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Hont-Pázmány

Hont-Pázmány (Hunt-Poznan) was the name of a gens ("clan") in the Kingdom of Hungary. The Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum mentions that the ancestors of the family, the brothers Hont (Hunt)[1] and Pázmány (Pazman),[1] originally from the Duchy of Swabia in the Holy Roman Empire, arrived in the late 10th century to the court of Grand Prince Géza of the Magyars:

Genus (gens) Hont-Pázmány
CountryApulia (Italy, according to János Karácsonyi)
Kingdom of Hungary
Foundedc. 983
FounderConte Panzano
Estate(s)Hont County, Esztergom County
Cadet branchesHouse of Bozóky
House of Bényi
House of Csalomjai
House of Födémási
House of Forgách
House of Szegi
House of Garadnai-Pogány
House of Szentgyörgyi
House of Czibak
House of Ujhelyi
House of Pázmány
House of Besztercei

The next arrivals were Hunt and Pazman, two half-brothers, courageous knights of Swabian origin. These two and their retainers had been journeying through Hungary with the intention of passing over the sea when they were detained by Duke Géza, and finally they girded King Stephen with the sword of knighthood at the river Hron, after the German custom.[1]

The clan Hontpaznan was mentioned for the first time in 1226 in a charter. Several prominent families of the kingdom (e.g., Szentgyörgyi and Forgách) descended from the gens.

The branches of the clan edit

By the 13th century, the clan divided into 12 branches:

  • the branch of Bozók held possessions in Hont County and they had two castles;
  • the possessions of the branch of Födémes (now Ipeľské Úľany) were located in Hont and Borsod counties and their castle in Borsod County was built without royal authorization and therefore, it was demolished in 1298;
  • the members of the branch of Bény owned lands in Hont and Nyitra counties and they held three castles;
  • the branch of Csalomja (today Malá Čalomija) held possessions in Hont county;
  • the lands of the members of the branch of Gímes (now Jelenec) were located in Nitra County and they had a castle built there;
  • the branch of Szeg possessed lands in Nitra County;
  • the members of the branch of Szentgyörgy and Cseklész (today Bernolákovo) held possessions in Prešporok County and they had three castles by the end of the 13th century;
  • the possessions of the branch Pogány of Garadna were located in Trencsén county;
  • the members of the branch of Újhely owned lands in Bihar County where they had a castle built;
  • the branch Pázmány of Panasz held possessions in Bihar County;
  • the members of the branch of Beszterce owned lands in Bihar County;
  • the possessions of the branch of Czibak-Batthyányi were also located in Bihar County.

Notable members of the clan edit

The first notable members of the clan were the brothers Hont and Pázmány who assisted Géza's son, the future King Stephen I of Hungary against his relative, the pagan Koppány who claimed for Géza's inheritance. The deed of foundation of the Pannonhalma Archabbey (issued in 1001) referred to both brothers as the king's military leaders (duces).[2] The brothers were granted possessions on the north-western parts of the kingdom (primarily in present-day Slovakia). Hont County was named after one of them.

Lampert (?–1132) founded the Abbey of Bozók. His first wife was the sister of King Ladislaus I of Hungary. He held about 30 possessions and thus he was one of the wealthiest landowners of the kingdom. In 1124, he took part in the campaign of King Stephen II of Hungary against Dalmatia. Lampert was murdered by the followers of King Béla II the Blind, because he was suspected of supporting Boris Kalamanos's claim to the throne.

Around 1201, Martin (?–1236/1245) held the office of count (comes) at the court of the future King Andrew II of Hungary, and served as the Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia. In 1202 and between 1212-1213, Martin was the Ban of Slavonia and he was styled Ban also in 1224 and 1234. In 1214, he held the office of judge royal (országbíró). He founded the Abbey of Ipolyság (today Šahy in Slovakia).

Achilles (b. 1210–1252) was bishop of Pécs between 1251 and 1252.

Lampert (of the branch of Csalomja) was bishop of Eger from 1247 to 1275.

Ivánka II from the Szeg branch was Judge royal sometime before 1289.

