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Nicholas II Garai

Nicholas II Garai (Hungarian: Garai II Miklós, Croatian: Nikola II Gorjanski; c. 1367 – December 1433) was a powerful Hungarian baron who served as the Palatine of Hungary from 1402 until 1433 and the ban of Macsó, Usora, , Slavonia, Croatia and Dalmatia. He also ruled over the Braničevo, Syrmia, Bačka, Banat and Baranya regions through vassals. Together with his close ally Stibor of Stiboricz, he remained one of the richest and most powerful nobles in Hungary for over 30 years. Nicholas II Garai also served as de facto ruler of Hungary next to King Sigismund. In 1416 Sigismund extended their armorial bearings showing the Order of the Dragon and the Order of the Scarf. He presented the patent to his brother-in-law.

Coat of arms of Nicholas II Garai given by the French king in a diploma dated 26 March 26 of 1416

Nicholas II's first wife was Theodora of Serbia, daughter of Prince Lazar of Serbia. In 1405, he married Anna of Cilli, sister of King Sigismund's second wife, Barbara of Cilli, thereby becoming brother-in-law of the King and Queen of Hungary. His granddaughter Anna was engaged to King Matthias Corvinus.

Early life

Nicholas was the son of Nicholas I Garai and his unnamed wife.[1][2] His father established the prestige and the wealth of the Garai family during the reign of Louis I of Hungary.[1] The year of Nicholas's birth is unknown, but he was born between the late 1350s and the middle of the 1360s.[2] His father arranged Nicholas's engagement to Helen, a daughter of Lazar of Serbia.[3]

Nicholas was present when his father died fighting against John Horváti and John of Palisna near their family seat, Gara (now Gorjani in Croatia), on 25 July 1386.[1][4] Horváti and Palisna had risen up against Louis I's daughter and successor, Mary, in favor of Ladislaus of Naples.[5] Nicholas became a staunch supporter of Mary's husband, Sigismund of Luxemburg, who was crowned King of Hungary on 31 March 1387.[1][6]

Career

Ban of Macsó

Sigismund made Nicholas ban (or governor) of Macsó (now Mačva in Serbia).[7] The bans had traditionally also administered the nearby Bács, Baranya, Bodrog, Szerém and Valkó Counties.[8] He and Stephen Losonci, Ban of Szörény, joined their forces and routed Horváti near Cserög (now Čerević in Serbia), thus restoring the king's authority in the region.[9] In 1387, Nicholas was also made ispán (or head) of Verőce County.[7][10] He persuaded his father-in-law, Lazar of Serbia, to swear fealty to Sigismund in 1389, according to a royal charter issued almost two decades later.[11]

Situated near the southern frontiers, his estates were subjected to Ottoman raids, thus Nicholas wanted to seize new estates in the central territories of the Kingdom of Hungary.[12] At his initiative, Sigismund seized Pápa and the fortress of Somló in Transdanubia from Nicholas Zámbó in exchange for royal estates in 1389.[13] Nicholas soon persuaded the king to grant both domains to him and his brother, John, for their castle at Ivánkaszentgyörgy (Ivankovo, Croatia).[12][14] Since Nicholas could not secure the defence of the southern frontier, the king dismissed him, appointing Losonci to administer Macsó in 1390.[10] Before long, he regained the favor of the king who again made him ban of Macsó in 1393.[10] Sigismund transferred Nicholas from Macsó to Croatia and Dalmatia in 1394.[10][15] In May, a royal charter referred to him as the former ban of Macsó.[16]

Ban of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia

Nicholas was first styled as the ban of Croatia and Dalmatia in a royal diploma issued in December.[17] Historian Stanko Andrić proposes that the king promoted Nicholas to the new office most probably after the successful royal campaign against Bosnia in July.[17] Before the end of the year, Nicholas routed Vuk Vukčić whom Ladislaus of Naples had appointed to represent him as his ban in the two realms.[17] After his victory, the burghers of Split elected him the count of the town.[18]

Nicholas left Croatia and Dalmatia to join the king's invasion of Wallachia[18] in July 1395.[19] He and Peter Perényi commanded the rearguard during the withdrawal of the royal troops from Wallachia.[10] He spent several months in his estates before returning to Croatia.[18] He and John Szepesi, Bishop of Zagreb, jointly presided the sabor (or general assembly) in July 1396.[18]

