fbpx
Wikipedia

Héder (genus)

Héder (also Heydrich or Hedrich) was the name of a gens (Latin for "clan"; nemzetség in Hungarian) in the Kingdom of Hungary, several prominent secular dignitaries came from this kindred. The ancestors of the kindred were two German knights from the Duchy of Swabia, brothers Wolfer and Héder. They were granted large-scale domains in Western Hungary. The powerful and influential Hédervári and Kőszegi noble families descended from them.

Genus (gens) Héder
CountryKingdom of Hungary
Founded1140s
FounderWolfer and Héder
Dissolutionearly 14th century
Cadet branchesa, Kőszegi branch

b, Hédervári branch

  • House of Hédervári
  • House of Bokodi

Origin

..., Volphger, who was descended from the counts of Hemburg, came with his brother Hedricus from Alemannia with three hundred armed horsemen, to whom Duke Geysa made a gift of Mount Kyscen and an island in the Danube near Iaurinum that he might dwell there for ever; here he built a castle of wood, and on the same mountain he founded a monastery, where he is buried. From him and his brother springs the clan of Heder.

... Wolfger and his brother Hedrich come to Hungary from Wildon with forty knights in armour. Wolfger was given Mt. Güssing to settle in. There he built a wooden fort, and later a monks' cloister, where he was buried after his death. The Héder descend from him.

 
Héder as depicted in the Illuminated Chronicle with false coat of arms

According to the Illuminated Chronicle, Wolfer and Héder belonged to the Counts of Hainburg. Mark of Kalt's work incorrectly – accidentally or intentionally – refers to Grand Prince Géza (c. 972–997), father of Saint Stephen, the first King of Hungary, in fact, Wolfer and Héder arrived to Hungary during the first regnal years of the minor Géza II of Hungary (definitely before 1146). The brothers' place of origin is in dispute. Simon of Kéza's Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum writes that Wolfer and Héder came from "Vildonia" with forty armored soldiers, referring to Burgruine Wildon in Styria, however the castle itself was built only after 1157 thus that identification is incorrect. Johannes de Thurocz says in his work Chronica Hungarorum that the two knights originated from Hainburg of "Alemannia", therefore the Duchy of Swabia. Presumably Mark of Kalt's version is closer to the truth, as there was a certain knight Wolfger von Erlach in the first half of the 12th century in Hainburg.

Due to the similarity between forenames within the family, the coat of arms and their frequent church dedications to St. James the Great, the Slovak historian Mária Feješová considers that the Héders presumably originated from the historical region of Picardy in the northwestern part of the Kingdom of France and perhaps they were related to the local Clacy medieval noble family. According to Feješová, knights Wolfer and Héder came to Hungary and permanently settled during the Second Crusade in 1147.[3]

In 1157, Gervasius, Bishop of Győr contributed and permitted the foundation of the Benedictine Abbey of Küszén (later Németújvár, present-day Burg Güssing in Austria), to comes Wolfer, who donated several surrounding lands to the monastery. Gervasius subordinated the monastery to the Pannonhalma Abbey and dedicated the new monastery to Virgin Mary. Both Wolfer and Héder were considered strong confidants of Géza II.[4] Héder was the ancestor of the prestigious Hédervári family, while the infamous Kőszegi family originated from Wolfer. As later the Héder genus was named after Héder and not after his elder brother, historian János Karácsonyi argued that Héder "was more talented than Wolfer or lived a very long time [after his brother's death]". Wolfer was buried in the Küszén Abbey.[5]

Based on Alexander Köcski's seal, the Köcski family was presumably also related to the local powerful Kőszegi family and thus was a scion of the gens Héder too, at least from maternal side.[6] Historian Pál Engel, however, considered that Alexander Köcski individually adopted his seal following his decisive victory over his ardent enemies, the Kőszegis, as a prominent general in Charles I of Hungary's unification war against the oligarchic domains.[7]

Members and their landholdings

Wolfer's branch

The brothers were granted their coherent and extensive possession from a crown land after the cessation of the "gyepű" border system. Accordingly, the Héders' first lands were part of the so-called "gyepűelve", a mostly uninhabited or sparsely inhabited area beyond the Austrian border, comparable to the modern buffer zones. The clan's lands concentrated mainly in the catchment area of the rivers Rába (Raab) and Lapincs (Lafnitz) in the southwestern part of Vas County at the turn of the 12th and 13th centuries. Most of the lands laid in the valley of stream Strém (or Strem) and centered around the hill of Küszén. According to historian Géza Érszegi, the Héders owned the whole territory between the streams Strém (and thus the parallel Királyút, lit. "King's Road") and Medves, i.e. southeast to Küszén. However, the Héders also owned contiguous lands towards the opposite direction and the mountain of Höheberg (or Hochberg) was considered the northwest border point of their territories.[8]

 
Burg Güssing, which was built by Béla III of Hungary on the pedestal of the short-lived and confiscated Küszén monastery, established by Wolfer in 1157

