapkiadó Egyesület. 32 (3): 36–51. ISSN 0237-7934.
  • Barabás, Gábor (2019). "Prince Coloman's Life after 1226: A Member of the Árpádian Dynasty and Central European Narrative Sources". Hungary and Hungarians in Central and East European Narrative Sources (10th–17th Centuries). Pécs: University of Pécs. pp. 107–123. ISBN 978-963-4293-67-5.
  • Barabás, Gábor (2020). "A King in Slavonia: Prince Coloman in the Realm of St Stephen in the 1230s". Stefan the First-Crowned and His Time. Belgrade: Institute of History. pp. 291–308. ISBN 978-86-7743-139-6.
  • Dimnik, Martin (2003). The Dynasty of Chernigov, 1146–1246. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-03981-9.
  • Engel, Pál (2001). The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526. I.B. Tauris Publishers. ISBN 1-86064-061-3.
  • Font, Márta (1991). "II. András orosz politikája és hadjáratai [Andrew II's policy and campaigns in Rus']". Századok (in Hungarian). 125 (1–2): 107–144. ISSN 0039-8098.
  • Font, Márta (2019). "Coloman, the King of Galicia: The Problems of Coronation". Specimina nova. Pars prima, Sectio mediaevalis: dissertationes historicae collectae per Cathedra Historiae Medii Aevi Modernorumque Temporum Universitatis Quinqueecclesiensis. University of Pécs. 10: 81–94. ISSN 1588-8002.
  • Font, Márta; Barabás, Gábor (2017). Kálmán, Halics királya, Szlavónia hercege, 1208–1241 [Coloman, King of Halych, Duke of Slavonia, 1208–1241] (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat–Kronosz Kiadó. ISBN 978-963-467-000-1.
  • Font, Márta; Barabás, Gábor (2019). Coloman, King of Galicia and Duke of Slavonia (1208–1241): Medieval Central Europe and Hungarian Power. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 978-164-1890-24-3.
  • Gál, Judit (2020). Dalmatia and the Exercise of Royal Authority in the Árpád-Era Kingdom of Hungary. Arpadiana III., Research Centre for the Humanities. ISBN 978-963-416-227-8.
  • Hollý, Karol (2007). "Princess Salomea and Hungarian–Polish Relations in the Period 1214–1241" (PDF). Historický Časopis. 55 (Supplement): 5–32. ISSN 0018-2575.
  • Kristó, Gyula; Makk, Ferenc (1996). Az Árpád-ház uralkodói [Rulers of the House of Árpád] (in Hungarian). I.P.C. Könyvek. ISBN 963-7930-97-3.
  • Runciman, Steven (1989). A History of the Crusades, Volume II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East 1100–1187. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-06162-8.

External links

  • Marek, Miroslav. "Genealogy of Danylo's family". Genealogy.EU.
Coloman of Galicia
Born: 1208 Died: May 1241
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Himself
as Prince of Halych
King of Galicia–Volhynia
1215–1219
Succeeded by
Preceded by Duke of Slavonia
1226–41
Succeeded by

coloman, galicia, coloman, halych, hungarian, kálmán, ukrainian, Коломан, 1208, 1241, ruler, from, 1214, prince, from, 1215, 1216, 1221, king, halych, duke, slavonia, from, 1226, death, second, andrew, hungary, gertrude, merania, father, leszek, white, duke, p. Coloman of Halych Hungarian Kalman Ukrainian Koloman 1208 1241 was the ruler from 1214 prince and from 1215 or 1216 to 1221 king of Halych and duke of Slavonia from 1226 to his death He was the second son of Andrew II of Hungary and Gertrude of Merania His father and Leszek the White Duke of Poland concluded an agreement about the marriage of Coloman and Leszek s daughter Salomea and the division of Halych allotting its western regions to Leszek the remaining lands to Coloman The Hungarian and Polish armies occupied the principality in late 1214 Andrew II appointed a Hungarian nobleman Benedict the Bald to administer it on Coloman s behalf Coloman was crowned the first king of Halych with the pope s authorization in early 1216 ColomanColoman s statue in GodolloPrince King of HalychReign1214 12191219 1221Coronationearly 1216PredecessorVladislav Kormilichich regent Mstislav MstislavichSuccessorMstislav MstislavichBorn1208DiedMay 1241 aged 32 33 Cazma SlavoniaSpouseSalomea of PolandDynastyArpadFatherAndrew II of HungaryMotherGertrude of MeraniaAfter the Hungarian troops occupied the western Galician territories