Nicholas accompanied Sigismund to a large-scale military campaign against the Ottoman Empire in 1396.[10] The crusade ended with the Ottomans' great victory in the Battle of Nicopolis on 25 September,[19] but Nicholas was one of the few who could flee from the battlefield.[18] The king's defeat outraged Stephen II Lackfi, one of the noblemen whom Sigismund had appointed to rule the country during his absence.[20] He and his nephew approached Ladislaus of Naples, who had not abdicated his claim to Hungary.[21][22]

Nicholas came back from the crusade in the king's retinue.[21] They landed at Split in Dalmatia on 21 December 1396.[21] Before the end of the year, the burghers of Split elected Nicholas their count.[23] The king and Nicholas put an end to the movements of the supporters of Ladislaus of Naples in the Dalmatian towns before hurrying to Križevci.[21] The two Lackfis were summoned to the town where they were captured and murdered on 27 February 1397.[21][18] Historian László Markó says, Nicholas and Hermann of Celje enticed them to come to Slavonia to facilitate their murder.[10] Another historian, Elemér Mályusz, emphasizes that the exact circumstances of the purge are unknown, but he proposes that John Kanizsai, Archbishop of Esztergom, was most probably its initiator.[12] After the "Bloody Sabor of Križevci" Sigismund made Nicholas Ban of Slavonia.[24][25]

Sigismund granted Osor and Cres in Dalmatia to Nicholas and his brother in May.[26] The two estates had been possessed by John Szerecsen and his sons, who failed to pay the taxes due to the bans.[26] Sigismund held a Diet (or legislative assembly) at Temesvár (now Timișoara in Romania) to adopt measures to secure the defense of the southern frontier of the kingdom.[27] At the Diet, the king granted "the banship of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia together with its appurtenances and income" to Nicholas and John Garai till the end of their lives on 2 November.[18][28]

Palatine

Sigismund made him Palatine of Hungary in September 1402.[10]

Family

Nicholas's first wife, Helen (born as Theodora), was the daughter of Lazar of Serbia and his wife, Princess Milica Nemanjic, who was member of collateral branch of the Nemanjić dynasty.[3][31] The year of their marriage is unknown, but it must have taken place before 1389, because in that year Nicholas was already Lazar's son-in-law.[3][32] She gave birth to Nicholas's eldest son and namesake. Helen died before 1401,[33] and Nicholas married Anne of Celje, daughter of count Hermann II of Celje. They had a daughter, Catherine, who married Henry VI, Count of Gorizia and gave birth to the last two sovereign counts of Gorizia, John II and Leonhard.[34]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Markó 2000, p. 219.
  2. ^ a b Árvai 2013, p. 104.
  3. ^ a b c Árvai 2013, p. 106.
  4. ^ Mályusz 1984, p. 19.
  5. ^ Mályusz 1984, p. 17.
  6. ^ Fine 1994, p. 397.
  7. ^ a b Engel 1996, p. 28.
  8. ^ Engel 1996, p. 27.
  9. ^ Markó 2000, pp. 219–220.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Markó 2000, p. 220.
  11. ^ Árvai 2013, pp. 106–107.
  12. ^ a b c Mályusz 1984, p. 36.
  13. ^ Mályusz 1984, p. 35.
  14. ^ Engel 1996, p. 414.
  15. ^ Engel 1996, p. 29.
  16. ^ Andrić 2015, p. 484.
  17. ^ a b c Andrić 2015, pp. 484, 546.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g Andrić 2015, pp. 485, 547.
  19. ^ a b Engel 2001, p. 203.
  20. ^ Mályusz 1984, pp. 36–37.
  21. ^ a b c d e Mályusz 1984, p. 37.
  22. ^ Engel 2001, p. 204.
  23. ^ C. Tóth 2015, p. 496, 549.
  24. ^ Andrić 2015, pp. 485–486, 548.
  25. ^ C. Tóth 2015, pp. 493–494, 548.
  26. ^ a b C. Tóth 2015, pp. 497, 550.
  27. ^ Engel 2001, p. 205.
  28. ^ C. Tóth 2015, pp. 493, 555.
  29. ^ Árvai 2013, p. 118.
  30. ^ Fügedi 2004, p. 166.
  31. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 374, 389.
  32. ^ Fine 1994, p. 389.
  33. ^ Árvai 2013, p. 107.
  34. ^ Daniela Dvořáková, Barbara Celjska. Črna kraljica (1392-1451) (Ljubljana: 2019), p. 209