Béla III of Hungary (r. 1172–1196) confiscated the Abbey of Küszén from the Benedictines and built a royal castle (called Németújvár, or simply Újvár, "New Castle", today Güssing in Austria) on top of the hill in the 1180s. He compensated its patron, comes Hencse I (Wolfer's son, also known as Henc or Aenz) with the patronage of the newly constructed abbey of Kapornak in Zala County.[9][10] Furthermore, Wolfer's descendants remained the owners of the nearby Szentelek and Szentkút (present-day Stegersbach and Heiligenbrunn in Austria, respectively). A document from 1198 refers to the vineyards of Szentkút as the accessory of the newly built castle (Újvár, or Novi Castri). Wolfer's great-grandson, Virunt (or Werenherth), who served as a canon of the cathedral chapter of Győr, still owned Szentkút itself and the surrounding villages, Mérhart, Szombatfalva, Újfalva and Pinka in the middle of the 13th century. In his last will, Virunt bequeathed the villages to Béla IV of Hungary and the Royal Crown, who soon donated them to Herrand, a representative of the Héder clan's other branch. The offspring Hédervári family possessed the area thereafter until its extinction. Beyond the Strém valley, the kindred also owned some lordships, for instance Rábagyarmat and two unidentified estates, Chegge and Podrag. According to a census of the Szentgotthárd Abbey from 1198, family members Simon and Lawrence I owned portions in Szentgotthárd and Battyán (once laid near Nagysimonyi), while Lawrence I, Denis I (from the Hédervári branch) and Hencse I also had interests in Almás. Battyán later was recalled Simonremetefölde (lit. "the land of hermit Simon"), which confirms that Simon became a friar in the last years of his life. Denis and Hencse also owned Pácsony until they donated it to the collegiate chapter of Vasvár sometime before 1217. The local wasteland is still called after Hencse.[11]

Hencse's son, Henry I possessed lands along the river Lendva (Ledava) near the Western border with Austria. He appears in some documents in the period between 1208 and 1212.[12] Henry I and his brother, Michael spent their childhood outside Hungary.[10] They had inherited the right of patronage of the Kapornak Abbey, which was usurped by their some degree of relatives, Fabian and Benz during their absent.[13] They unsuccessfully contested the right for themselves, but Andrew II of Hungary restored Henry and Michael as the rightful owners of the patronage upon their request in 1212.[10] Henry I also owned an estate near Szentbenedek (present-day Kančevci in Slovenia).[12] Michael died sometime after 1212; his widow married Michael Hahót later.[14] Michael's sons, Hencse II and Virunt, and their cousin, Henry II were patrons of the Kapornak Abbey in 1237.[14] Brothers John I and Wolfer II, whose parentage is uncertain, possessed portions in the northeast part of the lordship, near Prosznyákfalva (today a borough in Prosenjakovci, Slovenia).[12] Summarizing, the sporadic data from the end of the 12th century and the beginning of the 13th century clearly state that Wolfer's branch had possessions on the originally uninhabited borderlands, along the lines of defense, or ones close to royal households. The granted possession of Küszén was the part of a larger clan possession covering the whole valley of the stream Strém as far as the Rába, but they also had lands along the Rába near Szentgotthárd and the Mura (Mur) near the estate of the fortress of Felsőlendva (present-day Grad in Slovenia).[13]

The most ambitious and powerful member of the branch was Henry II. He entered the service of Béla IV and had gradually distanced himself from his relatives. Receiving large-scale personal land donations for his military career and loyalty, he was the founder and first member of the Kőszegi family (formerly incorrectly also called Németújvári in historiographical works),[15] which had dominated the northwestern part of Vas County and their lands were arranged around significant fortresses, for instance Borostyánkő, Léka (today Bernstein and Lockenhaus in Austria, respectively) and the eponymous Kőszeg. Henry Kőszegi established his lordship independently of his kinship and did not rely on the clan's formerly acquired landholdings in the opposite parts of Vas County. Henry Kőszegi and his sons had become the dominant power of whole Transdanubia within decades, spreading from their paterfamilias' first acquired lands in Vas County.[13]

Héder's branch

The younger brother, Héder I was granted lands in the island plain of Szigetköz in Győr County. The centre of his estates, Hédervár was named after him. It emerged into the most important settlement in Szigetköz and became the eponymous village of the influential and powerful Hédervári family.[5] Héder's only known son was Denis I, whose person was first identified by historians Gábor Kiss and Balázs Zágorhidi Czigány (formerly Pál Engel also considered an intermediate generation between Héder and his grandchildren).[16] During the determination of borders of the estate of Novák in 1210, Héder II (Hederic or Hedrich) was referred to as the owner of the neighboring estate, Hédervár (it is also the first mention of the village by contemporary records).[17] Héder II served as ispán of Győr County in 1223.[18] He had two sons, James I and Lawrence III, and a daughter, who married Pousa Bár-Kalán. In 1255, James and Lawrence successfully recovered their sister's dowry from the late Pousa's son, Nana.[17] Lawrence had a son, Héder IV (fl. 1309) and a daughter Margaret, who married Solomon Dárói.[19] After her husband's death, she strove to keep the estate of Déshida (today an area at Lake Deseda) in Somogy County for her daughter, Anne (wife of Stephen Gyovad) in 1309 and 1310. In the presence of her brother, Héder IV, Margaret pledged the land to the distant relative, Henry II Kőszegi, Ban of Slavonia on 23 October 1309. The powerful lord last appeared as a living person in that document. Henry died by 1 May 1310, when Margaret wanted to pay the loan and recover Déshida, according to a document issued by the Somogyvár Abbey four days later. As the envoy of Henry's sons did not bring the redemption certificate, Margaret refused to pay the pledge.[20]

 
The local parish at Hédervár, erected in the 13th century, burial site of the Héderváris

