fbpx
Wikipedia

Theodore Tengerdi

Theodore Tengerdi (Hungarian: Tengerdi Tivadar; died May/October 1308) was a Hungarian prelate at the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries, who served as Bishop of Győr from 1295 to 1308. Prior to that, he was provost of Székesfehérvár and vice-chancellor in the royal court, and briefly elected Bishop of Vác.

Theodore Tengerdi
Bishop of Győr
Seal of Theodore Tengerdi (1303)
Appointed1295
Term ended1308
PredecessorAndrew
SuccessorNicholas Kőszegi
Other post(s)Bishop-elect of Vác
Vice-chancellor
Personal details
DiedMay/October 1308
NationalityHungarian
ParentsNicholas I Tengerdi
Alma materUniversity of Bologna

Early career edit

Theodore was born into a prominent Transdanubian family, which originated from Tengerd in Fejér County. His father was vice-judge royal Nicholas I, who bought the village and the surrounding lands in 1256.[1] Theodore had two elder brothers, Nicholas II and Ladislaus I, who actively participated in the royal military campaigns against the Kingdom of Bohemia in the early 1270s. Ladislaus had a daughter Anne, who married James Hahót. The brothers' branch died out by the middle of the 14th century. The Rumi and the Botka de Széplak noble families descended from Theodore's uncles.[2]

As the youngest one, Theodore entered ecclesiastical service. Consequently, he attended the University of Bologna, a university record preserved his name in February 1269, when his debt (18 pounds) was settled by another Hungarian student Paul in his name.[3] He bore the title of "magister", demonstrating his education and skills in science.[4] Theodore was first mentioned by contemporary records in 1274, when Ladislaus IV of Hungary recovered the estate of Sitke and donated Chueföld, which then belonged to Szolgagyőr Castle (present-day ruins in Hlohovec, Slovakia), to the three brothers for the bravery and loyalty of Nicholas and Ladislaus in the previous years. He elevated into the dignity of provost of Szeben (today Sibiu, Romania) by 1284, serving in this office until 1287. Simultaneously, he also acted as a personal notary of King Ladislaus IV.[5] Theodore was also a confidant of the queen mother, Elizabeth the Cuman and the queen consort Elizabeth of Sicily: the two queens jointly donated Dencs and Sztupán, accessories to the Segesd lordship, to Theodore and Ladislaus in June 1284 (their brother Nicholas died by then).[6]

Ladislaus made Theodore as his vice-chancellor in 1286. In the next year, he was also elected provost of Székesfehérvár, thus he held both offices simultaneously, which have traditionally belonged together in the previous decades.[7] By that time, he was already a canon of the collegiate chapter.[8] During his appointment, he was granted Iváncsa by the king's spouse, Queen Elizabeth of Sicily.[6] A single charter from 1289 also styled him as Bishop-elect of Vác, but he was unable to take the office for unknown reasons.[9] Theodore was confirmed as provost by Pope Nicholas IV shortly after February 1289, when he instructed the local Dominican prior and the custos of the local Franciscans to investigate the regularity of his election before confirmation.[8]

Crown guard and bishop edit

It is possible that Theodore supported Archbishop Lodomer, who entered into an alliance with the rebellious Kőszegi family against the immoral and weak-handed Ladislaus IV and agreed to offer the crown to the king's distant relative Andrew the Venetian, who arrived to Hungary in early 1290. However Andrew was captured and surrendered him to Duke Albert. Ladislaus was assassinated by his favored Cuman subjects on 10 July 1290. Following the assassination, Lodomer managed to free Andrew from his captivity in order to crown king. As provost of Székesfehérvár, Theodore also functioned as guardian of the Holy Crown of Hungary. Upon Andrew's arrival, his unidentified opponents tried to bribe Theodore not to hand over the crown jewels to the soon-to-be-king, but the provost refused them. Archbishop Lodomer crowned Andrew king in Székesfehérvár on 23 July 1290.[10]

