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John Csák

John from the kindred Csák (Hungarian: Csák nembeli János; died before 1324) was a Hungarian baron at the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries. He served as Master of the horse in the 1290s. Following the extinction of the Árpád dynasty, he initially supported pretender Wenceslaus, but later joined the allegiance of Charles I. He was made Judge royal in 1311, putting end to a more than ten years of vacancy. He betrayed the King and joined his distant relative, the rebellious oligarch Matthew Csák in 1314.

John Csák
Judge royal
Reign1311–1314
Predecessorvacant,
before Stephen Ákos
SuccessorLampert Hermán
Diedbefore 1324
Noble familygens Csák
FatherCsák

Early career Edit

John was born into the Újlak (Ilok) branch of the extended and powerful gens (clan) Csák. His father was Csák, who was mentioned by contemporary records in the period between 1240 and 1274. John had numerous illustrious close relatives, including his second cousin Ugrin Csák, the de facto ruler of Upper Syrmia in the early 14th century. John had no known descendants.[1]

John first appeared in contemporary documents in 1295,[2] although two non-authentic charters refer to him as Master of the horse and ispán of Baranya County in July 1290.[3] He was considered a supporter of Andrew III, the last Hungarian monarch from the Árpád dynasty. For his court service, John was granted the castle of Visk (or Wysk) and its surrounding lands in Hont County (present-day Vyškovce nad Ipľom in Slovakia) on 25 April 1296.[4][5] He served as Master of the horse in 1297, replacing his relative Matthew Csák. He is the last known person, who held the dignity during the Age of Árpáds.[6] He functioned as ispán of Hont County in 1298.[7] He was ispán of Baranya County in 1300.[8] It is plausible that his latter function was highly nominal, as the county was ruled by the Kőszegi family, in addition to other parts of Transdanubia.[9]

During the Interregnum Edit

Andrew III died on 14 January 1301. A civil war between various claimants to the throne—Charles of Anjou, Wenceslaus of Bohemia, and Otto of Bavaria—followed Andrew's death and lasted for seven years. Initially, John supported Wenceslaus in the war of succession, [10] despite that Ugrin Csák, also from the clan's Újlak branch, was considered the strongest domestic pillar of Charles' dominion in the early years. John was first styled as a "baron" and member of the royal court of Wenceslaus in 1303.[11] In the same year, the young king transcribed and confirmed the letter donation of the late Andrew III, regarding the ownership of Visk.[4]

By 1307, John Csák took an oath of allegiance to Charles of Anjou.[12] He played an important role in the capture of Buda in June. Returning from his Bohemian captivity, the ex-rector Ladislaus, son of Werner marched into the town with the assistance of John Csák's troops.[13] As the Illuminated Chronicle narrates, Ladislaus and John infiltrated into the fort through the gate next to the Jewish synagogue at night. Their troops clashed with the guards of the city magistrate, who refused to acknowledge Charles as their legitimate king. The pro-Wenceslaus rector Petermann escaped from the scene without clothing, while other German burghers were tortured and massacred. John captured and sent to the court of Archbishop Thomas of Esztergom those local pro-Wenceslaus clergymen, who even excommunicated Pope Boniface VIII prior to that, and were labelled as heretics.[14] Historian Gyula Kristó analyzed the royal documents of the decade and placed John to the fifth or sixth most prominent partisan of Charles I in the subsequent years.[12]