Sources

  • Andrić, Stanko (2015). "A Garai főnemesi család és a Horvát Királyság / Velikaška obitelj Gorjanski i Hrvatsko Kraljevstvo [The aristocratic Garai family and the Kingdom of Croatia]". In Fodor, Pál; Sokcsevits, Dénes; Turkalj, Jasna; Karbić, Damir (eds.). A horvát-magyar együttélés fordulópontjai: Intézmények, társadalom, gazdaság, kultúra / Prekretnice u suživotu Hrvata i Mađara: Ustanove, društvo, gospodarstvo i kultura [Turning Points of the Croatian-Hungarian Co-habitation: Institutions, Society, Economy and Culture] (in Hungarian and Croatian). MTA Bölcsészettudományi Kutatóközpont Történettudományi Intézet, Hrvatski institut za povijest. pp. 481–492, 543–554. ISBN 978-963-416-019-9.
  • Árvai, Tünde (2013). "A házasságok szerepe a Garaiak hatalmi törekvéseiben [The role of marriages in the Garais' attempts to rise]". In Fedeles, Tamás; Font, Márta; Kiss, Gergely (eds.). Kor-Szak-Határ (in Hungarian). Pécsi Tudományegyetem. pp. 103–118. ISBN 978-963-642-518-0.
  • Árvai, Tünde (2014). "„magnus comes de Hungaria": Garai Miklós nádor Nyugat-Európában [„magnus comes de Hungaria": Palatine Nicholas Garai in Western Europe]". In Bárány, Attila; Pósán, László (eds.). "Causa unionis, causa fidei, causa reformationis in capite et membris". Tanulmányok a konstanzi zsinat 600. évfordulója alkalmából (in Hungarian). Print-Art. pp. 316–327. ISBN 978-963-89963-3-6.
  • C. Tóth, Norbert (2015). "Garai Milós dalmát-horvát és szlavón bán örkös bánságának kérdése: A Garaiak dalmáciai birtoklása a 14. század végén / Pitanje doživotnog banovanja dalmatinsko-hrvatskog i slavonskog bana Nikole Gorjanskog: Dalmatinski posjed Gorjanskih na koncu 14. stoljeća [The problem of the hereditary banship of Nicholas Garai: The Garais' possessions in Dalmatia at the end of the 14th century]". In Fodor, Pál; Sokcsevits, Dénes; Turkalj, Jasna; Karbić, Damir (eds.). A horvát-magyar együttélés fordulópontjai: Intézmények, társadalom, gazdaság, kultúra / Prekretnice u suživotu Hrvata i Mađara: Ustanove, društvo, gospodarstvo i kultura [Turning Points of the Croatian-Hungarian Co-habitation: Institutions, Society, Economy and Culture] (in Hungarian and Croatian). MTA Bölcsészettudományi Kutatóközpont Történettudományi Intézet, Hrvatski institut za povijest. pp. 493–503, 555–564. ISBN 978-963-416-019-9.
  • 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.
  • Fine, John V. A. (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
  • Fügedi, Erik (2004). Uram, királyom... (in Hungarian). Fekete Sas Kiadó. ISBN 963935264-0.
  • Mályusz, Elemér (1984). Zsigmond király uralma Magyarországon, 1387-1437 [The Rule of King Sigismund in Hungary, 1387-1437] (in Hungarian). Gondolat. ISBN 963-281-414-2.
  • Markó, László (2000). 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). Magyar Könyvklub. ISBN 963-547-085-1.