Leszek made an alliance with Mstislav Mstislavich Prince of Novgorod Mstislav invaded Halych forcing Coloman and his supporters to flee to Hungary most probably in early 1219 Mstislav supported his son in law Daniel Romanovich who had claimed Halych since 1205 to invade Polish territories which brought about a reconciliation between Andrew II and Leszek The Hungarians and Poles again occupied Halych and restored it to Coloman in the autumn of 1219 Mstislav and his Cuman allies defeated the Hungarians near Halych and captured Coloman and Salomea in August 1221 To secure their release Andrew II renounced Halych and arranged a marriage alliance between his youngest son Andrew and Mstislav s daughter Coloman returned to Hungary in late 1221 or 1222 He settled in Szepes now Spis in Slovakia where he had held large estates since the late 1210s Andrew II made him duke of Slavonia with jurisdiction also in Croatia and Dalmatia in 1226 He cooperated with his eldest brother Bela in revising their father s donations already during Andrew II s lifetime Contents 1 Early life 2 Halych 3 Kingdom of Hungary 3 1 Szepes 3 2 Slavonia 4 Titles 5 Ancestry 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksEarly life EditColoman was the second son of Andrew II of Hungary and his first wife Gertrude of Merania 1 Andrew s father Coloman s grandfather Bela III of Hungary was the first king of Hungary to conquer the Principality of Halych in 1188 2 Bela granted Halych to the teenager Andrew but Andrew was unpopular especially because his troops did not respect the Galicians Orthodox faith 2 The Galicians expelled him in 1189 or 1190 but he did not abandon his claim to Halych 2 3 After Roman Mstislavich who had united the principalities of Volhynia and Halych under his rule died fighting against the Poles in 1205 Andrew launched a military campaign against Halych in almost each year 4 5 He adopted the title of King of Galicia and Lodomeria in token of his claim to both principalities 6 7 Initially he supported Roman Mstislavich s minor sons Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich against Vladimir Igorevich and his brothers who also claimed Halych 4 Coloman was born in 1208 8 According to historians Marta Font and Gabor Barabas he was named most probably for Coloman of Stockerau an Irish pilgrim who had been martyred in Austria in 1012 9 Coloman s mother showed blatant favoritism towards her German kinsmen and courtiers which outraged the native lords 6 She was murdered by a group of Hungarian noblemen in September 1213 shortly after her husband departed for a new military campaign against Halych 10 Andrew returned to Hungary but only after appointing a Galician boyar or nobleman Vladislav Kormilichich to lead the Hungarian army to Halych 11 Kormilichich took control of the principality on Andrew s behalf 12 Leszek the White Duke of Poland granted asylum to Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich and made an alliance with princes Alexandr Vsevolodovich of Vladimir and Mstislav Yaroslavich of Peresopnytsia 12 They invaded Halych and routed Kormilichich but they could not capture the capital of the principality 13 14 In a letter to Pope Innocent III Andrew stated that Galician boyars had proposed him to grant Halych to Coloman 15 According to the Galician Volhynian Chronicle Leszek the White was the first to suggest the same idea also proposing his daughter Salomea to Coloman 16 Andrew and Leszek had a meeting in Szepes in the autumn of 1214 note 1 16 17 They reached a compromise which included the marriage of Coloman and Salomea and the cession of two western Galician towns Przemysl and Lubaczow to Leszek 18 The Hungarian and Polish armies invaded the principality and put an end to Vladislav Kormilichich s rule before the end of the year 19 Andrew II marched against Leszek the White whom Daniel Romanovich was visiting at that time Thereupon Leszek sent his envoy Lestic and the boyar Pakoslav to Andrew with the following message It is not proper for a boyar to reign in Halych marry my daughter to your son Coloman and let him rule in Halych Andrew