Judge royal and betrayal Edit

John Csák was mentioned as "designate" (Latin: deputatus) Judge royal on 10 March 1311. His position's austerity indicator was already omitted in the following mention, on 7 May.[12] Historian Pál Engel considered the dignity of Judge royal was vacant during the period of the Interregnum, at least since 1301, when the Kingdom of Hungary had disintegrated into autonomous provinces ruled by powerful oligarchs.[15] Prior to John's appointment, a certain comes Peter was referred as Judge royal, who issued a charter in September 1301 in Buda in this capacity. Historian Iván Bertényi Sr. argues that nobleman served in the court of Wenceslaus. The 18th-century Liber Dignitariorum Saecularium also mentions a certain Stephen as a Judge royal (possibly for Charles I) from 1301 to 1304, who simultaneously held the office of ispán of Sáros County.[16] A vice-Judge royal Thomas also appeared in contemporary documents in the same period, between 1302 and 1305, and styled himself as "king Ladislaus's [i.e. Wenceslaus] Judge royal".[15] According to the often unreliable Liber Dignitariorum Saecularium, Ugrin Csák also served as Judge royal between 1304 and 1311, until his death. Bertényi has accepted this information, referring to some data which reflect Ugrin's jurisdictional role on isolated occasions.[13] However, majority of historians, including John Csák's biographer Ildikó Tóth accept Pál Engel's theory and consider that the position of Judge royal was in a state of vacancy for a decade, until Charles's third coronation was performed in full accordance with customary law in August 1310. Tóth argues that Ugrin Csák performed his judicial role exclusively in his province in Syrmia, thus he did not held the dignity of Judge royal necessarily.[17]

 
The ruins of Ecseg Castle, which was owned by John Csák until his high treason

During his tenure as Judge royal, John Csák resided in Buda and performed his judicial role with countrywide competence. For instance, he judged over the Valkó County nobles' abuse of power case in August 1313, while in other occasions, he instructed the cathedral chapter of Gyulafehérvár (present-day Alba Iulia, Romania) during a land property lawsuit, and the cathedral chapter of Győr during an investigation.[18] Historian Ildikó Tóth emphasizes that many of John's legal cases were originally belonged to the judicial courts of the oligarchic provinces. Following the establishment of the strong royal power, John Csák took over and conducted these lawsuits. He was the first Judge royal, who has placed great emphasis on material evidences during his litigation processes.[19]

John Csák was last referred to as Judge royal on 12 July 1314.[15] According to a royal charter from the next year, he betrayed Charles I and joined to the allegiance of his distant relative, Matthew Csák, who was the most ardent enemy of the king, and ruled de facto independently the north-western counties of the kingdom. John's motivation is unknown, but the year of 1314 saw a large-scale replacement of the former elite, when Charles decided to struggle the oligarchs' power (Palatine James Borsa was also dismissed during that time) and appointed his supporters to the dignities. As the monarch narrates in 1324, John Csák conspired with the oligarch against him, and tried to hand him over to Matthew Csák.[20] As John's successor Lampert Hermán already appeared as Judge royal in a contemporary record on 29 September 1313, a scholarly debate emerged on the relevance of the aforementioned charter. Pál Engel declared the year of release is invalid and fixed it to 29 September 1314.[15] In contrast, Iván Bertényi argued John Csák and Lampert Hermán simultaneously held the dignity for a time until 1315, similarly to that case, where many oligarchs were styled themselves palatines during the era of feudal anarchy.[21] As this would be a unique solution in the history of the position, both Ildikó Tóth and Gyula Kristó refused Bertényi's theory and supported Engel's idea about the wrong date.[4][12] Thus John Csák's betrayal happened in the summer of 1314. After his unsuccessful abduction attempt, he fled to the dominion of Matthew Csák, where he died "miserably" sometime before 1324, as the king formulates. In that year, Charles I donated John's formerly confiscated lands, which laid in Pest, Szolnok, Hont, Nógrád and Moson counties.[21] Heretofore, John also owned (and possibly built himself) the castle of Ecseg in Nógrád County, which then became a property of Wulfing I Haschendorfer and his family (later the Szécsényis demolished the fort).[22] In the donation letter of 1324, Charles called his former courtier and judge as "treasonous Judas Iscariot".[4]