External links

  • Map: Lands ruled by Miklos Garai in 1400 AD
Nicholas II
Born: c. 1367  Died: December 1433
Political offices
Preceded by
John Bánfi
Ban of Macsó
1387–1390
Succeeded by
Stephen Losonci
Preceded by
George Lackfi
Ban of Macsó
1393–1394
Succeeded by
Nicholas Treutel &
Stephen Kórógyi
Preceded by
Ivan Frankopan
Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia
1394–1402
Succeeded by
Eberhard Albeni &
Emeric Bebek
Preceded by
Derek Bebek
Ban of Slavonia
1397–1402
Palatine of Hungary
1402–1433
Vacant
Title next held by
Matthew Pálóci

nicholas, garai, hungarian, garai, miklós, croatian, nikola, gorjanski, 1367, december, 1433, powerful, hungarian, baron, served, palatine, hungary, from, 1402, until, 1433, macsó, usora, slavonia, croatia, dalmatia, also, ruled, over, braničevo, syrmia, bačka. Nicholas II Garai Hungarian Garai II Miklos Croatian Nikola II Gorjanski c 1367 December 1433 was a powerful Hungarian baron who served as the Palatine of Hungary from 1402 until 1433 and the ban of Macso Usora So Slavonia Croatia and Dalmatia He also ruled over the Branicevo Syrmia Backa Banat and Baranya regions through vassals Together with his close ally Stibor of Stiboricz he remained one of the richest and most powerful nobles in Hungary for over 30 years Nicholas II Garai also served as de facto ruler of Hungary next to King Sigismund In 1416 Sigismund extended their armorial bearings showing the Order of the Dragon and the Order of the Scarf He presented the patent to his brother in law Coat of arms of Nicholas II Garai given by the French king in a diploma dated 26 March 26 of 1416 Nicholas II s first wife was Theodora of Serbia daughter of Prince Lazar of Serbia In 1405 he married Anna of Cilli sister of King Sigismund s second wife Barbara of Cilli thereby becoming brother in law of the King and Queen of Hungary His granddaughter Anna was engaged to King Matthias Corvinus Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Ban of Macso 2 2 Ban of Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia 2 3 Palatine 3 Family 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksEarly life EditNicholas was the son of Nicholas I Garai and his unnamed wife 1 2 His father established the prestige and the wealth of the Garai family during the reign of Louis I of Hungary 1 The year of Nicholas s birth is unknown but he was born between the late 1350s and the middle of the 1360s 2 His father arranged Nicholas s engagement to Helen a daughter of Lazar of Serbia 3 Nicholas was present when his father died fighting against John Horvati and John of Palisna near their family seat Gara now Gorjani in Croatia on 25 July 1386 1 4 Horvati and Palisna had risen up against Louis I s daughter and successor Mary in favor of Ladislaus of Naples 5 Nicholas became a staunch supporter of Mary s husband Sigismund of Luxemburg who was crowned King of Hungary on 31 March 1387 1 6 Career EditBan of Macso Edit Sigismund made Nicholas ban or governor of Macso now Macva in Serbia 7 The bans had traditionally also administered the nearby Bacs Baranya Bodrog Szerem and Valko Counties 8 He and Stephen Losonci Ban of Szoreny joined their forces and routed Horvati near Cserog now Cerevic in Serbia thus restoring the king s authority in the region 9 In 1387 Nicholas was also made ispan or head of Veroce County 7 10 He persuaded his father in law Lazar of Serbia to swear fealty to Sigismund in 1389 according to a royal charter issued almost two decades later 11 Situated near the southern frontiers his estates were subjected to Ottoman raids thus Nicholas wanted to seize new estates in the central territories of the Kingdom of Hungary 12 At his initiative Sigismund seized Papa and the fortress of Somlo in Transdanubia from Nicholas Zambo in exchange for royal estates in 1389 13 Nicholas soon persuaded the king to grant both domains to him and his brother John for their castle at Ivankaszentgyorgy Ivankovo Croatia 12 14 Since Nicholas could not secure the defence of the southern frontier the king dismissed him appointing Losonci to administer Macso in 1390 10 