James married Nabut Monoszló, the daughter of Thomas Monoszló, Ban of Slavonia.[21] He acquired the villages of Árpádsoka and Bős (today Gabčíkovo, Slovakia) in 1269. However, the original owner, Lothard Gutkeled, who lost it during the 1260s civil war, reclaimed the estates after the death of Béla IV. Queen Elizabeth the Cuman, the spouse of Stephen V of Hungary, supported his protege in this effort and officially returned the villages to the Gutkeleds. Amid such a political situation, James was willing to reach a peaceful agreement and sold Bős and Árpádsoka for 70 marks and also paid 7 marks as a compensation to Lothard in 1271.[22] James claimed the village of Bokod (today a wasteland in Celldömölk) from himself through his wife, Nabut Monoszló in 1278. He gradually became a familiaris of his powerful relatives, the Kőszegi brothers and joined their rebellion in that year. As a result, Ladislaus IV of Hungary confiscated the village of Fonyó from him in August. James and Nabut had four sons, Lawrence IV, Egidius, Henry III and Stephen I, who also joined that rebellion, which invited the future Andrew III to the Hungarian throne. Among them, Henry III was further mentioned in February 1284, when his land of Bolda in Vas County was confiscated because of affiliation to the Kőszegi family.[17] Of them, only Lawrence IV had descendants, the Bokodi family. He was still alive in 1311, when sold a portion of Bokod, called Nádszeg to Emeric Káldi from the gens (clan) Herény. His son was Stephen III and grandson was John III, who appeared in a contemporary record in 1336. Stephen's wife was Chuna Szőlősi, a sister of James Szőlősi from the gens (clan) Péc. In October 1336, Stephen and John provided the daughters' quarter from a portion of Bokod to Chuna. It is plausible that they were not related to that Bokodi family, which possessed lands in the region a century later.[23]

Héder's another grandson, Denis II was known only by name, there is no further information about him. He had three sons, Héder III, Herrand and Denis III (also known as the "White-headed"). Héder III married an unidentified daughter of a certain Vekhard. She was the widow of Maurus II Győr. Her husband and their only son, Conrad II both died before 1252. In that year, Héder successfully filed a lawsuit for his wife's dowry against the Győr clan.[20] He functioned as ispán of Hont County in 1269.[24] He also acquired a portion from the village Árpádsoka in that year, but after Stephen V ascended the Hungarian throne in the next year, he had to give back to its original owner, Lothard Gutkeled.[20] He last appeared in contemporary records in 1279, when he acted as an arbiter in a lawsuit over the ownership of Gesztence (today a borough in Jánossomorja) between Conrad Győr and a maternal relative, a certain James, son of Michael.[25] Héder had a son, John II, who was a supporter of Stephen V. He fought against the Bohemians, who invaded the Western borderlands of Hungary in April 1273. Therefore, he was granted Dabrony in Veszprém County. Later, he also joined the allegiance of the Kőszegis. He died sometime around 1284; there were some complaints that he unlawfully held a portion of Novák after his lord and relative, Ivan Kőszegi seized it from Conrad Győr.[25] Denis II's second son, Herrand was a long-time partisan of Béla IV. For his military service in the Duchy of Austria, he was granted the landholdings – Szentkút, Mérhart, Szombatfalva, Újfalva and Pinka – of his late relative, canon Virunt by Béla in 1255.[20] Herrand served as Master of the horse from 1262 to 1270, while also held the ispánates of Trencsén, then Moson counties. He regained influence after the death of Stephen V, holding various positions in the queenly court.[26] Today's Mesteri once was called Hernádmesteri after him. Herrand had three sons and a daughter. Dominic was mentioned in 1268 and 1269. James II handed his lands in Moson County – Oroszvár, Szerdahely (present-day Rusovce and Dunajská Streda in Slovakia, respectively), Csütörtökhely and Rajka, over to King Andrew III in 1297, in exchange for Monyorókerék (today Eberau in Austria). His new seat laid near the lordship of Németújvár (Güssing). James II' son John IV and grandson Stephen III died without descendants sometime before 1371. Herrand's third son, Nicholas I died in 1326; he donated Bekény (near Egyházashetye) to Peter Intai in his last will and testament.[20] Herrand's only daughter, Elizabeth married to Gregory Rumi from the Tengerdi kinship.[27]

Through his sons, Denis (III) the White-headed became forefather of the prestigious Hédervári family. Both the descendants of Desiderius and Nicholas II bore the Hédervári surname. Desiderius was first mentioned in 1285, when he was granted the land of Bodak in Csilizköz (Medzičiližie; today a southern region of Žitný ostrov in Slovakia). Abandoning the forced alliance with the Kőszegis, he became an ardent partisan of Charles I of Hungary, as a result lost several lands temporarily during the clashes against the Kőszegi family. He sacrificed his life to enable the king's escape during the disastrous Battle of Posada in November 1330.[25][28] Nicholas II served as ispán of Győr County from 1324 to 1330.[29] The Héderváris' main branch ascended from him, which survived the Middle Ages and flourished until the late 17th century.[23]