References Edit

  1. ^ Engel: Genealógia (Genus Csák, 8. Újlak branch)
  2. ^ Markó 2006, p. 275.
  3. ^ Zsoldos 2011, pp. 58, 133.
  4. ^ a b c d Tóth 1999, p. 144.
  5. ^ Engel 1996, p. 461.
  6. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 58.
  7. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 160.
  8. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 133.
  9. ^ Engel 1996, p. 102.
  10. ^ Kristó 1999, p. 42.
  11. ^ Engel 1996, p. 470.
  12. ^ a b c d Kristó 1999, p. 51.
  13. ^ a b Bertényi 1976, p. 61.
  14. ^ Tóth 1999, p. 145.
  15. ^ a b c d Engel 1996, p. 6.
  16. ^ Bertényi 1976, p. 60.
  17. ^ Tóth 1999, pp. 146, 148.
  18. ^ Tóth 1999, p. 147.
  19. ^ Tóth 1999, p. 148.
  20. ^ Kristó 1999, p. 52.
  21. ^ a b Bertényi 1976, p. 64.
  22. ^ Engel 1996, p. 307.

Sources Edit

  • Bertényi, Iván (1976). Az országbírói intézmény története a XIV. században [History of the Institution of Judge Royal in the 14th Century] (in Hungarian). Hungarian Academy of Sciences. ISBN 963-05-0734-X.
  • 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.
  • Kristó, Gyula (1999). "I. Károly király főúri elitje (1301–1309) [The Aristocratic Elite of King Charles I, 1301–1309]". Századok (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat. 133 (1): 41–62. ISSN 0039-8098.
  • 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 963-547-085-1.
  • Tóth, Ildikó (1999). "Károly Róbert első országbírója (Adalékok Csák János országbírói működéséhez) [Charles Robert's First Judge Royal: Data to the Function of John Csák as Judge Royal]". In Homonnai, Sarolta; Piti, Ferenc; Tóth, Ildikó (eds.). Tanulmányok a középkori magyar történelemről. Az I. Medievisztikai PhD-konferencia (Szeged, 1999. július 2.) előadásai (in Hungarian). University of Szeged. pp. 143–150. ISBN 963-482-421-8.
  • 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.
John
Born:  ?  Died: 1315/24
Political offices
Preceded by Master of the horse
disputed

1290
Succeeded by
Preceded by Master of the horse
1297
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Stephen Ákos
Judge royal
1311–1314
Succeeded by