liked Pakoslav s advice He held council with Leszek in Szepes and took Leszek s daughter for his son Galician Volhynian ChronicleHalych Edit The Principality of Halych and its neighbors Coloman was installed in Halych soon after the fall of Kormilichich 18 Since Coloman was a minor Benedict the Bald was appointed to administer the principality 19 Another Hungarian nobleman Demetrius Aba was made the master of the stewards in Coloman s court before 1216 20 Kormilichich s former ally Sudislav was one of the leading Galician boyars who supported Coloman 21 Andrew sent a letter to Pope Innocent requesting him to authorize John Archbishop of Esztergom to anoint Coloman as king 19 22 In his next letter Andrew thanked the pope for giving consent to Coloman s coronation but also informed him that a riot had broken out against Coloman and the rebels laid siege to Halych 23 Andrew urged Innocent to send a legate and a golden crown to Coloman to strengthen the legitimacy of his rule 24 Pope Honorius III mentioned in a letter in 1222 that the Archbishop of Esztergom had crowned Coloman with the blessing of the Holy See but the circumstances of the ceremony are unknown 25 26 Historians Font Barabas and Karol Holly inferred from the correspondence that Coloman was most probably crowned twice first in late 1214 or early 1215 with a provisional crown in Hungary later probably in early 1216 with the crown sent by the pope 25 27 Other historians including Tibor Almasi Natasa Prochazkova and Đura Hardi conclude that Coloman was first anointed and he was only once crowned in early 1216 1 28 The relationship between Andrew and Leszek the White had meanwhile become tense 19 Leszek granted Vladimir in Vohynia which was the most prestigious princely seat in Volhynia to Daniel and Vasilko Romanovich 28 He also failed to support Coloman during the siege of Halych 28 The Hungarian army invaded western Galicia and captured Przemysl and Lubaczow in late 1215 or early 1216 26 Leszek approached Mstislav Mstislavich Prince of Novgorod seeking his assistance against the Hungarians 26 The reconstruction of the ensuing events is difficult because their dating is uncertain 26 29 Mstislav invaded Halych between 1215 and 1219 most probably in early 1219 according to Font and Barabas and forced Coloman Benedict the Bald and Sudislav to flee to Hungary 30 31 Mstislav gave his daughter Anna in marriage to Daniel Romanovich who soon occupied the lands between the rivers Wieprz and Bug from Leszek 32 Outraged by Daniel s attack Leszek made a new alliance with Andrew II 33 34 Their united forces defeated Mstislav s army in three battles in October 1219 35 36 Mstislav and Daniel were forced to abandon Halych and Coloman returned to the principality 35 37 Andrew most probably made Sudislav s son in law Philnius the commander of the Hungarian army in Halych around this time according to Font and Barabas 38 Mstislav hired Cumans and again invaded Halych in late 1220 or early 1221 but could not capture the capital 33 Mstislav s fiasco encouraged Philnius to join Leszek s campaign against Volhynia leaving Coloman and Salomea in the newly fortified Church of the Virgin Mary in Halych 33 35 Taking advantage of the absence of the bulk of the Hungarian army Mstislav and the Cumans laid siege Halych in August 1221 note 2 36 39 Philnius hurried back from his campaign but Mstislav defeated his army and he could only flee with the help of a Galician boyar Zhiroslav on 14 August 37 35 Coloman s retainers tried to resist in the fortified church but the lack of water forced them to surrender 35 The Polish chronicler Jan Dlugosz wrote that Coloman and Salomea were imprisoned in the fortress of Torchesk 35 Internal strifes in Hungary prevented Coloman s father from launching a military expedition against Mstislav 33 40 Andrew entered into negotiations with Mstislav and they reached a compromise in late 1221 or early 1222 41 40 According to the agreement Coloman was to renounce the title of King of Halych but Mstislav agreed to give his daughter Maria in marriage to Coloman s younger brother Andrew to whom Coloman s royal