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Matthew III Csák

Máté Csák or Matthew III Csák (between 1260 and 1265 – 18 March 1321;[1] Hungarian: Csák (III.) Máté, Slovak: Matúš Čák III), also Máté Csák of Trencsén[1] (Hungarian: trencséni Csák (III.) Máté, Slovak: Matúš Čák III Trenčiansky), was a Hungarian[2] oligarch who ruled de facto independently the north-western counties of Medieval Hungary (today roughly the western half of present-day Slovakia and parts of Northern Hungary).[3] He held the offices of master of the horse (főlovászmester) (1293–1296), palatine (nádor) (1296–1297, 1302–1309) and master of the treasury (tárnokmester) (1309–1311).[4] He was able to maintain his rule over his territories even after his defeat at the Battle of Rozgony against King Charles I of Hungary. In the 19th century, he was often described as a symbol of the struggle for independence in both the Hungarian and Slovak literatures.[3]

Matthew III Csák
Palatine of Hungary
Reign1296–1297
1302–1309
PredecessorNicholas I Kőszegi (1st term)
Stephen Ákos (2nd term)
SuccessorAmade Aba &
Nicholas I Kőszegi (1st term)
James Borsa (2nd term)
Native nameCsák (III.) Máté
Bornbetween 1260 and 1265
Died18 March 1321 (aged 56-61)
Noble familygens Csák
IssueMatthew IV
a daughter
FatherPeter I
Motherunknown

Early years

He was a son of the Palatine Peter I Csák, a member of the Hungarian[2] genus ("clan") Csák.[4] Around 1283, Matthew and his brother, Csák, who later served as bearer of the sword (kardhordó) in 1293,[5] inherited their father's possessions, Komárom (Slovak: Komárno) and Szenic (Slovak: Senica).[3] At about that time, they also inherited their uncles' (Matthew II and Stephen I Csák) possessions around Nagytapolcsány (Slovak: Veľké Topoľčany, now Topoľčany), Hrussó (Slovak: Hrušovo) and Tata.[3] Their father had started to expand his influence over the territories that surrounded his possessions.[3]

Matthew was born around 1260s. A diploma recorded his lameness which caused by either birth defect or a result of a war injury. He was presumably first mentioned by a charter issued by the Somogyvár Abbey on 5 August 1284, where the sons of the late Peter were summoned in a case of land title rights to Kötcse. Historian Gyula Kristó argues that the document mentions the possible elder brothers of Matthew and Csák as they first appeared in contemporary sources only in 1291.[3] Following Peter's death, the members of the rival Kőszegi family from the Héder clan strengthened in Pozsony and Sopron Counties taking advantage of that the Csák clan has been weakened due to the death of Matthew II and Peter I. The Kőszegis defeated the local Osl clan in Sopron County and also forged ahead to Pozsony County where captured Pozsony Castle for a short time.[3]

King Andrew's partisan

 
Trenčín (Trencsén) Castle with Matthew's Tower

In 1291, Matthew took part in the campaign of King Andrew III of Hungary against Austria.[4] In the next year, when Nicholas I Kőszegi rebelled against King Andrew III and occupied Pozsony (German: Pressburg, Slovak: Prešporok, today Bratislava) and Detrekő (Slovak Plavecké Podhradie), Matthew managed to reoccupy the castles on behalf of the king.[4] Henceforward, the Danube became the border between the developing domains of the Kőszegi and Csák families.[3] King Andrew appointed him to master of the horse and he also became the ispán (comes) of Pozsony County (1293–1297).[5] On 28 October 1293, Matthew issued a charter and promised that he would respect the liberties of the burghers of the city of Pozsony that King Andrew had confirmed before.[3]

During this period, Matthew started to augment his possessions not only by the king's donations, but also by using force.[3] In 1296, he bought Vöröskő (Slovak: Červený Kameň) from its former holders for money; however, contemporary documents prove that he enforced several neighboring landowners to transfer their possessions either to him or his partisans.[3] He even was ready to occupy territories; e.g., around 1296, he took possession of the lands of the Archabbot of Pannonhalma south of the Danube and he also trespassed the possessions of the Collegiate Chapter of Pressburg.[3]

Around the end of 1296, Matthew acquired Trencsén (Slovak: Trenčín) and afterwards, he was named after the castle.[3] In 1296 King Andrew appointed him Palatine,[4] but shortly afterwards the king absolved one of Matthew's opponents, Andrew of Gimes from the Hont-Pázmány clan of all responsibility for the damage he had caused to Matthew.[3] The document proves that the relationship of the king and Matthew worsened and the king deprived him of his office of Palatine in 1297.[3] At the same time, the king granted Pozsony County to his queen, Agnes of Austria.[3]

Kings' rival

Matthew continued to style himself Palatine even after 1297.[1] He managed to overcome Andrew of Gimes and his family and thus expanded his influence along the Zsitva River (Žitava River).[3]

 
Domain of Matthew Csák

In 1298, King Andrew III allied himself with King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia; the alliance was probably directed against Matthew whose possessions lay between the two monarchs' territories.[3] In the next year, King Andrew sent his troops against him, but he could resist the attack;[1] only Pozsony County was reoccupied by the king's partisans.[3]

