
Árpád
'Árpád' (c.
850–
907) was the first ruler of
Hungary. He was the probable leader of the
Magyar tribe, and the founder of the
Arpad dynasty. Although he is not considered the founder of the
Kingdom of Hungary – that was his descendant
Stephen I –, he is generally thought of as the forefather of Hungarians and is often affectionally mentioned as ''our father Árpád.''
Árpád was the son of
Álmos leader of the Hungarian tribal federation. According to medieval chronicles, seven proto-Magyar tribes elected him – as the leader of one of those tribes – their common leader in
Etelköz around
890. He is said to have been the leader ("prince" – ''
fejedelem'') of the proto-Magyars for 20 years and to have died in
907. The
Byzantine ''
De administrando imperio'' says around
950: ''Prior to this Árpád, the Magyars did never have another ruling prince ('archont') and since then up to today the ruling prince of Hungary has been from that family.'' Other sources however imply that there was a second ruling prince called
Kurszán, who was either at the same "level" with Árp'ád, or a kind of "vice-prince". Based on Arabic sources, Árp'ád's title seems to have been ''
kende'' – although some scholars consider Kende to be the name of a person – or
gyula.
After several looting raids in Europe (from the 860s onwards), the proto-Magyars in
Etelköz under Árpád, pushed by the
Pechenegs from the East, decided to definitively pass the
Carpathian Mountains. In
896 they occupied the Upper
Tisza river, from there they undertook numerous looting raids in central and western Europe, and in
900/
901 they moved to
Pannonia. The proto-Magyars entering the Pannonian fields in 896 represented about 200,000–250,000 people.
According to ''De administrando imperio'', his sons included (maybe not exclusively) :
# Tarhos (Tarkacsu)
# Üllő (Jeleg)
# Jutas (Jutocsa)
# Liüntika (erroneously Levente in older references)
#
Zolta (Zaltasz) - the youngest one.
According to legends, Árpád is also said to have been holding the first "parliamentary" session with 40 other "nobles" on horseback before 900 AD.
See also
★
Arpads
★
Magyars
★
History of Hungary
★
Attila the Hun
External links
★
Árpád, painting from the 19th century