title would be transferred 33 40 Princes Mstislav and Volodimir went from Kiev to Halych against the King s son and the men of Halych came out against them and Czechs and Poles Moravians and Hungarians and the forces came together And God helped Mstislav and he entered the town of Halych and they took with their hands the King s son and his wife and he took peace with the King and let go his son and himself took his seat in Halych and Volodimir in Kiev The Chronicle of NovgorodKingdom of Hungary EditSzepes Edit After his release in late 1221 or early 1222 Coloman returned to Hungary 33 His father soon approached Pope Honorius III asking him to invalidate his agreement with Mstislav 40 The pope only cancelled the provision about the transfer of Coloman s royal title to his younger brother because the pope preserved the right to decide about coronations 40 42 Coloman styled himself King of Galicia till the end of his life although he never returned to Halych 40 He and his wife settled in Szepes near the Hungarian Galician border 40 43 Font and Barabas say that Coloman had received estates in the region already in the late 1210s 44 A late source a 1279 letter of Elizabeth the Cuman mentioned that Coloman had held Szepes till the end of his life 40 44 Coloman s activities in Szepes are poorly documented 45 He granted privileges to the guest settlers in Szepesolaszi now Spisske Vlachy in Slovakia 46 He made donations to the Cistercian monastery which was established in the 1220s in Szepes 47 Coloman also supported the establishment of the Premonstratensian provostry at Jaszo now Jasov in Slovakia 48 According to a scholarly theory the tower of the Szepes Castle was built on Coloman s order 49 Slavonia Edit Andrew II entrusted Coloman with the government of Slavonia Croatia and Dalmatia in 1226 50 The three provinces had been administered by Coloman s elder brother Bela who was appointed to administer Translyvania 50 Coloman s jurisdiction also included counties located in Hungary proper such as Baranya Pozsega Somogy Valko Varasd and Zala 51 In the summer of 1226 Coloman visited Dalmatia where he was ceremoniously received in the towns 52 He made donations to the Bishopric of Trogir and confirmed his mother s grant to the Hajszentlorinc Chapter 52 His following extant diplomas were issued in 1229 53 Estates located in Szepes were the subjects of both diplomas implying that Coloman had mostly stayed in Szepes from 1226 to 1229 according to Font and Barabas 54 Coloman supported Bela s attempts to revise their father s grants already during Andrew II s lifetime 54 The two brothers jointly confirmed a grant made by a previous ban of Croatia in 1231 55 Coloman ignored the privileges of the Knights Templar and wanted to collect taxes on their estates 56 The pope appointed Bartholomew le Gros the bishop of Pecs to arbitrate in the dispute together with the abbot of Pecsvarad Abbey and the provost of Pecs Chapter but also forbade them to excommunicate Coloman without his special authorization 56 The three prelates persuaded Coloman to confirm the knights privileges on 31 July 1231 but a full reconciliation was reached only after lengthy negotiations in 1239 56 Coloman granted liberties to the German Saxon Hungarian and Slavic guest settlers of Vukovar in 1239 57 He also confirmed the right of the guest settlers of Varazdin to elect their judges and put their obligations in writing 58 Coloman initiated the merger of the Archbishopric of Split and the Bishopric of Zagreb but Pope Gregory IX reminded him in 1240 that the two dioceses could not be united without the consent of the archbishop of Kalocsa and the chapters of their sees 59 In 1231 Coloman granted privileges to Vukovar Hungarian Valkovar Coloman similarly to his brother opposed his father s third marriage with Beatrice d Este and following the death of King Andrew II 21 September 1235 they accused their young stepmother of adultery citation needed Pope Gregory IX persuaded him to pursue the heretics in his provinces and in the adjacent territories therefore he invaded and occupied Bosnia and Zachlumia but he