Before 1300, Matthew entered into negotiations with the representatives of King Charles II of Naples and reassured him that he would assist the claim of his grandson, Charles for the throne against King Andrew III.[3] However, in the summer of 1300, Matthew visited Andrew's court, but the king, the last male member of the Árpád dynasty, died on 14 January 1301, and following his death a rivalry broke out among the several claimants for the throne.[3] At that time, Matthew's brother, Csák died childless and therefore Matthew inherited his possessions.[3]

Following the death of King Andrew III, he became the Neapolitan prince's follower, but shortly afterwards, he joined the party that offered the crown to Wenceslaus, the son of King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia.[3] He was present at the coronation of the young Bohemian prince (27 August 1301) who granted him Trencsén and Nyitra counties;[4] therefore he became the lawful holder of all the royal castles and possessions in the two counties.[3] In the following years, Matthew Csák occupied the possessions of the Balassa family in the two counties and he also took several castles in Nógrád and Hont counties.[3]

 

King Wenceslaus could not strengthen his rule against his opponent and he had to leave the kingdom (August 1304).[3] By that time Matthew Csák had already left King Wenceslaus' party,[4] and shortly afterwards he made an alliance with Duke Rudolph III of Austria against the king of Bohemia.[3] Although he did not join to King Charles' partisans, but his troops took part in the campaign King Charles and Duke Rudolph lead against the Kingdom of Bohemia (September–October 1304).[3] The internal struggles, however, did not end, because on 6 December 1305 a new claimant, Otto III, Duke of Bavaria was crowned King of Hungary.[3] Matthew Csák did not accept King Otto's rule, and his troops struggled together with King Charles' armies who occupied some castles on the northern part of the kingdom.[3]

On 10 October 1307, an assembly confirmed King Charles' rule, but Matthew Csák and some other oligarchs (Ladislaus Kán, Ivan and Henry II Kőszegi) absented themselves from the assembly.[3] In 1308, Pope Clement V sent a legate to the kingdom in order to strengthen King Charles' position.[3] The legate, Cardinal Gentile Portino da Montefiore managed to persuade Matthew to accept King Charles' rule at their meeting in the Pauline Monastery of Kékes (10 November 1308).[3] Although Matthew himself was not present at the following assembly (27 November) in Pest where King Charles' reign was again confirmed, he sent his envoy to attend at the meeting.[3] Shortly afterwards, King Charles appointed Matthew Palatine of the kingdom.[4] However, at the new coronation of King Charles (15 June 1309), he was only represented by one of his followers.[3] In the next year, King Charles appointed him to the office of master of the treasury,[1] which then was the first high-ranking political position during the first regnal years of Charles as the position of palatine was "devaluated".

Matthew Csák did not want to accept the king's rule; therefore, he did not attend King Charles' third coronation, when he was crowned with the Holy Crown of Hungary (27 August).[3] Moreover, Matthew Csák still continued to expand the borders of his domains and occupied several castles in the northern part of the kingdom.[3] On 25 June 1311, he led his troops towards Buda and pillaged the surrounding territories and on this account the Cardinal Gentile excommunicated him[1] on 6 July 1311.[3] However, he did not accept the punishment and persuaded some priests to continue their services on his territories.[3]

The indignant oligarch pillaged the possessions of the Archdiocese of Esztergom.[3] When the citizens of Kassa (Slovak: Košice) killed Amade Aba, the powerful oligarch of the north-eastern parts of the kingdom (5 September 1311) Matthew made an alliance with his sons against the king who sided with Kassa.[3] His troops liberated Sáros Castle (Slovak: Šarišský hrad), besieged by the king, and then marched against Kassa.[3] At the Battle of Rozgony, the king's armies defeated Matthew's and his allies' troops (15 June 1312).[1] Following the battle, the king occupied the territories of Amade Aba's sons.[3] Although Matthew's domain stayed undisturbed, the occupation of the neighboring territories by the king hindered his expansion.[3]

Last years

In 1314, the king's armies invaded Matthew Csák's domain, but they could not occupy it.[3] In the meantime, Matthew occupied some fortresses in the March of Moravia and therefore King John of Bohemia also invaded his territories (May 1315).[3] The Czech armies defeated his troops (whom he encouraged in Hungarian language) at Holics but they could not occupy the fortress.[3] King Charles also invaded Matthew's domain and occupied Visegrád.[3]

Charles I launched small campaigns against the Csák dominion during 1314 and 1315. When Matthew invaded Szepes and his troops plundered the region, he was narrowly defeated by Philip Drugeth, the king's loyal soldier.[3] During this time Thomas Szécsényi received Hollókő from Charles, who confiscated the land from the Kacsics clan, the disloyal relatives of Thomas. Charles gradually encircled the Csák dominion, when appointed loyal castellans to head of the nearby forts.[3]

The king attempted to weaken the unity among Matthew's partisans through diplomatic means. According to a royal charter issued in September 1315, Charles I stripped three of the oligarch's servients of all their possessions and gave those to Palatine Dominic Rátót, because they absolutely supported all Matthew Csák's efforts and did not ask for the king's grace. One of these sanctioned nobles was Felician Záh, who later unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate the entire royal family in 1330.[3]