Family tree

  • Wolfer I (fl. 1157) --> Kőszegi branch
    • Hencse I (fl. 1196–98)
      • Henry I (fl. 1208–12)
      • Michael (fl. 1212)
        • Hencse II (fl. 1233–37)
        • Lawrence II (fl. 1233)
        • Virunt (fl. 1233–37)
    • (?) Simon (fl. 1198)
    • (?) Lawrence I (fl. 1198)
      • (?) John I (fl. 1208)
      • (?) Wolfer II (fl. 1198–1208)
    • (?) N
      • (?) Fabian (fl. 1212)
      • (?) Benz (fl. 1212)
  • Héder I (fl. 1146–64) --> Hédervári branch
    • Denis I (fl. 1198)
      • Denis II
        • Héder III (fl. 1252–79) ∞ daughter of Vekhard
          • John II (fl. 1274–84)
        • Herrand (fl. 1255–76)
          • Dominic (fl. 1268–69)
          • James II (fl. 1297)
            • John IV (died before 1371)
              • Stephen III (died before 1371)
          • Nicholas I (fl. 1326†)
          • Elizabeth ∞ Gregory Rumi
        • Denis III ("the White-headed")
          • Desiderius (fl. 1285–1330†), ancestor of the Hédervári family
          • Nicholas II (fl. 1309–30†), ancestor of the Hédervári family
          • Andrew (fl. 1324–26†)
      • Héder II (fl. 1210–23)
        • James I (fl. 1255–78) ∞ Nabut Monoszló
          • Lawrence IV (Bokodi; fl. 1278–1311)
          • Egidius (fl. 1278)
          • Henry III (fl. 1278–89)
          • Stephen I (fl. 1278)
        • Lawrence III (fl. 1255)
          • Héder IV (fl. 1309)
            • Ladislaus
              • Anne (fl. 1394) ∞ Peter Bocskai
          • Margaret (fl. 1309–10) ∞ Solomon Dárói
        • a daughter (fl. 1255) ∞ Pousa Bár-Kalán

References

  1. ^ The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle (ch. 39), p. 101.
  2. ^ Simon of Kéza: The Deeds of the Hungarians (ch. 80.), pp. 164, 165.
  3. ^ Feješová 2020, p. 37.
  4. ^ Horváth 2015, p. 10.
  5. ^ a b Karácsonyi 1901, p. 144.
  6. ^ Markó 2006, p. 285.
  7. ^ Engel: Genealógia (Köcski)
  8. ^ Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, p. 173.
  9. ^ Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, p. 172.
  10. ^ a b c Wertner 1895, p. 44.
  11. ^ Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, pp. 174–175.
  12. ^ a b c Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, p. 176.
  13. ^ a b c Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, p. 177.
  14. ^ a b Wertner 1895, p. 45.
  15. ^ Markó 2006, p. 229.
  16. ^ Kiss & Zágorhidi Czigány 2012, p. 174.
  17. ^ a b c Karácsonyi 1901, p. 159.
  18. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 157.
  19. ^ Engel: Genealógia (Mojs kinship 1.)
  20. ^ a b c d e Karácsonyi 1901, p. 160.
  21. ^ Karácsonyi 1901, p. 381.
  22. ^ Karácsonyi 1901, p. 40.
  23. ^ a b Engel: Genealógia (Genus Héder 1., Hédervár branch)
  24. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 159.
  25. ^ a b c Karácsonyi 1901, p. 161.
  26. ^ Zsoldos 2011, pp. 57, 308.
  27. ^ Engel: Genealógia (Tengerdi kinship 1. Rumi branch)
  28. ^ Engel 1996, pp. 56–57, 459.
  29. ^ Engel 1996, p. 132.

Sources

Primary sources

  • 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. ISBN 963-9116-31-9.
  • The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle: Chronica de Gestis Hungarorum (Edited by Dezső Dercsényi) (1970). Corvina, Taplinger Publishing. ISBN 0-8008-4015-1.

Secondary sources

  • Engel, Pál (1996). Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1301–1457, I. [Secular Archontology of Hungary, 1301–1457, Volume I] (in Hungarian). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete. ISBN 963-8312-44-0.
  • Feješová, Mária (2020). "Hederikovci z Kyseku a Modry [Hederiks from Kysek and Modra]". In Weinbergerová, Mária; Velička, Drahomír (eds.). Archívny almanach (ročnik III.) (in Slovak). Spolok Pro Archivis. pp. 29–37. ISBN 978-80-972999-2-7.
  • Horváth, Richárd (2015). "A favár rejtélye, avagy mennyire régi Újvár vára?: Németújvár várának "vélelmezett" története a kezdetektől a 13. század végéig [The Mystery of the Wooden Fort, or How Old is Újvár?: The "Presumed" History of the Castle of Németújvár from the Beginning to the End of the 13th Century]". Castrum (in Hungarian). Castrum Bene Egyesület. 18 (1–2): 5–24. ISSN 1787-1093.
  • Karácsonyi, János (1901). A magyar nemzetségek a XIV. század közepéig. II. kötet [The Hungarian genera until the middle of the 14th century, Vol. 2] (in Hungarian). Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
  • Kiss, Gábor; Zágorhidi Czigány, Balázs (2012). "A Héder nemzetség korai birtokai Vas vármegyében és a küszéni bencés apátság [The Foundation of the Benedictine Abbey in Küszén and the Early Possessions of the Héder Family in Vas County]". In Illés, Pál Attila; Juhász-Laczik, Albin (eds.). Örökség és küldetés. Bencések Magyarországon (Rendtörténeti konferenciák 7/1) (in Hungarian). Magyar Egyháztörténeti Enciklopédia Munkaközösség (METEM). pp. 172–180. ISBN 978-963-9662-60-5.
  • Mályusz, Elemér (1971). Az V. István-kori geszta [The Gesta of the Age of Stephen V]. Akadémiai Kiadó.
  • Markó, László (2006). A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig: Életrajzi Lexikon [Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days: A Biographical Encyclopedia] (in Hungarian). Helikon Kiadó. ISBN 963-208-970-7.
  • Wertner, Mór (1895). "A Güssingiek [The Güssingers]". Századok (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat. 29 (1 & 2): 42–64, 136–154. ISSN 0039-8098.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2011). Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1000–1301 [Secular Archontology of Hungary, 1000–1301] (in Hungarian). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete. ISBN 978-963-9627-38-3.