Theodore was a staunch supporter of Andrew III throughout his reign. He retained his positions of vice-chancellor and provost of Székesfehérvár too. He was one of the main organizers of the diet, which took place in Óbuda in the first days of September 1290, where Andrew III promised to preserve the rights and privileges of the nobility. As vice-chancellor, Theodore drafted the text of the laws. At his own request, one of the articles stated "the old right of the church of Fehérvár to the position of vice-chancellor to be held", thus officially combined the two dignities, confirming the existing customary law.[5] The Hungarian diplomacy already began a search for a suitable spouse for their new king before his release from captivity and the coronation. After the closure of the diet, Theodore traveled to Kuyavia in the Kingdom of Poland to escort Andrew's fiancée Fenenna, the daughter of Ziemomysł of Kuyavia to Hungary. The wedding took place before the end of 1290.[11] Theodore sent a large army (banderium) to Andrew's military campaign against the Duchy of Austria in the summer of 1291.[12] Thereafter the concluded peace treaty prescribed the destruction of the fortresses that Albert of Austria had seized from the Kőszegis, who, in response, rose up in open rebellion against Andrew in spring 1292, acknowledging Charles Martel of Anjou, as King of Hungary. The royal troops subdued the rebellion by July, but Ivan Kőszegi captured and imprisoned Andrew during his journey to Slavonia in August. Theodore arrived to the province with his army. He saved the royal property, jewels, and treasures from the robbers, and transferred them to the royal court. Alongside other lords and bishops, Theodore negotiated with the notorious Ivan Kőszegi over the liberation of Andrew.[13] He was among those partisans, who sent their relatives – his brother Ladislaus and nephews – as hostages to the Kőszegis,[14] thus Andrew was freed. As a result, they were granted Halásztelek by Andrew III in January 1293.[12] Theodore and his relatives bought Békásmegyer for 120 silver denari from Ladislaus Balog, lector of Buda chapter. The family also acquired forts and towers in the nearby Margaret Island.[12]

Theodore Tengerdi was elected Bishop of Győr around April 1295.[15] Therefore he was replaced as provost of Székesfehérvár by Gregory Bicskei still in that month, but, despite the aforementioned law, which legitimized a custom right, he retained the office of vice-chancellor until 1297, when Bicskei succeeded him in those dignity too.[16] Theodore attended the diet in Pest in the summer of 1298, which authorized Andrew to destroy forts built without permission and ordered the punishment of those who had seized landed property with force.[12] The Diocese of Győr, which laid in the borderlands between the expansionary Kőszegi and Csák domains, was threatened constantly by looting and plundering raids. Ivan Kőszegi pillaged and unlawfully seized the bishopric's several lands in Western Transdanubia. In response, Theodore excommunicated the treacherous and greedy lord, but without any consequences and results.[17] During his episcopate, Theodore donated privileges to the fishermen and millers of the nearby Révfalu (today a borough of Győr).[17]

Interregnum edit

Andrew III died in 1301. With his death, the House of Árpád, the first royal dynasty of Hungary, ended. A period of Interregnum and 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. It is plausible that Theodore initially supported the claim of Wenceslaus, alongside the majority of the Hungarian prelates. However the arriving papal legate Niccolo Boccasini convinced most of the bishops to accept Charles's reign.[17] Upon the invitation of Pope Boniface VIII, Theodore was a member of that Hungarian clerical delegation, which visited the Roman Curia and met the pope and Charles' grandmother Mary, Queen of Naples. Pope Boniface, who regarded Hungary as a fief of the Holy See declared Charles the lawful king of Hungary on 31 May 1303.[14] The Hungarian prelates, led by Stephen, Archbishop of Kalocsa traveled further to the Neapolitan court, while Theodore returned to Hungary. He already resided in Szombathely on 24 June 1303.[18]