In 1316, some of his former followers rebelled against Matthew, and although he occupied their castle at Jókő, some of them left his domain.[3] In 1317, he invaded the possessions of the Diocese of Nyitra, and his troops occupied and pillaged its see.[3] As a consequence, Bishop John excommunicated him and his followers again.[3]

The king's armies continued to invade his territories and occupied Sirok and Fülek (Fiľakovo), but Matthew could maintain his rule over his territories until his death.[3]

Domain

Matthew Csák's domain had been developing gradually before the Battle of Rozgony, and it reached its greatest territorial extent around 1311.[3] By that time, 14 counties of the kingdom, and about 50 castles were under his and his followers' rule.[1]

Around 1297, he organized his own court, similar to the king's court and he usurped royal prerogatives on his domains, similarly to other oligarchs (e.g., Amade Aba, Nicholas Kőszegi) of the beginning of the 14th century.[3] Thus he became the de facto ruler of his domain and he made alliances independently of the king.[3] He refused to accept appeals to the king against his decisions and he denied to put claimants in possession of lands the king had granted them on his territories.[3] Although some of the local landowners did not want to accept Matthew's supremacy, but sooner or later, they had to leave their possessions.[3]

Following his death, his cousin Stephen Sternberg (or Stephen the Bohemian) became the lord of his domain,[1] because his son (Matthew IV) had died and his grandsons (Matthew V and James) were still minors at the time of his death in 1321.[3] However, Stephen Sternberg could not resist the king's invasion and Matthew Csák's former domain was overtaken by the king's armies in a few months' time.[3]

Legacy in the Slovak romantic movement

 
Matthew III Csák, lithography probably by Roland Weibezahl (1817-1871)

Matthew Csák significantly influenced regional history of today's Slovakia in the 13th–14th centuries. Alongside other activities, he founded several new settlements mainly in Trencsén County and supported raising towns.[6] The level of independence he had achieved together with his contacts with the Czech lands (especially with Moravia) positively influenced also the development of local Slovak speaking nobility.[7] Regardless of his relatively short rule his (ex-)domain was called the Matthew's Land (terra Matthei) already in the 14th century. This concept had been preserved until the 15th century, when individuals still used to claim their origin from the Matthew's Land (de Terra Matthei) instead of the official administrative divisions or settlements of the Kingdom of Hungary.[6]

This was later reflected in the Slovak national revival in the 19th century. Although his personality was known to older generation of Slovak intellects (Adam František Kollár, Anton Bernolák), he became a subject of the national mythology only in the period of Ľudovít Štúr. The motive of Matthew Csák was introduced in 1836–37 by a Slovak lawyer Alexander Boleslavín Vrchovský.[8] Thereafter, the topic was covered by numerous Slovak poets and writers like Ľudovít Štúr, Ján Kalinčiak, Jozef Miloslav Hurban, Mikuláš Dohány, Viliam Paulíny-Tóth, Samuel Ornis, Jonáš Záborský, Jozef Škultéty and others.[8] In the romantic national discourse of the 19th century, he was perceived as a Slovak national hero, defender of Slovak interests and/or an uncrowned Slovak king. Matthew Csák and his "realm" became the symbols of Slovak independence with the purpose to expropriate his historical heritage for the emerging national state of Slovakia.[3] Ľudovít Štúr, the most prominent personality in the period of the Slovak national revival presented Matthew Csák in his poem Matúš z Trenčína ("Matúš of Trenčín") as champion of Slovak interests who build on legacy of Great Moravia, predicting that the Slovak nation "will be free one day".[9]

However, such idealized view remained favored only by a narrow group of Slovak intellectuals and was not (in most cases) adopted by ordinary people.[10] The idea of Matthew Csák as a Slovak national hero was already eroded by critically thinking members of the Slovak intellectuals in the second half of the 19th century and the early 20th century (Jonáš Záborský, Július Botto) and was finally crushed in 1923 by Slovak historian Jozef Škultéty.[11] Similar views are also rejected by the modern critical Slovak historiography and in Slovak historic memory Matthew Csák is perceived simply as a feudal magnate, a notable regional figure and the "Lord of Váh and Tatras".

Matúš Čák was hardly a Slovak patriot as some 19th century historians have claimed. He pursued the ordinary goals of a Hungarian magnate and never did establish a sufficiently well-defined territory or political organization to support any Slovak claims to a heritage.