héder, genus, héder, also, heydrich, hedrich, name, gens, latin, clan, nemzetség, hungarian, kingdom, hungary, several, prominent, secular, dignitaries, came, from, this, kindred, ancestors, kindred, were, german, knights, from, duchy, swabia, brothers, wolfer. Heder also Heydrich or Hedrich was the name of a gens Latin for clan nemzetseg in Hungarian in the Kingdom of Hungary several prominent secular dignitaries came from this kindred The ancestors of the kindred were two German knights from the Duchy of Swabia brothers Wolfer and Heder They were granted large scale domains in Western Hungary The powerful and influential Hedervari and Koszegi noble families descended from them Genus gens HederCountryKingdom of HungaryFounded1140sFounderWolfer and HederDissolutionearly 14th centuryCadet branchesa Koszegi branchHouse of Koszegib Hedervari branch House of Hedervari House of Bokodi Contents 1 Origin 2 Members and their landholdings 2 1 Wolfer s branch 2 2 Heder s branch 3 Family tree 4 References 5 Sources 5 1 Primary sources 5 2 Secondary sourcesOrigin Edit Volphger who was descended from the counts of Hemburg came with his brother Hedricus from Alemannia with three hundred armed horsemen to whom Duke Geysa made a gift of Mount Kyscen and an island in the Danube near Iaurinum that he might dwell there for ever here he built a castle of wood and on the same mountain he founded a monastery where he is buried From him and his brother springs the clan of Heder Illuminated Chronicle 1 Wolfger and his brother Hedrich come to Hungary from Wildon with forty knights in armour Wolfger was given Mt Gussing to settle in There he built a wooden fort and later a monks cloister where he was buried after his death The Heder descend from him Simon of Keza The Deeds of the Hungarians 2 Heder as depicted in the Illuminated Chronicle with false coat of arms According to the Illuminated Chronicle Wolfer and Heder belonged to the Counts of Hainburg Mark of Kalt s work incorrectly accidentally or intentionally refers to Grand Prince Geza c 972 997 father of Saint Stephen the first King of Hungary in fact Wolfer and Heder arrived to Hungary during the first regnal years of the minor Geza II of Hungary definitely before 1146 The brothers place of origin is in dispute Simon of Keza s Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum writes that Wolfer and Heder came from Vildonia with forty armored soldiers referring to Burgruine Wildon in Styria however the castle itself was built only after 1157 thus that identification is incorrect Johannes de Thurocz says in his work Chronica Hungarorum that the two knights originated from Hainburg of Alemannia therefore the Duchy of Swabia Presumably Mark of Kalt s version is closer to the truth as there was a certain knight Wolfger von Erlach in the first half of the 12th century in Hainburg Due to the similarity between forenames within the family the coat of arms and their frequent church dedications to St James the Great the Slovak historian Maria Fejesova considers that the Heders presumably originated from the historical region of Picardy in the northwestern part of the Kingdom of France and perhaps they were related to the local Clacy medieval noble family According to Fejesova knights Wolfer and Heder came to Hungary and permanently settled during the Second Crusade in 1147 3 In 1157 Gervasius Bishop of Gyor contributed and permitted the foundation of the Benedictine Abbey of Kuszen later Nemetujvar present day Burg Gussing in Austria to comes Wolfer who donated several surrounding lands to the monastery Gervasius subordinated the monastery to the Pannonhalma Abbey and dedicated the new monastery to Virgin Mary Both Wolfer and Heder were considered strong confidants of Geza II 4 Heder was the ancestor of the prestigious Hedervari family while the infamous Koszegi family originated from Wolfer As later the Heder genus was named after Heder and not after his elder brother historian Janos Karacsonyi argued that Heder was more talented than Wolfer or lived a very long time after his brother s death Wolfer was buried in the Kuszen Abbey 5 Based on Alexander Kocski s seal the Kocski family was presumably also related to the local powerful Koszegi family and thus was a scion of the gens Heder too at least from maternal side 6 Historian Pal Engel however considered that Alexander Kocski individually adopted his seal following his decisive victory over his ardent enemies the Koszegis as a prominent general in Charles I of Hungary s unification war against the oligarchic domains 7 Members and their landholdings EditWolfer s branch Edit The brothers were granted their coherent and extensive possession from a crown land after the cessation of the gyepu border system Accordingly the Heders first lands were part of the so called gyepuelve a mostly uninhabited or sparsely inhabited area beyond the Austrian border comparable to the modern buffer zones The clan s lands concentrated mainly in the catchment area of the rivers Raba Raab and Lapincs Lafnitz in the southwestern part of Vas County at the turn of the 12th and 13th centuries Most of the lands laid in the valley of stream Strem or Strem and centered around the hill of Kuszen According to historian Geza Erszegi the Heders owned the whole territory between the streams Strem and thus the parallel Kiralyut lit King s Road and Medves i e southeast to Kuszen However the Heders also owned contiguous