john, csák, businessman, diplomat, jános, csák, john, from, kindred, csák, hungarian, csák, nembeli, jános, died, before, 1324, hungarian, baron, turn, 13th, 14th, centuries, served, master, horse, 1290s, following, extinction, Árpád, dynasty, initially, suppo. For the businessman and diplomat see Janos Csak John from the kindred Csak Hungarian Csak nembeli Janos died before 1324 was a Hungarian baron at the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries He served as Master of the horse in the 1290s Following the extinction of the Arpad dynasty he initially supported pretender Wenceslaus but later joined the allegiance of Charles I He was made Judge royal in 1311 putting end to a more than ten years of vacancy He betrayed the King and joined his distant relative the rebellious oligarch Matthew Csak in 1314 John CsakJudge royalReign1311 1314Predecessorvacant before Stephen AkosSuccessorLampert HermanDiedbefore 1324Noble familygens CsakFatherCsak Contents 1 Early career 2 During the Interregnum 3 Judge royal and betrayal 4 References 5 SourcesEarly career EditJohn was born into the Ujlak Ilok branch of the extended and powerful gens clan Csak His father was Csak who was mentioned by contemporary records in the period between 1240 and 1274 John had numerous illustrious close relatives including his second cousin Ugrin Csak the de facto ruler of Upper Syrmia in the early 14th century John had no known descendants 1 John first appeared in contemporary documents in 1295 2 although two non authentic charters refer to him as Master of the horse and ispan of Baranya County in July 1290 3 He was considered a supporter of Andrew III the last Hungarian monarch from the Arpad dynasty For his court service John was granted the castle of Visk or Wysk and its surrounding lands in Hont County present day Vyskovce nad Ipľom in Slovakia on 25 April 1296 4 5 He served as Master of the horse in 1297 replacing his relative Matthew Csak He is the last known person who held the dignity during the Age of Arpads 6 He functioned as ispan of Hont County in 1298 7 He was ispan of Baranya County in 1300 8 It is plausible that his latter function was highly nominal as the county was ruled by the Koszegi family in addition to other parts of Transdanubia 9 During the Interregnum EditAndrew III died on 14 January 1301 A civil war between various claimants to the throne Charles of Anjou Wenceslaus of Bohemia and Otto of Bavaria followed Andrew s death and lasted for seven years Initially John supported Wenceslaus in the war of succession 10 despite that Ugrin Csak also from the clan s Ujlak branch was considered the strongest domestic pillar of Charles dominion in the early years John was first styled as a baron and member of the royal court of Wenceslaus in 1303 11 In the same year the young king transcribed and confirmed the letter donation of the late Andrew III regarding the ownership of Visk 4 By 1307 John Csak took an oath of allegiance to Charles of Anjou 12 He played an important role in the capture of Buda in June Returning from his Bohemian captivity the ex rector Ladislaus son of Werner marched into the town with the assistance of John Csak s troops 13 As the Illuminated Chronicle narrates Ladislaus and John infiltrated into the fort through the gate next to the Jewish synagogue at night Their troops clashed with the guards of the city magistrate who refused to acknowledge Charles as their legitimate king The pro Wenceslaus rector Petermann escaped from the scene without clothing while other German burghers were tortured and massacred John captured and sent to the court of Archbishop Thomas of Esztergom those local pro Wenceslaus clergymen who even excommunicated Pope Boniface VIII prior to that and were labelled as heretics 14 Historian Gyula Kristo analyzed the royal documents of the decade and placed John to the fifth or sixth most prominent partisan of Charles I in the subsequent years 12 Judge royal and betrayal EditJohn Csak was mentioned as designate Latin deputatus Judge royal on 10 March 1311 His position s austerity indicator was already omitted in the following mention on 7 May 12 Historian Pal Engel considered the dignity of Judge royal was vacant during the period of the Interregnum at least since 1301 when the Kingdom of Hungary had disintegrated into autonomous provinces ruled by powerful oligarchs 15 Prior to John s appointment a certain comes Peter was referred as Judge royal who issued a charter in September 1301 in Buda in this capacity Historian Ivan Bertenyi Sr argues that nobleman served in the court of Wenceslaus The 18th century Liber Dignitariorum Saecularium also mentions a certain Stephen as a Judge royal possibly for Charles I from 1301 to 1304 who simultaneously held the office of ispan of Saros County 16 A vice Judge royal Thomas also appeared in contemporary documents in the same period between 1302 and 1305 and styled himself as king Ladislaus s i e Wenceslaus Judge royal 15 According to the often unreliable Liber Dignitariorum Saecularium Ugrin Csak also served as Judge royal between 1304 and 1311 until his death Bertenyi has accepted this information referring to some data which reflect Ugrin s jurisdictional role on isolated