— Anton Špiesz, Dušan Čaplovič, Ladislaus J. Bolchazy; Illustrated Slovak history: a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe (2006).[12]

See also

  • Beckov Castle – owned and fortified by Matthew Csák
  • Amade Aba – oligarch who ruled de facto independently the northern and north-eastern counties of the Kingdom of Hungary[1]
  • Ladislaus Kán – oligarch who governed de facto independently the Transylvanian parts of the Kingdom of Hungary[1]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Kristó, Gyula; Engel, Pál; Makk, Ferenc. Korai magyar történeti lexikon (9–14. század).
  2. ^ a b Peter A. Toma; Dušan Kováč (2001). Slovakia: from Samo to Dzurinda. Hoover Institution Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-8179-9951-3. ...The greatest magnates were Matus Cak (Matthew Cak) of Trencin and the Amadeis of the Aba...The Caks, of Magyar origin, had begun their rise during the rules of Stephen V and Ladislas IV...
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk Kristó, Gyula. Csák Máté.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Markó, László. A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig.
  5. ^ a b Zsoldos, Attila. Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1000–1301.
  6. ^ a b Ján Lukačka (2016). Matúš Čák Trenčiansky (in Slovak). Bratislava: VEDA, vydavateľstvo SAV. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-80-224-1532-3.
  7. ^ Branislav, Varsik (1998). Otázky vzniku a vývoja slovenského zemianstva (in Slovak). Bratislava: VEDA, vydavateľstvo SAV. p. 102.
  8. ^ a b Macho 2012, p. 136
  9. ^ Stanislav J. Kirschbaum (16 September 1996). A history of Slovakia: the struggle for survival. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-312-16125-5.
  10. ^ Macho 2012, p. 137.
  11. ^ Macho 2012, p. 152.
  12. ^ Anton Špiesz; Duśan Čaplovič; Ladislaus J. Bolchazy (30 July 2006). Illustrated Slovak history: a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-86516-426-0.

Sources

  • Engel, Pál (1988). "Az ország újraegyesítése. I. Károly küzdelmei az oligarchák ellen (1310–1323) [Reunification of the Realm. The Struggles of Charles I Against the Oligarchs (1310–1323)]". Századok (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat. 122 (1–2): 89–146. ISSN 0039-8098.
  • 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.
  • Engel, Pál (2001). The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526. I.B. Tauris Publishers. ISBN 1-86064-061-3.
  • Fügedi, Erik (1986). Ispánok, bárók, kiskirályok [Ispáns, Barons and Petty Kings] (in Hungarian). Magvető. ISBN 963-14-0582-6.
  • Kristó, Gyula (1973). Csák Máté tartományúri hatalma [The Provincial Lordship of Matthew Csák] (in Hungarian). Akadémiai Kiadó.
  • Kristó, Gyula (1979). A feudális széttagolódás Magyarországon [Feudal Anarchy in Hungary] (in Hungarian). Akadémiai Kiadó. ISBN 963-05-1595-4.
  • Kristó, Gyula (1986). Csák Máté [Matthew Csák] (in Hungarian). Gondolat Kiadó. ISBN 963-281-736-2.
  • 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.
  • Kristó, Gyula (2003). "I. Károly király harcai a tartományurak ellen (1310–1323) [The Struggles of Charles I Against the Oligarchs (1310–1323)]". Századok (in Hungarian). Magyar Történelmi Társulat. 137 (2): 297–347. ISSN 0039-8098.
  • Macho, Peter (2012). "Matúš Čák Trenčiansky v diele Ľudovíta Štúra". In Mihalkovičová, Beáta (ed.). Nové kontexty života a diela Ľudovíta Štúra:Zborník z vedeckého seminára konaného v dňoch 28. a 29. októbra 2010 v Modre (in Slovak). Modra: Modranská muzeálna spoločnosť. ISBN 978-80-224-1532-3.
  • 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.
  • Szőcs, Tibor (2014). A nádori intézmény korai története, 1000–1342 [An Early History of the Palatinal Institution: 1000–1342] (in Hungarian). Magyar Tudományos Akadémia Támogatott Kutatások Irodája. ISBN 978-963-508-697-9.
  • Szűcs, Jenő (2002). Az utolsó Árpádok [The Last Árpáds] (in Hungarian). Osiris Kiadó. ISBN 963-389-271-6.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2011a). Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1000–1301 [Secular Archontology of Hungary, 1000–1301] (in Hungarian). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete. ISBN 978-963-9627-38-3.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2011b). "III. András hat nádora [The Six Palatines of Andrew III]". In Cabello, Juan; C. Tóth, Norbert (eds.). Erősségénél fogva várépítésre való: Tanulmányok a 70 éves Németh Péter tiszteletére [It is Very Well Placed for a Castle: Studies for the 70-year-old Péter Németh] (in Hungarian). Szabolcs-Szatmár-Bereg Megyei Önkormányzat Múzeumok Igazgatósága. pp. 289–299. ISBN 978-963-7220-75-3.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2012). "Hűséges oligarchák [Loyal Oligarchs]". In Baráth, Magdolna; Molnár, Antal (eds.). A történettudomány szolgálatában: Tanulmányok a 70 éves Gecsényi Lajos tiszteletére (in Hungarian). Magyar Országos Levéltár. pp. 347–354. ISBN 978-963-7228-34-6.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2013). "Kings and Oligarchs in Hungary at the Turn of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries". Hungarian Historical Review. 2 (2): 211–242. ISSN 2063-8647.