could not wind up the Bosnian Church He supported the establishment of the Diocese of Bosnia and he granted Đakovo Hungarian Diakovar to its bishop When he was informed that the Mongols invaded the kingdom he joined his brother s troops However their troops were defeated at the Battle of Mohi 11 April 1241 Coloman suffered serious wounds and died of his injuries a few weeks after the battle citation needed Titles EditColoman was styled by the Grace of God king of the Ruthenians and by his glorious father s generosity duke of Dalmatia and Croatia in his first extant charter in 1226 60 Goncol Archbishop of Split referred to Coloman as king and duke of Slavonia in 1229 61 The first document mentioning Coloman s rule in whole Slavonia was issued by the Zagreb Chapter in 1230 61 He was consequently styled as king and duke of whole Slavonia from the late 1230s 61 Ancestry EditAncestors of Coloman of Galicia 62 63 64 16 Bela II of Hungary8 Geza II of Hungary17 Helena of Raska4 Bela III of Hungary18 Mstislav I of Kiev9 Euphrosyne of Kiev19 Liubava Dmitrievna Zavidich2 Andrew II of Hungary20 Henry I of Chatillon10 Raynald of Chatillon21 Ermengarde of Montjay5 Agnes of Antioch22 Bohemund II of Antioch11 Constance of Antioch23 Alice of Jerusalem1 Coloman of Hungary24 Berthold III Count of Diessen Plassenberg and Stein12 Berthold III of Andechs25 Sophie of Istria6 Berthold IV Duke of Merania26 Otto IV Count of Wittelsbach13 Hedwig of Wittelsbach27 Heilika of Pettendorf Lengenfeld Hopfenohe3 Gertrude of Merania28 Conrad Margrave of Meissen14 Dedo V Count of Wettin29 Luitgard of Elchingen Ravenstein7 Agnes of Wettin and Rochlitz30 Goswin II of Heinsberg15 Matilda of Heinsberg31 Aleidis von SommerschenburgNotes Edit The Galician Volhynian Chronicle is the most important source of Coloman s rule in Halych its variants narrate the events without a precise chronology thus most dates of this period are un certain Font amp Barabas 2017 p 13 Historian Martin Dimnik writes Mstislav captured Coloman in both 1219 and 1221 Dimnik 2003 pp 290 291 References Edit a b Almasi 1994 p 316 a b c Engel 2001 p 54 Font 1991 p 120 a b Font 1991 pp 121 122 Engel 2001 pp 54 89 a b Engel 2001 p 90 Font 1991 p 122 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 11 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 12 Engel 2001 p 91 Barabas 2016 pp 90 91 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 27 28 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 28 Holly 2007 p 11 Holly 2007 pp 11 12 a b Holly 2007 p 12 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 32 33 a b Barabas 2016 p 92 a b c d Font 1991 p 126 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 55 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 61 62 Holly 2007 p 15 Holly 2007 p 16 Holly 2007 pp 16 17 a b Holly 2007 p 17 a b c d Font 1991 p 127 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 41 44 74 a b c Font amp Barabas 2017 p 43 Holly 2007 pp 20 22 Holly 2007 pp 20 21 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 67 Holly 2007 p 21 a b c d e f Font 1991 p 128 Dimnik 2003 p 290 a b c d e f Holly 2007 p 22 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 68 74 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 p 68 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 62 68 Dimnik 2003 p 291 a b c d e f g h Holly 2007 p 23 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 69 74 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 76 Barabas 2016 p 96 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 p 75 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 76 80 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 79 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 79 80 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 80 81 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 78 a b Holly 2007 p 26 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 94 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 p 85 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 82 a b Font amp Barabas 2017 p 84 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 