lands towards the opposite direction and the mountain of Hoheberg or Hochberg was considered the northwest border point of their territories 8 Burg Gussing which was built by Bela III of Hungary on the pedestal of the short lived and confiscated Kuszen monastery established by Wolfer in 1157 Bela III of Hungary r 1172 1196 confiscated the Abbey of Kuszen from the Benedictines and built a royal castle called Nemetujvar or simply Ujvar New Castle today Gussing in Austria on top of the hill in the 1180s He compensated its patron comes Hencse I Wolfer s son also known as Henc or Aenz with the patronage of the newly constructed abbey of Kapornak in Zala County 9 10 Furthermore Wolfer s descendants remained the owners of the nearby Szentelek and Szentkut present day Stegersbach and Heiligenbrunn in Austria respectively A document from 1198 refers to the vineyards of Szentkut as the accessory of the newly built castle Ujvar or Novi Castri Wolfer s great grandson Virunt or Werenherth who served as a canon of the cathedral chapter of Gyor still owned Szentkut itself and the surrounding villages Merhart Szombatfalva Ujfalva and Pinka in the middle of the 13th century In his last will Virunt bequeathed the villages to Bela IV of Hungary and the Royal Crown who soon donated them to Herrand a representative of the Heder clan s other branch The offspring Hedervari family possessed the area thereafter until its extinction Beyond the Strem valley the kindred also owned some lordships for instance Rabagyarmat and two unidentified estates Chegge and Podrag According to a census of the Szentgotthard Abbey from 1198 family members Simon and Lawrence I owned portions in Szentgotthard and Battyan once laid near Nagysimonyi while Lawrence I Denis I from the Hedervari branch and Hencse I also had interests in Almas Battyan later was recalled Simonremetefolde lit the land of hermit Simon which confirms that Simon became a friar in the last years of his life Denis and Hencse also owned Pacsony until they donated it to the collegiate chapter of Vasvar sometime before 1217 The local wasteland is still called after Hencse 11 Hencse s son Henry I possessed lands along the river Lendva Ledava near the Western border with Austria He appears in some documents in the period between 1208 and 1212 12 Henry I and his brother Michael spent their childhood outside Hungary 10 They had inherited the right of patronage of the Kapornak Abbey which was usurped by their some degree of relatives Fabian and Benz during their absent 13 They unsuccessfully contested the right for themselves but Andrew II of Hungary restored Henry and Michael as the rightful owners of the patronage upon their request in 1212 10 Henry I also owned an estate near Szentbenedek present day Kancevci in Slovenia 12 Michael died sometime after 1212 his widow married Michael Hahot later 14 Michael s sons Hencse II and Virunt and their cousin Henry II were patrons of the Kapornak Abbey in 1237 14 Brothers John I and Wolfer II whose parentage is uncertain possessed portions in the northeast part of the lordship near Prosznyakfalva today a borough in Prosenjakovci Slovenia 12 Summarizing the sporadic data from the end of the 12th century and the beginning of the 13th century clearly state that Wolfer s branch had possessions on the originally uninhabited borderlands along the lines of defense or ones close to royal households The granted possession of Kuszen was the part of a larger clan possession covering the whole valley of the stream Strem as far as the Raba but they also had lands along the Raba near Szentgotthard and the Mura Mur near the estate of the fortress of Felsolendva present day Grad in Slovenia 13 The most ambitious and powerful member of the branch was Henry II He entered the service of Bela IV and had gradually distanced himself from his relatives Receiving large scale personal land donations for his military career and loyalty he was the founder and first member of the Koszegi family formerly incorrectly also called Nemetujvari in historiographical works 15 which had dominated the northwestern part of Vas County and their lands were arranged around significant fortresses for instance Borostyanko Leka today Bernstein and Lockenhaus in Austria respectively and the eponymous Koszeg Henry Koszegi established his lordship independently of his kinship and did not rely on the clan s formerly acquired landholdings in the opposite parts of Vas County Henry Koszegi and his sons had become the dominant power of whole Transdanubia within decades spreading from their paterfamilias first acquired lands in Vas County 13 Heder s branch Edit The younger brother Heder I was granted lands in the island plain of Szigetkoz in Gyor County The centre of his estates Hedervar was named after him It emerged into the most important settlement in Szigetkoz and became the eponymous village of the influential and powerful Hedervari family 5 Heder s only known son was Denis I whose person was first identified by historians Gabor Kiss and Balazs Zagorhidi Czigany formerly Pal Engel also considered an intermediate generation between Heder and his grandchildren 16 During the determination of borders of the estate of Novak in 1210 Heder II Hederic or Hedrich was referred to as the owner of the neighboring estate Hedervar it is also the first mention of the village by contemporary records 17 Heder II served as ispan of Gyor County in 1223 18 He