Gímes branch edit

Andrew I was a confidant of Béla IV of Hungary. He erected the castles of Gímes (Jelenec) and Turóc (Zniev). His sons were John, archbishop of Kalocsa from 1278 to 1301, and Thomas III, an influential baron. Both were strong partisans of King Andrew III of Hungary. Another sons were Andrew II and Ivánka III, who were killed by Matthew III Csák.

Alternate theory on their origin edit

 
Hont depicted in the Chronicon Pictum

Some modern authors suggest that the clan Hont-Poznany was formed by intermarriages of two separate families, the Hunts and the Poznans ("Pázmánys", "Posnans") when the latter's male line died out in the mid-12th century. They claim that the ancestors both of the two families were already nobles at the time of Great Moravia and preserved their possessions after the incorporation of their territories into the arising Hungarian state.[3][4] The theory suggests that they kept their Christian faith during the 10th century and its followers claim that the foundation deed of the Benedictine monastery of Bzovík proves that hereditary estates from the time before the arrival of the Magyars prevailed in the Hunts' property. The Pázmánys oversaw the Benedictine monastery below Zobor hill near Nitra and became its secular patrons. According to the theory, the seat of the Hunt family was the Hont castle and they ruled in the Central Ipeľ region in today's southern Slovakia, while the Pázmánys ruled in the region of today's north western Slovakia in the 10th century. Both families acknowledged the sovereignty of Michael of the House of Árpád and thus they became nobles at his court in Nitra. After Michael's death, the new ruler, Vajk (Stephen I) and the local nobility, spearheaded by the Pázmány and Hunt houses, developed very close personal ties and while fighting the Koppány rebellion in 997, Stephen took shelter with Pázmány and Hunt ("Poznano" and "Cuntio"); they in turn added their troops to the retinue of Stephen's Bavarian wife Giselle. The united forces then defeated Koppány, making Stephen the sole ruler of the emerging Hungarian state. In the 11th and 12th century the Hunts owned estates mainly in the county of Hont and along the Ipeľ river. By the 11th and 12th centuries the Pázmáns' estates were mainly in the valley of the Nitra river. According to the alternate theory, the Pázmáns' male line died out in the mid-12th century; allied by marriage to the Hunts, the line became "Hont-Pázmány".

The oldest genealogic data about the Poznans are preserved in the Zobor charters (1111-1113). The charters contain names at least of fourth nobles from the Poznan family - Una, Bacha (Bača) and two sons of Bukven - Deda (Dedo) and Caca (Kačä). The high number of Slavic names in the Hunt-Poznan family is obvious until the 14th century (Stojslav, Vlk, Držislav, etc.). The character of their hereditary property also indicates pre-Hungarian origin[a][5] Naturally, those who belonged to the royal court or obtained property in Hungarian ethnic territories self-identified with the majority population in the area.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The property of Honts and Poznans was at the beginning clearly separated and both clans also used a completely different system of significant names. This contradicts theory that they were brothers. The domain of the Poznans was in the south-western Slovakia with highest density of properties in Ponitrie. The original hereditary property of the Hunts was nearly exclusively located in Hont, Malohont and Nógrád. The charter of the Abbey of Bzovice (1135) contains valuable information about Hunts's early property, because it strictly differentiates between property dedicated by the first Hungarian kings, property bought later and those "inherited from ancestors". (Lukačka, 2010) The fact that later Hunt-Poznans held numerous property also in the other parts in the kingdom is already taken into account.