To strengthen his son's position, Wenceslaus II of Bohemia came to Hungary at the head of a large army in May 1304. However, his negotiations with the local lords convinced him that his son's position in Hungary had dramatically weakened. Accordingly, he decided to take his son back to Bohemia and even took the Holy Crown of Hungary with himself to Prague. According to the narration of the Steirische Reimchronik ("Styrian Rhyming Chronicle"), perceiving the intrigue, Theodore Tengerdi and his small accompaniment caught up to the royal escort before crossing the border. There, the bishop asked and begged King Wenceslaus not to take the Holy Crown and the royal insignia out of the Kingdom of Hungary, but the Bohemian king replied angrily the crown is not entitled to anyone more than the rightful king who is his son, and the Holy Crown must be kept where the king resides.[19] Theodore and his banderium participated in the invasion of Bohemia in the autumn of 1304.[20] Theodore Tengerdi died sometimes between May and October 1308, when he was succeeded by Ivan Kőszegi's illegitimate son Nicholas, who was Theodore's deputy as provost of the collegiate chapter of St. Adalbert church in Győr prior to that.[21]

References edit

  1. ^ Győri 2008, p. 25.
  2. ^ Engel: Genealógia (Tengerdi kinship 1. Rumi branch)
  3. ^ Haraszti Szabó & Kelényi 2019, p. 122.
  4. ^ Győri 2008, p. 26.
  5. ^ a b Szűcs 2002, p. 451.
  6. ^ a b Győri 2008, p. 28.
  7. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 113.
  8. ^ a b Kertész 2022, p. 45.
  9. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 97.
  10. ^ Zsoldos 2003, p. 136.
  11. ^ Zsoldos 2003, p. 163.
  12. ^ a b c d Győri 2008, p. 32.
  13. ^ Szűcs 2002, p. 456.
  14. ^ a b Bánk 1968, p. 33.
  15. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 92.
  16. ^ Zsoldos 2003, p. 204.
  17. ^ a b c Győri 2008, p. 36.
  18. ^ Kádár 2015, pp. 78–80.
  19. ^ Kádár 2015, p. 87.
  20. ^ Kádár 2015, p. 94.
  21. ^ Engel 1996, p. 71.

Sources edit

  • Bánk, József, ed. (1968). Győregyházmegyei almanach. Schematizmus Dioecesis Jaurinensis [Almanac of the Diocese of Győr] (in Hungarian). Authority of the Diocese of Győr.
  • 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.
  • Győri, Éva (2008). "Győri püspökök a XIII. században [The Bishops of Győr in the 13th Century]". Belvedere Meridionale (in Hungarian). 20 (1–2): 24–43. ISSN 1419-0222.
  • Haraszti Szabó, Péter; Kelényi, Borbála (2019). Magyarországi diákok francia, angol, itáliai és német egyetemeken a középkorban, 1100–1526 [Students from Hungary at the Universities of France, England, Italy and Germany in the Middle Ages 1100–1526] (in Hungarian). ELTE Egyetemi Könyvtár és Levéltár; MTA ELTE Egyetemtörténeti Kutatócsoport. ISBN 978-963-489-098-0.
  • Kádár, Tamás (2015). "Harcban a koronáért. I. Károly (Róbert) király uralkodásának első évei 1305 végéig [Fight for the Crown. The First Regnal Years of Charles I (Robert) until the End of 1305]". Történeti Tanulmányok. Acta Universitatis Debreceniensis (in Hungarian). 23: 42–111. ISSN 1217-4602.
  • Kertész, Balázs (2022). A székesfehérvári káptalan archontológiája és oklevéladó tevékenysége az Árpád-korban [The Archontology and Diploma Issuing Activity of the Chapter of Székesfehérvár in the Age of Árpáds] (in Hungarian). Városi Levéltár és Kutatóintézet. ISBN 978-963-8406-27-9.
  • Szűcs, Jenő (2002). Az utolsó Árpádok [The Last Árpáds] (in Hungarian). Osiris Kiadó. ISBN 963-389-271-6.
  • Zsoldos, Attila (2003). "III. András". In Szovák, Kornél; Szentpéteri, József; Szakács, Margit (eds.). Szent István és III. András [Saint Stephen and Andrew III] (in Hungarian). Kossuth Kiadó. pp. 119–227. ISBN 963-09-4461-8.
  • 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.
Theodore
House of Tengerdi
Born:  ?  Died: May/October 1308
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Provost of Szeben
1284–1287
Succeeded by
John
Preceded by Provost of Székesfehérvár
1287–1295
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Vác
(elected)