had two sons James I and Lawrence III and a daughter who married Pousa Bar Kalan In 1255 James and Lawrence successfully recovered their sister s dowry from the late Pousa s son Nana 17 Lawrence had a son Heder IV fl 1309 and a daughter Margaret who married Solomon Daroi 19 After her husband s death she strove to keep the estate of Deshida today an area at Lake Deseda in Somogy County for her daughter Anne wife of Stephen Gyovad in 1309 and 1310 In the presence of her brother Heder IV Margaret pledged the land to the distant relative Henry II Koszegi Ban of Slavonia on 23 October 1309 The powerful lord last appeared as a living person in that document Henry died by 1 May 1310 when Margaret wanted to pay the loan and recover Deshida according to a document issued by the Somogyvar Abbey four days later As the envoy of Henry s sons did not bring the redemption certificate Margaret refused to pay the pledge 20 The local parish at Hedervar erected in the 13th century burial site of the Hedervaris James married Nabut Monoszlo the daughter of Thomas Monoszlo Ban of Slavonia 21 He acquired the villages of Arpadsoka and Bos today Gabcikovo Slovakia in 1269 However the original owner Lothard Gutkeled who lost it during the 1260s civil war reclaimed the estates after the death of Bela IV Queen Elizabeth the Cuman the spouse of Stephen V of Hungary supported his protege in this effort and officially returned the villages to the Gutkeleds Amid such a political situation James was willing to reach a peaceful agreement and sold Bos and Arpadsoka for 70 marks and also paid 7 marks as a compensation to Lothard in 1271 22 James claimed the village of Bokod today a wasteland in Celldomolk from himself through his wife Nabut Monoszlo in 1278 He gradually became a familiaris of his powerful relatives the Koszegi brothers and joined their rebellion in that year As a result Ladislaus IV of Hungary confiscated the village of Fonyo from him in August James and Nabut had four sons Lawrence IV Egidius Henry III and Stephen I who also joined that rebellion which invited the future Andrew III to the Hungarian throne Among them Henry III was further mentioned in February 1284 when his land of Bolda in Vas County was confiscated because of affiliation to the Koszegi family 17 Of them only Lawrence IV had descendants the Bokodi family He was still alive in 1311 when sold a portion of Bokod called Nadszeg to Emeric Kaldi from the gens clan Hereny His son was Stephen III and grandson was John III who appeared in a contemporary record in 1336 Stephen s wife was Chuna Szolosi a sister of James Szolosi from the gens clan Pec In October 1336 Stephen and John provided the daughters quarter from a portion of Bokod to Chuna It is plausible that they were not related to that Bokodi family which possessed lands in the region a century later 23 Heder s another grandson Denis II was known only by name there is no further information about him He had three sons Heder III Herrand and Denis III also known as the White headed Heder III married an unidentified daughter of a certain Vekhard She was the widow of Maurus II Gyor Her husband and their only son Conrad II both died before 1252 In that year Heder successfully filed a lawsuit for his wife s dowry against the Gyor clan 20 He functioned as ispan of Hont County in 1269 24 He also acquired a portion from the village Arpadsoka in that year but after Stephen V ascended the Hungarian throne in the next year he had to give back to its original owner Lothard Gutkeled 20 He last appeared in contemporary records in 1279 when he acted as an arbiter in a lawsuit over the ownership of Gesztence today a borough in Janossomorja between Conrad Gyor and a maternal relative a certain James son of Michael 25 Heder had a son John II who was a supporter of Stephen V He fought against the Bohemians who invaded the Western borderlands of Hungary in April 1273 Therefore he was granted Dabrony in Veszprem County Later he also joined the allegiance of the Koszegis He died sometime around 1284 there were some complaints that he unlawfully held a portion of Novak after his lord and relative Ivan Koszegi seized it from Conrad Gyor 25 Denis II s second son Herrand was a long time partisan of Bela IV For his military service in the Duchy of Austria he was granted the landholdings Szentkut Merhart Szombatfalva Ujfalva and Pinka of his late relative canon Virunt by Bela in 1255 20 Herrand served as Master of the horse from 1262 to 1270 while also held the ispanates of Trencsen then Moson counties He regained influence after the death of Stephen V holding various positions in the queenly court 26 Today s Mesteri once was called Hernadmesteri after him Herrand had three sons and a daughter Dominic was mentioned in 1268 and 1269 James II handed his lands in Moson County Oroszvar Szerdahely present day Rusovce and Dunajska Streda in Slovakia respectively Csutortokhely and Rajka over to King Andrew III in 1297 in exchange for Monyorokerek today Eberau in Austria His new seat laid near the lordship of Nemetujvar Gussing James II son John IV and grandson Stephen III died without descendants sometime before 1371 Herrand s third son Nicholas I died in 1326 he donated Bekeny near Egyhazashetye to Peter Intai in his last will and testament 20 Herrand s only daughter Elizabeth married to Gregory Rumi from the Tengerdi kinship 27 Through his sons Denis III the White headed became forefather