Sources edit

  • Fügedi, Erik: Ispánok, bárók, kiskirályok - a középkori magyar arisztokrácia fejlődése (Counts, Barons and Petty Kings - The Development of the Hungarian Medieval Aristocracy); Magvető Könyvkiadó, 1986, Budapest; ISBN 963-14-0582-6.
  • Kristó, Gyula (editor): Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon - 9-14. század (Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History - 9-14th centuries); Akadémiai Kiadó, 1994, Budapest; ISBN 963-05-6722-9.
  • Kristó, Gyula: Néhány megjegyzés a magyar nemzetségekről (Some remarks on the Hungarian clans), in: Tanulmányok az Árpád-korról, pp. 26-50. (Studies on the Age of the Árpáds); Magvető Könyvkiadó, 1983, Budapest; ISBN 963-271-890-9.
  • Markó, László: A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig - Életrajzi Lexikon (The High Officers of the Hungarian State from Saint Stephen to the Present Days - A Biographical Encyclopedia); Magyar Könyvklub, 2000, Budapest; ISBN 963-547-085-1.
  • Ján Lukačka: Beginnings of the formation of Aristocracy on the territory of Slovakia (available online)
  • Lukačka, Ján (2010). "K otázke etnického pôvodu Hunt-Poznanovcov" [On the Ethnic Origin of the Magnate Clan Hont-Poznan]. Forum Historiae (in Slovak). Historical institute of Slovak Academy of Sciences. 4 (2). ISSN 1337-6861.
  • Lukačka, Ján. 2002. Formovanie vyššej šľachty na západnom Slovensku.
  • Ján Steinhübel: Nitrianske kniežatstvo [Nitrian principality], Veda, vydavateľstvo Slovenskej akadémie vied + Vydavateľstvo Rak, 2004, Bratislava [with several further Slovak and Hungarian genealogy and other references listed in the book]
  • Hunt-Pázmán in: Slovakia and the Slovaks - A concise encyclopaedia, Encyklopedical Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, 1994

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Simon of Kéza; edited and translated by László Veszprémy and Frank Schaer (1999). The Deeds of the Hungarians. Central European University Press. p. 163. ISBN 963-9116-31-9. Post hæc venit Hunt et Pazman, duo fratres carnales, milites coridati orti de Svevia. Hi enim passagium per Hungariam cum suis militibus facientes ultra mare ire intendebant. Qui detenti per ducem Geicham, tandem sanctum regem Stephanum in flumine Goron Teutonico more gladio militari accinxerunt. {{cite book}}: |last2= has generic name (help)
  2. ^ Kristó, Gyula, ed. (1999). Az államalapítás korának írott forrásai (The written sources of the age of the foundation of the state). Szeged: Szegedi Középkortörténeti Könyvtár. pp. 37–41. ISBN 963-482-393-9.
  3. ^ Lukačka, Ján (2002). Formovanie vyššej šľachty na západnom Slovensku. Bratislava: Minor.
  4. ^ Lukačka, Ján. "K otázke etnického pôvodu veľmožského rodu Hont-Poznanovcov" (PDF). Forum historiae. Forum historiae, SAV.
  5. ^ Lukačka 2010.