External links

  • Map – Lands ruled by Matthew Csák
Matthew III
Born: between 1260 and 1265  Died: 18 March 1321
Political offices
Preceded by Master of the horse
1293–1296
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ispán of Pozsony
1293–1297
Succeeded by
Demetrius Balassa
Preceded by Palatine of Hungary
alongside Amadeus Aba in 1296

1296–1297
Succeeded by
Preceded by Palatine of Hungary
alongside others

1302–1309
Succeeded by
Preceded by Master of the treasury
1309–1311
Succeeded by

matthew, csák, máté, csák, between, 1260, 1265, march, 1321, hungarian, csák, máté, slovak, matúš, Čák, also, máté, csák, trencsén, hungarian, trencséni, csák, máté, slovak, matúš, Čák, trenčiansky, hungarian, oligarch, ruled, facto, independently, north, west. Mate Csak or Matthew III Csak between 1260 and 1265 18 March 1321 1 Hungarian Csak III Mate Slovak Matus Cak III also Mate Csak of Trencsen 1 Hungarian trencseni Csak III Mate Slovak Matus Cak III Trenciansky was a Hungarian 2 oligarch who ruled de facto independently the north western counties of Medieval Hungary today roughly the western half of present day Slovakia and parts of Northern Hungary 3 He held the offices of master of the horse folovaszmester 1293 1296 palatine nador 1296 1297 1302 1309 and master of the treasury tarnokmester 1309 1311 4 He was able to maintain his rule over his territories even after his defeat at the Battle of Rozgony against King Charles I of Hungary In the 19th century he was often described as a symbol of the struggle for independence in both the Hungarian and Slovak literatures 3 Matthew III CsakPalatine of HungaryReign1296 12971302 1309PredecessorNicholas I Koszegi 1st term Stephen Akos 2nd term SuccessorAmade Aba amp Nicholas I Koszegi 1st term James Borsa 2nd term Native nameCsak III MateBornbetween 1260 and 1265Died18 March 1321 aged 56 61 Noble familygens CsakIssueMatthew IVa daughterFatherPeter IMotherunknown Contents 1 Early years 2 King Andrew s partisan 3 Kings rival 4 Last years 5 Domain 6 Legacy in the Slovak romantic movement 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 Sources 10 External linksEarly years EditHe was a son of the Palatine Peter I Csak a member of the Hungarian 2 genus clan Csak 4 Around 1283 Matthew and his brother Csak who later served as bearer of the sword kardhordo in 1293 5 inherited their father s possessions Komarom Slovak Komarno and Szenic Slovak Senica 3 At about that time they also inherited their uncles Matthew II and Stephen I Csak possessions around Nagytapolcsany Slovak Veľke Topoľcany now Topoľcany Hrusso Slovak Hrusovo and Tata 3 Their father had started to expand his influence over the territories that surrounded his possessions 3 Matthew was born around 1260s A diploma recorded his lameness which caused by either birth defect or a result of a war injury He was presumably first mentioned by a charter issued by the Somogyvar Abbey on 5 August 1284 where the sons of the late Peter were summoned in a case of land title rights to Kotcse Historian Gyula Kristo argues that the document mentions the possible elder brothers of Matthew and Csak as they first appeared in contemporary sources only in 1291 3 Following Peter s death the members of the rival Koszegi family from the Heder clan strengthened in Pozsony and Sopron Counties taking advantage of that the Csak clan has been weakened due to the death of Matthew II and Peter I The Koszegis defeated the local Osl clan in Sopron County and also forged ahead to Pozsony County where captured Pozsony Castle for a short time 3 King Andrew s partisan Edit Trencin Trencsen Castle with Matthew s Tower In 1291 Matthew took part in the campaign of King Andrew III of Hungary against Austria 4 In the next year when Nicholas I Koszegi rebelled against King Andrew III and occupied Pozsony German Pressburg Slovak Presporok today Bratislava and Detreko Slovak Plavecke Podhradie Matthew managed to reoccupy the castles on behalf of the king 4 Henceforward the Danube became the border between the developing domains of the Koszegi and Csak families 3 King Andrew appointed him to master of the horse and he also became the ispan comes of Pozsony County 1293 1297 5 On 28 October 1293 Matthew issued a charter and promised that he would respect the liberties of the burghers of the city of Pozsony that King Andrew had confirmed before 3 During this period Matthew started to augment his possessions not only by the king s donations but also by using force 3 In 1296 he bought Vorosko Slovak Cerveny Kamen from its former holders for money however contemporary documents prove that he enforced several neighboring landowners to transfer their possessions either to him or his partisans 3 He even was ready to occupy territories e g around 1296 he took possession of the lands of the Archabbot of Pannonhalma south of the Danube and he also trespassed the possessions of the Collegiate Chapter of Pressburg 3 Around the end of 1296 Matthew acquired Trencsen Slovak Trencin and afterwards he was named after the castle 3 In 1296 King Andrew appointed him Palatine 4 but shortly afterwards the king absolved one of Matthew s opponents Andrew of Gimes from the Hont Pazmany clan of all responsibility for the damage he had caused to Matthew 3 The document proves that the relationship of the king and Matthew worsened and the king deprived him of his office of Palatine in 1297 3 At the same time the king granted Pozsony County to his queen Agnes of Austria 3 Kings rival