Before long he regained the favor of the king who again made him ban of Macso in 1393 10 Sigismund transferred Nicholas from Macso to Croatia and Dalmatia in 1394 10 15 In May a royal charter referred to him as the former ban of Macso 16 Ban of Croatia Dalmatia and Slavonia Edit Nicholas was first styled as the ban of Croatia and Dalmatia in a royal diploma issued in December 17 Historian Stanko Andric proposes that the king promoted Nicholas to the new office most probably after the successful royal campaign against Bosnia in July 17 Before the end of the year Nicholas routed Vuk Vukcic whom Ladislaus of Naples had appointed to represent him as his ban in the two realms 17 After his victory the burghers of Split elected him the count of the town 18 Nicholas left Croatia and Dalmatia to join the king s invasion of Wallachia 18 in July 1395 19 He and Peter Perenyi commanded the rearguard during the withdrawal of the royal troops from Wallachia 10 He spent several months in his estates before returning to Croatia 18 He and John Szepesi Bishop of Zagreb jointly presided the sabor or general assembly in July 1396 18 Nicholas accompanied Sigismund to a large scale military campaign against the Ottoman Empire in 1396 10 The crusade ended with the Ottomans great victory in the Battle of Nicopolis on 25 September 19 but Nicholas was one of the few who could flee from the battlefield 18 The king s defeat outraged Stephen II Lackfi one of the noblemen whom Sigismund had appointed to rule the country during his absence 20 He and his nephew approached Ladislaus of Naples who had not abdicated his claim to Hungary 21 22 Nicholas came back from the crusade in the king s retinue 21 They landed at Split in Dalmatia on 21 December 1396 21 Before the end of the year the burghers of Split elected Nicholas their count 23 The king and Nicholas put an end to the movements of the supporters of Ladislaus of Naples in the Dalmatian towns before hurrying to Krizevci 21 The two Lackfis were summoned to the town where they were captured and murdered on 27 February 1397 21 18 Historian Laszlo Marko says Nicholas and Hermann of Celje enticed them to come to Slavonia to facilitate their murder 10 Another historian Elemer Malyusz emphasizes that the exact circumstances of the purge are unknown but he proposes that John Kanizsai Archbishop of Esztergom was most probably its initiator 12 After the Bloody Sabor of Krizevci Sigismund made Nicholas Ban of Slavonia 24 25 Sigismund granted Osor and Cres in Dalmatia to Nicholas and his brother in May 26 The two estates had been possessed by John Szerecsen and his sons who failed to pay the taxes due to the bans 26 Sigismund held a Diet or legislative assembly at Temesvar now Timișoara in Romania to adopt measures to secure the defense of the southern frontier of the kingdom 27 At the Diet the king granted the banship of Dalmatia Croatia and Slavonia together with its appurtenances and income to Nicholas and John Garai till the end of their lives on 2 November 18 28 Palatine Edit Sigismund made him Palatine of Hungary in September 1402 10 Family EditAncestors of Nicholas II Garai 29 30 8 Stephen Dorozsma4 Andrew Garai2 Nicholas I Garai20 Serfesd Nevnai10 Ladislaus Nevnai5 N Nevnai22 Gregory Korogyi11 Yolanda Korogyi1 Nicholas II Garai Nicholas s first wife Helen born as Theodora was the daughter of Lazar of Serbia and his wife Princess Milica Nemanjic who was member of collateral branch of the Nemanjic dynasty 3 31 The year of their marriage is unknown but it must have taken place before 1389 because in that year Nicholas was already Lazar s son in law 3 32 She gave birth to Nicholas s eldest son and namesake Helen died before 1401 33 and Nicholas married Anne of Celje daughter of count Hermann II of Celje They had a daughter Catherine who married Henry VI Count of Gorizia and gave birth to the last two sovereign counts of Gorizia John II and Leonhard 34 See also EditHouse of Garai DorozsmaReferences Edit a b c d Marko 2000 p 219 a b Arvai 2013 p 104 a b c Arvai 2013 p 106 Malyusz 1984 p 19 Malyusz 1984 p 17 Fine 1994 p 397 