1289
Succeeded by
Ladislaus
Preceded by Bishop of Győr
1295–1308
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Vice-chancellor
1286–1297
Succeeded by

theodore, tengerdi, hungarian, tengerdi, tivadar, died, october, 1308, hungarian, prelate, turn, 13th, 14th, centuries, served, bishop, győr, from, 1295, 1308, prior, that, provost, székesfehérvár, vice, chancellor, royal, court, briefly, elected, bishop, vác,. Theodore Tengerdi Hungarian Tengerdi Tivadar died May October 1308 was a Hungarian prelate at the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries who served as Bishop of Gyor from 1295 to 1308 Prior to that he was provost of Szekesfehervar and vice chancellor in the royal court and briefly elected Bishop of Vac Theodore TengerdiBishop of GyorSeal of Theodore Tengerdi 1303 Appointed1295Term ended1308PredecessorAndrewSuccessorNicholas KoszegiOther post s Bishop elect of VacVice chancellorPersonal detailsDiedMay October 1308NationalityHungarianParentsNicholas I TengerdiAlma materUniversity of Bologna Contents 1 Early career 2 Crown guard and bishop 3 Interregnum 4 References 5 SourcesEarly career editTheodore was born into a prominent Transdanubian family which originated from Tengerd in Fejer County His father was vice judge royal Nicholas I who bought the village and the surrounding lands in 1256 1 Theodore had two elder brothers Nicholas II and Ladislaus I who actively participated in the royal military campaigns against the Kingdom of Bohemia in the early 1270s Ladislaus had a daughter Anne who married James Hahot The brothers branch died out by the middle of the 14th century The Rumi and the Botka de Szeplak noble families descended from Theodore s uncles 2 As the youngest one Theodore entered ecclesiastical service Consequently he attended the University of Bologna a university record preserved his name in February 1269 when his debt 18 pounds was settled by another Hungarian student Paul in his name 3 He bore the title of magister demonstrating his education and skills in science 4 Theodore was first mentioned by contemporary records in 1274 when Ladislaus IV of Hungary recovered the estate of Sitke and donated Chuefold which then belonged to Szolgagyor Castle present day ruins in Hlohovec Slovakia to the three brothers for the bravery and loyalty of Nicholas and Ladislaus in the previous years He elevated into the dignity of provost of Szeben today Sibiu Romania by 1284 serving in this office until 1287 Simultaneously he also acted as a personal notary of King Ladislaus IV 5 Theodore was also a confidant of the queen mother Elizabeth the Cuman and the queen consort Elizabeth of Sicily the two queens jointly donated Dencs and Sztupan accessories to the Segesd lordship to Theodore and Ladislaus in June 1284 their brother Nicholas died by then 6 Ladislaus made Theodore as his vice chancellor in 1286 In the next year he was also elected provost of Szekesfehervar thus he held both offices simultaneously which have traditionally belonged together in the previous decades 7 By that time he was already a canon of the collegiate chapter 8 During his appointment he was granted Ivancsa by the king s spouse Queen Elizabeth of Sicily 6 A single charter from 1289 also styled him as Bishop elect of Vac but he was unable to take the office for unknown reasons 9 Theodore was confirmed as provost by Pope Nicholas IV shortly after February 1289 when he instructed the local Dominican prior and the custos of the local Franciscans to investigate the regularity of his election before confirmation 8 Crown guard and bishop editIt is possible that Theodore supported Archbishop Lodomer who entered into an alliance with the rebellious Koszegi family against the immoral and weak handed Ladislaus IV and agreed to offer the crown to the king s distant relative Andrew the Venetian who arrived to Hungary in early 1290 However Andrew was captured and surrendered him to Duke Albert Ladislaus was assassinated by his favored Cuman subjects on 10 July 1290 Following the assassination Lodomer managed to free Andrew from his captivity in order to crown king As provost of Szekesfehervar Theodore also functioned