EditMatthew continued to style himself Palatine even after 1297 1 He managed to overcome Andrew of Gimes and his family and thus expanded his influence along the Zsitva River Zitava River 3 Domain of Matthew Csak In 1298 King Andrew III allied himself with King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia the alliance was probably directed against Matthew whose possessions lay between the two monarchs territories 3 In the next year King Andrew sent his troops against him but he could resist the attack 1 only Pozsony County was reoccupied by the king s partisans 3 Before 1300 Matthew entered into negotiations with the representatives of King Charles II of Naples and reassured him that he would assist the claim of his grandson Charles for the throne against King Andrew III 3 However in the summer of 1300 Matthew visited Andrew s court but the king the last male member of the Arpad dynasty died on 14 January 1301 and following his death a rivalry broke out among the several claimants for the throne 3 At that time Matthew s brother Csak died childless and therefore Matthew inherited his possessions 3 Following the death of King Andrew III he became the Neapolitan prince s follower but shortly afterwards he joined the party that offered the crown to Wenceslaus the son of King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia 3 He was present at the coronation of the young Bohemian prince 27 August 1301 who granted him Trencsen and Nyitra counties 4 therefore he became the lawful holder of all the royal castles and possessions in the two counties 3 In the following years Matthew Csak occupied the possessions of the Balassa family in the two counties and he also took several castles in Nograd and Hont counties 3 Battle of Rozgony in 1312 Chronicon Pictum from 1360 King Wenceslaus could not strengthen his rule against his opponent and he had to leave the kingdom August 1304 3 By that time Matthew Csak had already left King Wenceslaus party 4 and shortly afterwards he made an alliance with Duke Rudolph III of Austria against the king of Bohemia 3 Although he did not join to King Charles partisans but his troops took part in the campaign King Charles and Duke Rudolph lead against the Kingdom of Bohemia September October 1304 3 The internal struggles however did not end because on 6 December 1305 a new claimant Otto III Duke of Bavaria was crowned King of Hungary 3 Matthew Csak did not accept King Otto s rule and his troops struggled together with King Charles armies who occupied some castles on the northern part of the kingdom 3 On 10 October 1307 an assembly confirmed King Charles rule but Matthew Csak and some other oligarchs Ladislaus Kan Ivan and Henry II Koszegi absented themselves from the assembly 3 In 1308 Pope Clement V sent a legate to the kingdom in order to strengthen King Charles position 3 The legate Cardinal Gentile Portino da Montefiore managed to persuade Matthew to accept King Charles rule at their meeting in the Pauline Monastery of Kekes 10 November 1308 3 Although Matthew himself was not present at the following assembly 27 November in Pest where King Charles reign was again confirmed he sent his envoy to attend at the meeting 3 Shortly afterwards King Charles appointed Matthew Palatine of the kingdom 4 However at the new coronation of King Charles 15 June 1309 he was only represented by one of his followers 3 In the next year King Charles appointed him to the office of master of the treasury 1 which then was the first high ranking political position during the first regnal years of Charles as the position of palatine was devaluated Matthew Csak did not want to accept the king s rule therefore he did not attend King Charles third coronation when he was crowned with the Holy Crown of Hungary 27 August 3 Moreover Matthew Csak still continued to expand the borders of his domains and occupied several castles in the northern part of the kingdom 3 On 25 June 1311 he led his troops towards Buda and pillaged the surrounding territories and on this account the Cardinal Gentile excommunicated him 1 on 6 July 1311 3 However he did not accept the punishment and persuaded some priests to continue their services on his territories 3 The indignant oligarch pillaged the possessions of the Archdiocese of Esztergom 3 When the citizens of Kassa Slovak Kosice killed Amade Aba the powerful oligarch of the north eastern parts of the kingdom 5 September 1311 Matthew made an alliance with his sons against the king who sided with Kassa 3 His troops liberated Saros Castle Slovak Sarissky hrad besieged by the king and then marched against Kassa 3 At the Battle of Rozgony the king s armies defeated Matthew s and his allies troops 15 June 1312 1 Following the battle the king occupied the territories of Amade Aba s sons 3 Although Matthew s domain stayed undisturbed the occupation of the neighboring territories by the king hindered his expansion 3 Last years EditIn 1314 the king s armies invaded Matthew Csak s domain but they could not occupy it 3 In the meantime Matthew occupied some fortresses in the March of Moravia and therefore King John of Bohemia also invaded his territories May 1315 3 The Czech armies defeated his troops whom he encouraged in Hungarian language at Holics but they could not occupy the fortress 3 King Charles also invaded Matthew s domain and occupied Visegrad 3 Charles I launched small campaigns against the Csak dominion during 1314 and 1315 When Matthew invaded Szepes and his troops plundered