a b Engel 1996 p 28 Engel 1996 p 27 Marko 2000 pp 219 220 a b c d e f g h Marko 2000 p 220 Arvai 2013 pp 106 107 a b c Malyusz 1984 p 36 Malyusz 1984 p 35 Engel 1996 p 414 Engel 1996 p 29 Andric 2015 p 484 a b c Andric 2015 pp 484 546 a b c d e f g Andric 2015 pp 485 547 a b Engel 2001 p 203 Malyusz 1984 pp 36 37 a b c d e Malyusz 1984 p 37 Engel 2001 p 204 C Toth 2015 p 496 549 Andric 2015 pp 485 486 548 C Toth 2015 pp 493 494 548 a b C Toth 2015 pp 497 550 Engel 2001 p 205 C Toth 2015 pp 493 555 Arvai 2013 p 118 Fugedi 2004 p 166 Fine 1994 pp 374 389 Fine 1994 p 389 Arvai 2013 p 107 Daniela Dvorakova Barbara Celjska Crna kraljica 1392 1451 Ljubljana 2019 p 209Sources EditAndric Stanko 2015 A Garai fonemesi csalad es a Horvat Kiralysag Velikaska obitelj Gorjanski i Hrvatsko Kraljevstvo The aristocratic Garai family and the Kingdom of Croatia In Fodor Pal Sokcsevits Denes Turkalj Jasna Karbic Damir eds A horvat magyar egyutteles fordulopontjai Intezmenyek tarsadalom gazdasag kultura Prekretnice u suzivotu Hrvata i Mađara Ustanove drustvo gospodarstvo i kultura Turning Points of the Croatian Hungarian Co habitation Institutions Society Economy and Culture in Hungarian and Croatian MTA Bolcseszettudomanyi Kutatokozpont Tortenettudomanyi Intezet Hrvatski institut za povijest pp 481 492 543 554 ISBN 978 963 416 019 9 Arvai Tunde 2013 A hazassagok szerepe a Garaiak hatalmi torekveseiben The role of marriages in the Garais attempts to rise In Fedeles Tamas Font Marta Kiss Gergely eds Kor Szak Hatar in Hungarian Pecsi Tudomanyegyetem pp 103 118 ISBN 978 963 642 518 0 Arvai Tunde 2014 magnus comes de Hungaria Garai Miklos nador Nyugat Europaban magnus comes de Hungaria Palatine Nicholas Garai in Western Europe In Barany Attila Posan Laszlo eds Causa unionis causa fidei causa reformationis in capite et membris Tanulmanyok a konstanzi zsinat 600 evforduloja alkalmabol in Hungarian Print Art pp 316 327 ISBN 978 963 89963 3 6 C Toth Norbert 2015 Garai Milos dalmat horvat es szlavon ban orkos bansaganak kerdese A Garaiak dalmaciai birtoklasa a 14 szazad vegen Pitanje dozivotnog banovanja dalmatinsko hrvatskog i slavonskog bana Nikole Gorjanskog Dalmatinski posjed Gorjanskih na koncu 14 stoljeca The problem of the hereditary banship of Nicholas Garai The Garais possessions in Dalmatia at the end of the 14th century In Fodor Pal Sokcsevits Denes Turkalj Jasna Karbic Damir eds A horvat magyar egyutteles fordulopontjai Intezmenyek tarsadalom gazdasag kultura Prekretnice u suzivotu Hrvata i Mađara Ustanove drustvo gospodarstvo i kultura Turning Points of the Croatian Hungarian Co habitation Institutions Society Economy and Culture in Hungarian and Croatian MTA Bolcseszettudomanyi Kutatokozpont Tortenettudomanyi Intezet Hrvatski institut za povijest pp 493 503 555 564 ISBN 978 963 416 019 9 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 Fine John V A 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest The University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08260 4 Fugedi Erik 2004 Uram kiralyom in Hungarian Fekete Sas Kiado ISBN 963935264 0 Malyusz Elemer 1984 Zsigmond kiraly uralma Magyarorszagon 1387 1437 The Rule of King Sigismund in Hungary 1387 1437 in Hungarian Gondolat ISBN 963 281 414 2 Marko Laszlo 2000 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 Magyar Konyvklub ISBN 963 547 085 1 External links EditMap Lands ruled by Miklos Garai in 1400 ADNicholas IIHouse of GaraiBorn c 1367 Died December 1433Political officesPreceded byJohn Banfi Ban of Macso1387 1390 Succeeded byStephen LosonciPreceded byGeorge Lackfi Ban of Macso1393 1394 Succeeded byNicholas Treutel amp Stephen KorogyiPreceded byIvan Frankopan Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia1394 1402 Succeeded byEberhard Albeni amp Emeric BebekPreceded byDerek Bebek Ban of Slavonia1397 1402Palatine of Hungary1402 1433 VacantTitle next held byMatthew Paloci Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicholas II Garai amp oldid 1106931626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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