as guardian of the Holy Crown of Hungary Upon Andrew s arrival his unidentified opponents tried to bribe Theodore not to hand over the crown jewels to the soon to be king but the provost refused them Archbishop Lodomer crowned Andrew king in Szekesfehervar on 23 July 1290 10 Theodore was a staunch supporter of Andrew III throughout his reign He retained his positions of vice chancellor and provost of Szekesfehervar too He was one of the main organizers of the diet which took place in obuda in the first days of September 1290 where Andrew III promised to preserve the rights and privileges of the nobility As vice chancellor Theodore drafted the text of the laws At his own request one of the articles stated the old right of the church of Fehervar to the position of vice chancellor to be held thus officially combined the two dignities confirming the existing customary law 5 The Hungarian diplomacy already began a search for a suitable spouse for their new king before his release from captivity and the coronation After the closure of the diet Theodore traveled to Kuyavia in the Kingdom of Poland to escort Andrew s fiancee Fenenna the daughter of Ziemomysl of Kuyavia to Hungary The wedding took place before the end of 1290 11 Theodore sent a large army banderium to Andrew s military campaign against the Duchy of Austria in the summer of 1291 12 Thereafter the concluded peace treaty prescribed the destruction of the fortresses that Albert of Austria had seized from the Koszegis who in response rose up in open rebellion against Andrew in spring 1292 acknowledging Charles Martel of Anjou as King of Hungary The royal troops subdued the rebellion by July but Ivan Koszegi captured and imprisoned Andrew during his journey to Slavonia in August Theodore arrived to the province with his army He saved the royal property jewels and treasures from the robbers and transferred them to the royal court Alongside other lords and bishops Theodore negotiated with the notorious Ivan Koszegi over the liberation of Andrew 13 He was among those partisans who sent their relatives his brother Ladislaus and nephews as hostages to the Koszegis 14 thus Andrew was freed As a result they were granted Halasztelek by Andrew III in January 1293 12 Theodore and his relatives bought Bekasmegyer for 120 silver denari from Ladislaus Balog lector of Buda chapter The family also acquired forts and towers in the nearby Margaret Island 12 Theodore Tengerdi was elected Bishop of Gyor around April 1295 15 Therefore he was replaced as provost of Szekesfehervar by Gregory Bicskei still in that month but despite the aforementioned law which legitimized a custom right he retained the office of vice chancellor until 1297 when Bicskei succeeded him in those dignity too 16 Theodore attended the diet in Pest in the summer of 1298 which authorized Andrew to destroy forts built without permission and ordered the punishment of those who had seized landed property with force 12 The Diocese of Gyor which laid in the borderlands between the expansionary Koszegi and Csak domains was threatened constantly by looting and plundering raids Ivan Koszegi pillaged and unlawfully seized the bishopric s several lands in Western Transdanubia In response Theodore excommunicated the treacherous and greedy lord but without any consequences and results 17 During his episcopate Theodore donated privileges to the fishermen and millers of the nearby Revfalu today a borough of Gyor 17 Interregnum editAndrew III died in 1301 With his death the House of Arpad the first royal dynasty of Hungary ended A period of Interregnum and 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 It is plausible that Theodore initially supported the claim of Wenceslaus alongside the majority of the Hungarian prelates However the arriving papal legate Niccolo Boccasini convinced most of the bishops to accept Charles s reign 17 Upon the invitation of Pope Boniface VIII Theodore was a member of that Hungarian clerical delegation which visited the Roman Curia and met the pope and Charles grandmother Mary Queen of Naples Pope Boniface who regarded Hungary as a fief of the Holy See declared Charles the