the region he was narrowly defeated by Philip Drugeth the king s loyal soldier 3 During this time Thomas Szecsenyi received Holloko from Charles who confiscated the land from the Kacsics clan the disloyal relatives of Thomas Charles gradually encircled the Csak dominion when appointed loyal castellans to head of the nearby forts 3 The king attempted to weaken the unity among Matthew s partisans through diplomatic means According to a royal charter issued in September 1315 Charles I stripped three of the oligarch s servients of all their possessions and gave those to Palatine Dominic Ratot because they absolutely supported all Matthew Csak s efforts and did not ask for the king s grace One of these sanctioned nobles was Felician Zah who later unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate the entire royal family in 1330 3 In 1316 some of his former followers rebelled against Matthew and although he occupied their castle at Joko some of them left his domain 3 In 1317 he invaded the possessions of the Diocese of Nyitra and his troops occupied and pillaged its see 3 As a consequence Bishop John excommunicated him and his followers again 3 The king s armies continued to invade his territories and occupied Sirok and Fulek Fiľakovo but Matthew could maintain his rule over his territories until his death 3 Domain EditMatthew Csak s domain had been developing gradually before the Battle of Rozgony and it reached its greatest territorial extent around 1311 3 By that time 14 counties of the kingdom and about 50 castles were under his and his followers rule 1 Around 1297 he organized his own court similar to the king s court and he usurped royal prerogatives on his domains similarly to other oligarchs e g Amade Aba Nicholas Koszegi of the beginning of the 14th century 3 Thus he became the de facto ruler of his domain and he made alliances independently of the king 3 He refused to accept appeals to the king against his decisions and he denied to put claimants in possession of lands the king had granted them on his territories 3 Although some of the local landowners did not want to accept Matthew s supremacy but sooner or later they had to leave their possessions 3 Following his death his cousin Stephen Sternberg or Stephen the Bohemian became the lord of his domain 1 because his son Matthew IV had died and his grandsons Matthew V and James were still minors at the time of his death in 1321 3 However Stephen Sternberg could not resist the king s invasion and Matthew Csak s former domain was overtaken by the king s armies in a few months time 3 Legacy in the Slovak romantic movement Edit Matthew III Csak lithography probably by Roland Weibezahl 1817 1871 Matthew Csak significantly influenced regional history of today s Slovakia in the 13th 14th centuries Alongside other activities he founded several new settlements mainly in Trencsen County and supported raising towns 6 The level of independence he had achieved together with his contacts with the Czech lands especially with Moravia positively influenced also the development of local Slovak speaking nobility 7 Regardless of his relatively short rule his ex domain was called the Matthew s Land terra Matthei already in the 14th century This concept had been preserved until the 15th century when individuals still used to claim their origin from the Matthew s Land de Terra Matthei instead of the official administrative divisions or settlements of the Kingdom of Hungary 6 This was later reflected in the Slovak national revival in the 19th century Although his personality was known to older generation of Slovak intellects Adam Frantisek Kollar Anton Bernolak he became a subject of the national mythology only in the period of Ľudovit Stur The motive of Matthew Csak was introduced in 1836 37 by a Slovak lawyer Alexander Boleslavin Vrchovsky 8 Thereafter the topic was covered by numerous Slovak poets and writers like Ľudovit Stur Jan Kalinciak Jozef Miloslav Hurban Mikulas Dohany Viliam Pauliny Toth Samuel Ornis Jonas Zaborsky Jozef Skultety and others 8 In the romantic national discourse of the 19th century he was perceived as a Slovak national hero defender of Slovak interests and or an uncrowned Slovak king Matthew Csak and his realm became the symbols of Slovak independence with the purpose to expropriate his historical heritage for the emerging national state of Slovakia 3 Ľudovit Stur the most prominent personality in the period of the Slovak national revival presented Matthew Csak in his poem Matus z Trencina Matus of Trencin as champion of Slovak interests who build on legacy of Great Moravia predicting that the Slovak nation will be free one day 9 However such idealized view remained favored only by a narrow group of Slovak intellectuals and was not in most cases adopted by ordinary people 10 The idea of Matthew Csak as a Slovak national hero was already eroded by critically thinking members of the Slovak intellectuals in the second half of the 19th century and the early 20th century Jonas Zaborsky Julius Botto and was finally crushed in 1923 by Slovak historian Jozef Skultety 11 Similar views are also rejected by the modern critical Slovak historiography and in Slovak historic memory Matthew Csak is perceived simply as a feudal magnate a notable regional figure and the Lord of Vah and Tatras Matus Cak was hardly a Slovak patriot as some 19th century historians have claimed He pursued the ordinary goals of a Hungarian magnate and never did establish a sufficiently