89 a b c Font amp Barabas 2017 p 109 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 120 Font amp Barabas 2017 pp 120 121 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 117 Font amp Barabas 2017 p 95 a b c Font amp Barabas 2017 p 96 Kristo amp Makk 1996 pp 246 248 257 Appendices 4 5 Almasi 1994 p 234 Runciman 1989 p 345 Appendix III Sources EditAlmasi Tibor 1994 Kalman 2 In Kristo Gyula Engel Pal Makk Ferenc eds Korai magyar torteneti lexikon 9 14 szazad Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History 9th 14th centuries in Hungarian Akademiai Kiado p 316 ISBN 963 05 6722 9 Barabas Gabor 2015 Viola opolei hercegno es Kalman szlavon herceg Egy historiografiai vita margojara Duchess Viola of Opole and Coloman Duke of Slavonia Contribution to a Historiographical Dispute Vilagtortenet in Hungarian 37 1 5 28 ISSN 0083 6265 Barabas Gabor 2016 Coloman of Galicia and his Polish Relations The Duke of Slavonia as Protector of Widowed Duchesses In Bagi Daniel Barabas Gabor Mate Zsolt eds Hungaro Polonica Young Scholars on Medieval Polish Hungarian Relations Torteneszceh Egyesulet pp 89 117 ISBN 978 963 12 7382 3 Barabas Gabor 2017 Kalman szlavon herceg es IX Gergely papa Magyar kiralyi herceg az Apostoli Szentszek szolgalataban Coloman Duke of Slavonia and Pope Gregory IX Hungarian Royal Prince in the Service of the Holy See Aetas in Hungarian AETAS Konyv es Lapkiado Egyesulet 32 3 36 51 ISSN 0237 7934 Barabas Gabor 2019 Prince Coloman s Life after 1226 A Member of the Arpadian Dynasty and Central European Narrative Sources Hungary and Hungarians in Central and East European Narrative Sources 10th 17th Centuries Pecs University of Pecs pp 107 123 ISBN 978 963 4293 67 5 Barabas Gabor 2020 A King in Slavonia Prince Coloman in the Realm of St Stephen in the 1230s Stefan the First Crowned and His Time Belgrade Institute of History pp 291 308 ISBN 978 86 7743 139 6 Dimnik Martin 2003 The Dynasty of Chernigov 1146 1246 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03981 9 Engel Pal 2001 The Realm of St Stephen A History of Medieval Hungary 895 1526 I B Tauris Publishers ISBN 1 86064 061 3 Font Marta 1991 II Andras orosz politikaja es hadjaratai Andrew II s policy and campaigns in Rus Szazadok in Hungarian 125 1 2 107 144 ISSN 0039 8098 Font Marta 2019 Coloman the King of Galicia The Problems of Coronation Specimina nova Pars prima Sectio mediaevalis dissertationes historicae collectae per Cathedra Historiae Medii Aevi Modernorumque Temporum Universitatis Quinqueecclesiensis University of Pecs 10 81 94 ISSN 1588 8002 Font Marta Barabas Gabor 2017 Kalman Halics kiralya Szlavonia hercege 1208 1241 Coloman King of Halych Duke of Slavonia 1208 1241 in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat Kronosz Kiado ISBN 978 963 467 000 1 Font Marta Barabas Gabor 2019 Coloman King of Galicia and Duke of Slavonia 1208 1241 Medieval Central Europe and Hungarian Power Amsterdam University Press ISBN 978 164 1890 24 3 Gal Judit 2020 Dalmatia and the Exercise of Royal Authority in the Arpad Era Kingdom of Hungary Arpadiana III Research Centre for the Humanities ISBN 978 963 416 227 8 Holly Karol 2007 Princess Salomea and Hungarian Polish Relations in the Period 1214 1241 PDF Historicky Casopis 55 Supplement 5 32 ISSN 0018 2575 Kristo Gyula Makk Ferenc 1996 Az Arpad haz uralkodoi Rulers of the House of Arpad in Hungarian I P C Konyvek ISBN 963 7930 97 3 Runciman Steven 1989 A History of the Crusades Volume II The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East 1100 1187 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 06162 8 External links EditMarek Miroslav Genealogy of Danylo s family Genealogy EU Coloman of GaliciaHouse of ArpadBorn 1208 Died May 1241Regnal titlesPreceded byHimselfas Prince of Halych King of Galicia Volhynia1215 1219 Succeeded byAndrewPreceded byBela IV of Hungary Duke of Slavonia1226 41 Succeeded byStephen V of Hungary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coloman of Galicia amp oldid 1155074361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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