of the prestigious Hedervari family Both the descendants of Desiderius and Nicholas II bore the Hedervari surname Desiderius was first mentioned in 1285 when he was granted the land of Bodak in Csilizkoz Medzicilizie today a southern region of Zitny ostrov in Slovakia Abandoning the forced alliance with the Koszegis he became an ardent partisan of Charles I of Hungary as a result lost several lands temporarily during the clashes against the Koszegi family He sacrificed his life to enable the king s escape during the disastrous Battle of Posada in November 1330 25 28 Nicholas II served as ispan of Gyor County from 1324 to 1330 29 The Hedervaris main branch ascended from him which survived the Middle Ages and flourished until the late 17th century 23 Family tree EditWolfer I fl 1157 gt Koszegi branch Hencse I fl 1196 98 Henry I fl 1208 12 Henry II fl 1237 74 first member of the Koszegi family Michael fl 1212 Hencse II fl 1233 37 Lawrence II fl 1233 Virunt fl 1233 37 Simon fl 1198 Lawrence I fl 1198 John I fl 1208 Wolfer II fl 1198 1208 N Fabian fl 1212 Benz fl 1212 Heder I fl 1146 64 gt Hedervari branch Denis I fl 1198 Denis II Heder III fl 1252 79 daughter of Vekhard John II fl 1274 84 Herrand fl 1255 76 Dominic fl 1268 69 James II fl 1297 John IV died before 1371 Stephen III died before 1371 Nicholas I fl 1326 Elizabeth Gregory Rumi Denis III the White headed Desiderius fl 1285 1330 ancestor of the Hedervari family Nicholas II fl 1309 30 ancestor of the Hedervari family Andrew fl 1324 26 Heder II fl 1210 23 James I fl 1255 78 Nabut Monoszlo Lawrence IV Bokodi fl 1278 1311 Stephen II fl 1336 Chuna Szolosi John III fl 1336 Egidius fl 1278 Henry III fl 1278 89 Stephen I fl 1278 Lawrence III fl 1255 Heder IV fl 1309 Ladislaus Anne fl 1394 Peter Bocskai Margaret fl 1309 10 Solomon Daroi a daughter fl 1255 Pousa Bar KalanReferences Edit The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle ch 39 p 101 Simon of Keza The Deeds of the Hungarians ch 80 pp 164 165 Fejesova 2020 p 37 Horvath 2015 p 10 a b Karacsonyi 1901 p 144 Marko 2006 p 285 Engel Genealogia Kocski Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 p 173 Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 p 172 a b c Wertner 1895 p 44 Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 pp 174 175 a b c Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 p 176 a b c Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 p 177 a b Wertner 1895 p 45 Marko 2006 p 229 Kiss amp Zagorhidi Czigany 2012 p 174 a b c Karacsonyi 1901 p 159 Zsoldos 2011 p 157 Engel Genealogia Mojs kinship 1 a b c d e Karacsonyi 1901 p 160 Karacsonyi 1901 p 381 Karacsonyi 1901 p 40 a b Engel Genealogia Genus Heder 1 Hedervar branch Zsoldos 2011 p 159 a b c Karacsonyi 1901 p 161 Zsoldos 2011 pp 57 308 Engel Genealogia Tengerdi kinship 1 Rumi branch Engel 1996 pp 56 57 459 Engel 1996 p 132 Sources EditPrimary sources Edit Simon of Keza The Deeds of the Hungarians Edited and translated by Laszlo Veszpremy and Frank Schaer with a study by Jeno Szucs 1999 CEU Press ISBN 963 9116 31 9 The Hungarian Illuminated Chronicle Chronica de Gestis Hungarorum Edited by Dezso Dercsenyi 1970 Corvina Taplinger Publishing ISBN 0 8008 4015 1 Secondary sources Edit Engel Pal 1996 Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1301 1457 I Secular Archontology of Hungary 1301 1457 Volume I in Hungarian Historia MTA Tortenettudomanyi Intezete ISBN 963 8312 44 0 Fejesova Maria 2020 Hederikovci z Kyseku a Modry Hederiks from Kysek and Modra In Weinbergerova Maria Velicka Drahomir eds Archivny almanach rocnik III in Slovak Spolok Pro Archivis pp 29 37 ISBN 978 80 972999 2 7 Horvath Richard 2015 A favar rejtelye avagy mennyire regi Ujvar vara Nemetujvar varanak velelmezett tortenete a kezdetektol a 13 szazad vegeig The Mystery of the Wooden Fort or How Old is Ujvar The Presumed History of the Castle of Nemetujvar from the Beginning to the End of the 13th Century Castrum in Hungarian Castrum Bene Egyesulet 18 1 2 5 24 ISSN 1787 1093 Karacsonyi Janos 1901 A magyar nemzetsegek a XIV szazad kozepeig II kotet The Hungarian genera until the middle of the 14th century Vol 2 in Hungarian Hungarian Academy of Sciences Kiss Gabor Zagorhidi Czigany Balazs 2012 A Heder nemzetseg korai birtokai Vas varmegyeben es a kuszeni bences apatsag The Foundation of the Benedictine Abbey in Kuszen and the Early Possessions of the Heder Family in Vas County In Illes Pal Attila Juhasz Laczik Albin eds Orokseg es kuldetes Bencesek Magyarorszagon Rendtorteneti konferenciak 7 1 in Hungarian Magyar Egyhaztorteneti Enciklopedia Munkakozosseg METEM pp 172 180 ISBN 978 963 9662 60 5 Malyusz Elemer 1971 Az V Istvan kori geszta The Gesta of the Age of Stephen V Akademiai Kiado Marko Laszlo 2006 A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig Eletrajzi Lexikon Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days A Biographical Encyclopedia in Hungarian Helikon Kiado ISBN 963 208 970 7 Wertner Mor 1895 A Gussingiek The Gussingers Szazadok in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat 29 1 amp 2 42 64 136 154 ISSN 0039 8098 Zsoldos Attila 2011 Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1000 1301 Secular Archontology of Hungary 1000 1301 in Hungarian Historia MTA Tortenettudomanyi Intezete ISBN 978 963 9627 38 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heder genus amp oldid 1117862334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.