hont, pázmány, hunt, poznan, name, gens, clan, kingdom, hungary, gesta, hunnorum, hungarorum, mentions, that, ancestors, family, brothers, hont, hunt, pázmány, pazman, originally, from, duchy, swabia, holy, roman, empire, arrived, late, 10th, century, court, g. Hont Pazmany Hunt Poznan was the name of a gens clan in the Kingdom of Hungary The Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum mentions that the ancestors of the family the brothers Hont Hunt 1 and Pazmany Pazman 1 originally from the Duchy of Swabia in the Holy Roman Empire arrived in the late 10th century to the court of Grand Prince Geza of the Magyars Genus gens Hont PazmanyCountryApulia Italy according to Janos Karacsonyi Kingdom of HungaryFoundedc 983FounderConte PanzanoEstate s Hont County Esztergom CountyCadet branchesHouse of BozokyHouse of BenyiHouse of CsalomjaiHouse of FodemasiHouse of ForgachHouse of SzegiHouse of Garadnai PoganyHouse of SzentgyorgyiHouse of CzibakHouse of UjhelyiHouse of PazmanyHouse of Besztercei The next arrivals were Hunt and Pazman two half brothers courageous knights of Swabian origin These two and their retainers had been journeying through Hungary with the intention of passing over the sea when they were detained by Duke Geza and finally they girded King Stephen with the sword of knighthood at the river Hron after the German custom 1 The clan Hontpaznan was mentioned for the first time in 1226 in a charter Several prominent families of the kingdom e g Szentgyorgyi and Forgach descended from the gens Contents 1 The branches of the clan 2 Notable members of the clan 2 1 Gimes branch 3 Alternate theory on their origin 4 Notes 5 Sources 6 ReferencesThe branches of the clan editBy the 13th century the clan divided into 12 branches the branch of Bozok held possessions in Hont County and they had two castles the possessions of the branch of Fodemes now Ipeľske Uľany were located in Hont and Borsod counties and their castle in Borsod County was built without royal authorization and therefore it was demolished in 1298 the members of the branch of Beny owned lands in Hont and Nyitra counties and they held three castles the branch of Csalomja today Mala Calomija held possessions in Hont county the lands of the members of the branch of Gimes now Jelenec were located in Nitra County and they had a castle built there the branch of Szeg possessed lands in Nitra County the members of the branch of Szentgyorgy and Cseklesz today Bernolakovo held possessions in Presporok County and they had three castles by the end of the 13th century the possessions of the branch Pogany of Garadna were located in Trencsen county the members of the branch of Ujhely owned lands in Bihar County where they had a castle built the branch Pazmany of Panasz held possessions in Bihar County the members of the branch of Beszterce owned lands in Bihar County the possessions of the branch of Czibak Batthyanyi were also located in Bihar County Notable members of the clan editThe first notable members of the clan were the brothers Hont and Pazmany who assisted Geza s son the future King Stephen I of Hungary against his relative the pagan Koppany who claimed for Geza s inheritance The deed of foundation of the Pannonhalma Archabbey issued in 1001 referred to both brothers as the king s military leaders duces 2 The brothers were granted possessions on the north western parts of the kingdom primarily in present day Slovakia Hont County was named after one of them Lampert 1132 founded the Abbey of Bozok His first wife was the sister of King Ladislaus I of Hungary He held about 30 possessions and thus he was one of the wealthiest landowners of the kingdom In 1124 he took part in the campaign of King Stephen II of Hungary against Dalmatia Lampert was murdered by the followers of King Bela II the Blind because he was suspected of supporting Boris Kalamanos s claim to the throne Around 1201 Martin 1236 1245 held the office of count comes at the court of the future King Andrew II of Hungary and served as the Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia In 1202 and between 1212 1213 Martin was the Ban of Slavonia and he was styled Ban also in 1224 and 1234 In 1214 he held the office of judge royal orszagbiro He founded the Abbey of Ipolysag today Sahy in Slovakia Achilles b 1210 1252 was bishop of Pecs between 1251 and 1252 Lampert of the branch of Csalomja was bishop of Eger from 1247 to 1275 Ivanka II from the Szeg branch was Judge royal sometime before 1289 Gimes branch edit Andrew I was a confidant of Bela IV of Hungary He erected the castles of Gimes Jelenec and Turoc Zniev His sons were John archbishop of Kalocsa from 1278 to 1301 and Thomas III an influential baron Both were strong partisans of King Andrew III of Hungary Another sons were Andrew II and Ivanka III who were killed by Matthew III Csak Alternate theory on their origin edit nbsp Hont depicted in the Chronicon PictumSome modern authors suggest that the clan Hont Poznany was formed by intermarriages of two separate families the Hunts and the Poznans Pazmanys Posnans when the latter s male line died out in the mid 12th century They claim that the ancestors both of the two families were already nobles at the time of Great Moravia and preserved their possessions after the incorporation of their territories into the arising Hungarian state 3 4 The theory suggests that they kept their Christian faith during the 10th century and its followers claim that the foundation deed of the Benedictine monastery of Bzovik