occasions 13 However majority of historians including John Csak s biographer Ildiko Toth accept Pal Engel s theory and consider that the position of Judge royal was in a state of vacancy for a decade until Charles s third coronation was performed in full accordance with customary law in August 1310 Toth argues that Ugrin Csak performed his judicial role exclusively in his province in Syrmia thus he did not held the dignity of Judge royal necessarily 17 The ruins of Ecseg Castle which was owned by John Csak until his high treasonDuring his tenure as Judge royal John Csak resided in Buda and performed his judicial role with countrywide competence For instance he judged over the Valko County nobles abuse of power case in August 1313 while in other occasions he instructed the cathedral chapter of Gyulafehervar present day Alba Iulia Romania during a land property lawsuit and the cathedral chapter of Gyor during an investigation 18 Historian Ildiko Toth emphasizes that many of John s legal cases were originally belonged to the judicial courts of the oligarchic provinces Following the establishment of the strong royal power John Csak took over and conducted these lawsuits He was the first Judge royal who has placed great emphasis on material evidences during his litigation processes 19 John Csak was last referred to as Judge royal on 12 July 1314 15 According to a royal charter from the next year he betrayed Charles I and joined to the allegiance of his distant relative Matthew Csak who was the most ardent enemy of the king and ruled de facto independently the north western counties of the kingdom John s motivation is unknown but the year of 1314 saw a large scale replacement of the former elite when Charles decided to struggle the oligarchs power Palatine James Borsa was also dismissed during that time and appointed his supporters to the dignities As the monarch narrates in 1324 John Csak conspired with the oligarch against him and tried to hand him over to Matthew Csak 20 As John s successor Lampert Herman already appeared as Judge royal in a contemporary record on 29 September 1313 a scholarly debate emerged on the relevance of the aforementioned charter Pal Engel declared the year of release is invalid and fixed it to 29 September 1314 15 In contrast Ivan Bertenyi argued John Csak and Lampert Herman simultaneously held the dignity for a time until 1315 similarly to that case where many oligarchs were styled themselves palatines during the era of feudal anarchy 21 As this would be a unique solution in the history of the position both Ildiko Toth and Gyula Kristo refused Bertenyi s theory and supported Engel s idea about the wrong date 4 12 Thus John Csak s betrayal happened in the summer of 1314 After his unsuccessful abduction attempt he fled to the dominion of Matthew Csak where he died miserably sometime before 1324 as the king formulates In that year Charles I donated John s formerly confiscated lands which laid in Pest Szolnok Hont Nograd and Moson counties 21 Heretofore John also owned and possibly built himself the castle of Ecseg in Nograd County which then became a property of Wulfing I Haschendorfer and his family later the Szecsenyis demolished the fort 22 In the donation letter of 1324 Charles called his former courtier and judge as treasonous Judas Iscariot 4 References Edit Engel Genealogia Genus Csak 8 Ujlak branch Marko 2006 p 275 Zsoldos 2011 pp 58 133 a b c d Toth 1999 p 144 Engel 1996 p 461 Zsoldos 2011 p 58 Zsoldos 2011 p 160 Zsoldos 2011 p 133 Engel 1996 p 102 Kristo 1999 p 42 Engel 1996 p 470 a b c d Kristo 1999 p 51 a b Bertenyi 1976 p 61 Toth 1999 p 145 a b c d Engel 1996 p 6 Bertenyi 1976 p 60 Toth 1999 pp 146 148 Toth 1999 p 147 Toth 1999 p 148 Kristo 1999 p 52 a b Bertenyi 1976 p 64 Engel 1996 p 307 Sources EditBertenyi Ivan 1976 Az orszagbiroi intezmeny tortenete a XIV szazadban History of the Institution of Judge Royal in the 14th Century in Hungarian Hungarian Academy of Sciences ISBN 963 05 0734 X 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 Kristo Gyula 1999 I Karoly kiraly fouri elitje 1301 1309 The Aristocratic Elite of King Charles I 1301 1309 Szazadok in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat 133 1 41 62 ISSN 0039 8098 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 963 547 085 1 Toth Ildiko 1999 Karoly Robert elso orszagbiroja Adalekok Csak Janos orszagbiroi mukodesehez Charles Robert s First Judge Royal Data to the Function of John Csak as Judge Royal In Homonnai Sarolta Piti Ferenc Toth Ildiko eds Tanulmanyok a kozepkori magyar tortenelemrol Az I Medievisztikai PhD konferencia Szeged 1999 julius 2 eloadasai in Hungarian University of Szeged pp 143 150 ISBN 963 482 421 8 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 JohnGenus CsakBorn Died 1315 24Political officesPreceded byJames Borsa Master of the horsedisputed1290 Succeeded byMiko SzecsPreceded byMatthew Csak Master of the horse1297 Succeeded byKakas Ratot VacantTitle last held byStephen Akos Judge royal1311 1314 Succeeded byLampert Herman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Csak amp oldid 1120359168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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