well defined territory or political organization to support any Slovak claims to a heritage Anton Spiesz Dusan Caplovic Ladislaus J Bolchazy Illustrated Slovak history a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe 2006 12 See also EditBeckov Castle owned and fortified by Matthew Csak Amade Aba oligarch who ruled de facto independently the northern and north eastern counties of the Kingdom of Hungary 1 Ladislaus Kan oligarch who governed de facto independently the Transylvanian parts of the Kingdom of Hungary 1 Footnotes Edit a b c d e f g h i j k Kristo Gyula Engel Pal Makk Ferenc Korai magyar torteneti lexikon 9 14 szazad a b Peter A Toma Dusan Kovac 2001 Slovakia from Samo to Dzurinda Hoover Institution Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 8179 9951 3 The greatest magnates were Matus Cak Matthew Cak of Trencin and the Amadeis of the Aba The Caks of Magyar origin had begun their rise during the rules of Stephen V and Ladislas IV a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk Kristo Gyula Csak Mate a b c d e f g h Marko Laszlo A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig a b Zsoldos Attila Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1000 1301 a b Jan Lukacka 2016 Matus Cak Trenciansky in Slovak Bratislava VEDA vydavateľstvo SAV pp 128 129 ISBN 978 80 224 1532 3 Branislav Varsik 1998 Otazky vzniku a vyvoja slovenskeho zemianstva in Slovak Bratislava VEDA vydavateľstvo SAV p 102 a b Macho 2012 p 136 Stanislav J Kirschbaum 16 September 1996 A history of Slovakia the struggle for survival Palgrave Macmillan p 102 ISBN 978 0 312 16125 5 Macho 2012 p 137 Macho 2012 p 152 Anton Spiesz Dusan Caplovic Ladislaus J Bolchazy 30 July 2006 Illustrated Slovak history a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 51 ISBN 978 0 86516 426 0 Sources EditEngel Pal 1988 Az orszag ujraegyesitese I Karoly kuzdelmei az oligarchak ellen 1310 1323 Reunification of the Realm The Struggles of Charles I Against the Oligarchs 1310 1323 Szazadok in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat 122 1 2 89 146 ISSN 0039 8098 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 Engel Pal 2001 The Realm of St Stephen A History of Medieval Hungary 895 1526 I B Tauris Publishers ISBN 1 86064 061 3 Fugedi Erik 1986 Ispanok barok kiskiralyok Ispans Barons and Petty Kings in Hungarian Magveto ISBN 963 14 0582 6 Kristo Gyula 1973 Csak Mate tartomanyuri hatalma The Provincial Lordship of Matthew Csak in Hungarian Akademiai Kiado Kristo Gyula 1979 A feudalis szettagolodas Magyarorszagon Feudal Anarchy in Hungary in Hungarian Akademiai Kiado ISBN 963 05 1595 4 Kristo Gyula 1986 Csak Mate Matthew Csak in Hungarian Gondolat Kiado ISBN 963 281 736 2 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 Kristo Gyula 2003 I Karoly kiraly harcai a tartomanyurak ellen 1310 1323 The Struggles of Charles I Against the Oligarchs 1310 1323 Szazadok in Hungarian Magyar Tortenelmi Tarsulat 137 2 297 347 ISSN 0039 8098 Macho Peter 2012 Matus Cak Trenciansky v diele Ľudovita Stura In Mihalkovicova Beata ed Nove kontexty zivota a diela Ľudovita Stura Zbornik z vedeckeho seminara konaneho v dnoch 28 a 29 oktobra 2010 v Modre in Slovak Modra Modranska muzealna spolocnost ISBN 978 80 224 1532 3 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 Szocs Tibor 2014 A nadori intezmeny korai tortenete 1000 1342 An Early History of the Palatinal Institution 1000 1342 in Hungarian Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Tamogatott Kutatasok Irodaja ISBN 978 963 508 697 9 Szucs Jeno 2002 Az utolso Arpadok The Last Arpads in Hungarian Osiris Kiado ISBN 963 389 271 6 Zsoldos Attila 2011a Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1000 1301 Secular Archontology of Hungary 1000 1301 in Hungarian Historia MTA Tortenettudomanyi Intezete ISBN 978 963 9627 38 3 Zsoldos Attila 2011b III Andras hat nadora The Six Palatines of Andrew III In Cabello Juan C Toth Norbert eds Erossegenel fogva varepitesre valo Tanulmanyok a 70 eves Nemeth Peter tiszteletere It is Very Well Placed for a Castle Studies for the 70 year old Peter Nemeth in Hungarian Szabolcs Szatmar Bereg Megyei Onkormanyzat Muzeumok Igazgatosaga pp 289 299 ISBN 978 963 7220 75 3 Zsoldos Attila 2012 Huseges oligarchak Loyal Oligarchs In Barath Magdolna Molnar Antal eds A tortenettudomany szolgalataban Tanulmanyok a 70 eves Gecsenyi Lajos tiszteletere in Hungarian Magyar Orszagos Leveltar pp 347 354 ISBN 978 963 7228 34 6 Zsoldos Attila 2013 Kings and Oligarchs in Hungary at the Turn of the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries Hungarian Historical Review 2 2 211 242 ISSN 2063 8647 External links EditMap Lands ruled by Matthew Csak Map The oligarchs domains in the early 14th centuryMatthew IIIGenus CsakBorn between 1260 and 1265 Died 18 March 1321Political officesPreceded byThomas Hont Pazmany Master of the horse1293 1296 Succeeded byJohn CsakPreceded byApor Pec Ispan of Pozsony1293 1297 Succeeded byDemetrius BalassaPreceded byNicholas I Koszegi Palatine of Hungary alongside Amadeus Aba in 12961296 1297 Succeeded byAmadeus AbaNicholas I KoszegiPreceded byStephen Akos Palatine of Hungary alongside others1302 1309 Succeeded byJames BorsaPreceded byUgrin Csak Master of the treasury1309 1311 Succeeded byNicholas III Koszegi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Matthew III Csak amp oldid 1145260043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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