proves that hereditary estates from the time before the arrival of the Magyars prevailed in the Hunts property The Pazmanys oversaw the Benedictine monastery below Zobor hill near Nitra and became its secular patrons According to the theory the seat of the Hunt family was the Hont castle and they ruled in the Central Ipeľ region in today s southern Slovakia while the Pazmanys ruled in the region of today s north western Slovakia in the 10th century Both families acknowledged the sovereignty of Michael of the House of Arpad and thus they became nobles at his court in Nitra After Michael s death the new ruler Vajk Stephen I and the local nobility spearheaded by the Pazmany and Hunt houses developed very close personal ties and while fighting the Koppany rebellion in 997 Stephen took shelter with Pazmany and Hunt Poznano and Cuntio they in turn added their troops to the retinue of Stephen s Bavarian wife Giselle The united forces then defeated Koppany making Stephen the sole ruler of the emerging Hungarian state In the 11th and 12th century the Hunts owned estates mainly in the county of Hont and along the Ipeľ river By the 11th and 12th centuries the Pazmans estates were mainly in the valley of the Nitra river According to the alternate theory the Pazmans male line died out in the mid 12th century allied by marriage to the Hunts the line became Hont Pazmany The oldest genealogic data about the Poznans are preserved in the Zobor charters 1111 1113 The charters contain names at least of fourth nobles from the Poznan family Una Bacha Baca and two sons of Bukven Deda Dedo and Caca Kaca The high number of Slavic names in the Hunt Poznan family is obvious until the 14th century Stojslav Vlk Drzislav etc The character of their hereditary property also indicates pre Hungarian origin a 5 Naturally those who belonged to the royal court or obtained property in Hungarian ethnic territories self identified with the majority population in the area Notes edit The property of Honts and Poznans was at the beginning clearly separated and both clans also used a completely different system of significant names This contradicts theory that they were brothers The domain of the Poznans was in the south western Slovakia with highest density of properties in Ponitrie The original hereditary property of the Hunts was nearly exclusively located in Hont Malohont and Nograd The charter of the Abbey of Bzovice 1135 contains valuable information about Hunts s early property because it strictly differentiates between property dedicated by the first Hungarian kings property bought later and those inherited from ancestors Lukacka 2010 The fact that later Hunt Poznans held numerous property also in the other parts in the kingdom is already taken into account Sources editFugedi Erik Ispanok barok kiskiralyok a kozepkori magyar arisztokracia fejlodese Counts Barons and Petty Kings The Development of the Hungarian Medieval Aristocracy Magveto Konyvkiado 1986 Budapest ISBN 963 14 0582 6 Kristo Gyula editor Korai Magyar Torteneti Lexikon 9 14 szazad Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History 9 14th centuries Akademiai Kiado 1994 Budapest ISBN 963 05 6722 9 Kristo Gyula Nehany megjegyzes a magyar nemzetsegekrol Some remarks on the Hungarian clans in Tanulmanyok az Arpad korrol pp 26 50 Studies on the Age of the Arpads Magveto Konyvkiado 1983 Budapest ISBN 963 271 890 9 Marko Laszlo A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig Eletrajzi Lexikon The High Officers of the Hungarian State from Saint Stephen to the Present Days A Biographical Encyclopedia Magyar Konyvklub 2000 Budapest ISBN 963 547 085 1 Jan Lukacka Beginnings of the formation of Aristocracy on the territory of Slovakia available online Lukacka Jan 2010 K otazke etnickeho povodu Hunt Poznanovcov On the Ethnic Origin of the Magnate Clan Hont Poznan Forum Historiae in Slovak Historical institute of Slovak Academy of Sciences 4 2 ISSN 1337 6861 Lukacka Jan 2002 Formovanie vyssej sľachty na zapadnom Slovensku Jan Steinhubel Nitrianske kniezatstvo Nitrian principality Veda vydavateľstvo Slovenskej akademie vied Vydavateľstvo Rak 2004 Bratislava with several further Slovak and Hungarian genealogy and other references listed in the book Hunt Pazman in Slovakia and the Slovaks A concise encyclopaedia Encyklopedical Institute of the Slovak Academy of Sciences 1994References edit a b c Simon of Keza edited and translated by Laszlo Veszpremy and Frank Schaer 1999 The Deeds of the Hungarians Central European University Press p 163 ISBN 963 9116 31 9 Post haec venit Hunt et Pazman duo fratres carnales milites coridati orti de Svevia Hi enim passagium per Hungariam cum suis militibus facientes ultra mare ire intendebant Qui detenti per ducem Geicham tandem sanctum regem Stephanum in flumine Goron Teutonico more gladio militari accinxerunt a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last2 has generic name help Kristo Gyula ed 1999 Az allamalapitas koranak irott forrasai The written sources of the age of the foundation of the state Szeged Szegedi Kozepkortorteneti Konyvtar pp 37 41 ISBN 963 482 393 9 Lukacka Jan 2002 Formovanie vyssej sľachty na zapadnom Slovensku Bratislava Minor Lukacka Jan K otazke etnickeho povodu veľmozskeho rodu Hont Poznanovcov PDF Forum historiae Forum historiae SAV Lukacka 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hont Pazmany amp oldid 1168906437, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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