lawful king of Hungary on 31 May 1303 14 The Hungarian prelates led by Stephen Archbishop of Kalocsa traveled further to the Neapolitan court while Theodore returned to Hungary He already resided in Szombathely on 24 June 1303 18 To strengthen his son s position Wenceslaus II of Bohemia came to Hungary at the head of a large army in May 1304 However his negotiations with the local lords convinced him that his son s position in Hungary had dramatically weakened Accordingly he decided to take his son back to Bohemia and even took the Holy Crown of Hungary with himself to Prague According to the narration of the Steirische Reimchronik Styrian Rhyming Chronicle perceiving the intrigue Theodore Tengerdi and his small accompaniment caught up to the royal escort before crossing the border There the bishop asked and begged King Wenceslaus not to take the Holy Crown and the royal insignia out of the Kingdom of Hungary but the Bohemian king replied angrily the crown is not entitled to anyone more than the rightful king who is his son and the Holy Crown must be kept where the king resides 19 Theodore and his banderium participated in the invasion of Bohemia in the autumn of 1304 20 Theodore Tengerdi died sometimes between May and October 1308 when he was succeeded by Ivan Koszegi s illegitimate son Nicholas who was Theodore s deputy as provost of the collegiate chapter of St Adalbert church in Gyor prior to that 21 References edit Gyori 2008 p 25 Engel Genealogia Tengerdi kinship 1 Rumi branch Haraszti Szabo amp Kelenyi 2019 p 122 Gyori 2008 p 26 a b Szucs 2002 p 451 a b Gyori 2008 p 28 Zsoldos 2011 p 113 a b Kertesz 2022 p 45 Zsoldos 2011 p 97 Zsoldos 2003 p 136 Zsoldos 2003 p 163 a b c d Gyori 2008 p 32 Szucs 2002 p 456 a b Bank 1968 p 33 Zsoldos 2011 p 92 Zsoldos 2003 p 204 a b c Gyori 2008 p 36 Kadar 2015 pp 78 80 Kadar 2015 p 87 Kadar 2015 p 94 Engel 1996 p 71 Sources editBank Jozsef ed 1968 Gyoregyhazmegyei almanach Schematizmus Dioecesis Jaurinensis Almanac of the Diocese of Gyor in Hungarian Authority of the Diocese of Gyor 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 Gyori Eva 2008 Gyori puspokok a XIII szazadban The Bishops of Gyor in the 13th Century Belvedere Meridionale in Hungarian 20 1 2 24 43 ISSN 1419 0222 Haraszti Szabo Peter Kelenyi Borbala 2019 Magyarorszagi diakok francia angol italiai es nemet egyetemeken a kozepkorban 1100 1526 Students from Hungary at the Universities of France England Italy and Germany in the Middle Ages 1100 1526 in Hungarian ELTE Egyetemi Konyvtar es Leveltar MTA ELTE Egyetemtorteneti Kutatocsoport ISBN 978 963 489 098 0 Kadar Tamas 2015 Harcban a koronaert I Karoly Robert kiraly uralkodasanak elso evei 1305 vegeig Fight for the Crown The First Regnal Years of Charles I Robert until the End of 1305 Torteneti Tanulmanyok Acta Universitatis Debreceniensis in Hungarian 23 42 111 ISSN 1217 4602 Kertesz Balazs 2022 A szekesfehervari kaptalan archontologiaja es oklevelado tevekenysege az Arpad korban The Archontology and Diploma Issuing Activity of the Chapter of Szekesfehervar in the Age of Arpads in Hungarian Varosi Leveltar es Kutatointezet ISBN 978 963 8406 27 9 Szucs Jeno 2002 Az utolso Arpadok The Last Arpads in Hungarian Osiris Kiado ISBN 963 389 271 6 Zsoldos Attila 2003 III Andras In Szovak Kornel Szentpeteri Jozsef Szakacs Margit eds Szent Istvan es III Andras Saint Stephen and Andrew III in Hungarian Kossuth Kiado pp 119 227 ISBN 963 09 4461 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 TheodoreHouse of TengerdiBorn Died May October 1308 Catholic Church titles Preceded byBenedict Provost of Szeben1284 1287 Succeeded byJohn Preceded byAnthony Provost of Szekesfehervar1287 1295 Succeeded byGregory Bicskei elected Preceded byThomas Bishop of Vac elected 1289 Succeeded byLadislaus Preceded byAndrew Bishop of Gyor1295 1308 Succeeded byNicholas Koszegi Political offices Preceded byBartholomew Vice chancellor1286 1297 Succeeded byGregory Bicskei Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Hungary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theodore Tengerdi amp oldid 1185740564, 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.