The 'Árpáds' or 'Arpads' (
Hungarian: ''Árpádok'',
Croatian: ''Arpadovići'',
Slovak: ''Arpádovci'') was a dynasty ruling in historic
Hungary from the late
9th century to
1301.
They were
chieftains (
dukes and
princes) till c. 970.
Géza (c. 970–997) as well as till 1000 his son
Stephen were
Grand Princes. From c. 1000 onwards they were
Kings.
The
agnatic seniority principle was replaced by the
agnatic primogeniture, which led to struggles for the throne between 997–1163. The male line was extinguished by 1301, yet the
Croÿ family of
Belgium and the
Drummond family of
Scotland claim to descend from illegitimate sons of medieval Hungarian kings who settled in those countries. In medieval times the dynasty was often called the "House of the Holy Kings".
10th century

Statue of
Árpád at the National Memorial Park of Ópusztaszer
Árpád (died after 900), the founder of the dynasty brought the proto-
Hungarians to present-day Hungary in 896. According to
Simon of Kéza, a medieval Hungarian chronicler, Árpád descended from the Turul clan. It seems that the
Turul was the totem animal of the Árpáds in pagan times. Árpád was probably succeeded by his nephew, duke
Szabolcs, who in turn was succeeded by Árpád's grandson
Fajsz (Fales, Falitzi). These two chieftains, who however did not control all proto-Hungarians yet, undertook almost fifty campaigns, by which they forced the
Lombards (905–950), the
Saxons (924–932), the
Byzantine Empire and
Bulgaria (934–957) to pay tribute to them. They also destroyed
Great Moravia probably around 907. The first two Hungarian chieftains, (
Bulcsú and
Gyula) were baptised in the Byzantine Empire in 950.
After a grave defeat in the
Battle of Lechfeld in
955, the Hungarians decided to stay in what is present-day Hungary (more exactly
Transdanubia) and adjacent regions, and to stop their raids in Europe, so that a gradual unification of proto-Hungarian tribes led by numerous local chieftains began. The Hungarian dukes
Lehel (Lél),
Bulcsú and
Súr, who were not Árpáds, were captured by the Germans in the Battle of Lechfeld and executed. Since the
Nitrian principality (present-day southwestern
Slovakia) had been ruled by Lél since the 920s, it thus became part of the Árpáds' domain in 955.
While
Taksony (c. 955 – c. 971) ruled present-day Hungary, his father
Zoltán, Árpád's son, ruled the Nitrian principality and maybe had to accept the supremacy of Bohemia in western Slovakia (c. 955 – c. 970). According to other sources, Taksony and then his son Géza were the rulers of Nitra before 971 instead.
In 971,
Géza (c. 971 – 997), the son of Taksony, became a "Grand Prince", moved his seat to
Esztergom and began to form a unified Hungarian state (hence the title "grand") – a task completed only later by his son. Transdanubia was ruled by himself, the Nitrian principality was given in fief to his brother
Michael (ruled there 971 – 995). Influence in
Transylvania was gained through Géza's marriage with Sarolt, the daughter of the Transylvanian duke
Gyula I, but local proto-Hungarian chieftains/dukes still ruled in other parts of present-day Hungary.
Although Géza was de facto only the ruler of Transdanubia, he is said to have made the Árpád dynasty the ruling dynasty of Hungary. Pushed by
Henry II. the Quarrelsome (Heinrich II. der Zänker), under Géza the Hungarians had to leave
Ostarrîchi (
Austria) and make peace with
Otto I and
Otto II (in 972). In 995, Géza brought a
Latin (i. e. not
Byzantine) bishop to Hungary (namely
Adalbert, the Bishop of
Prague) and started introducing
Christianity by force.
Géza's brother Michael was married to
Adelajda (Adelhaid), the daughter of the
Polish Prince
Mieszko I. By various deals with Slovak nobles, Michael managed to expand the Hungarian territory to some further parts of present-day Slovakia. Since Michael became too powerful, Géza had him killed in 995, and Michael's sons
Vazul and
Ladislaus the Bold fled abroad.
In the same year, Géza's son Vajk (after his baptism called
Stephen) was made, by his father, the ruler of the Nitrian Principality within Hungary. He probably brought his
Christian wife Gisela (the date of marriage is disputed, most probably 995 or 996) to the old Christian center of
Nitra, and that is why he became an ardent Christianizer first in the Nitrian principality, later in whole Hungary. His marriage of Gisela promoted the influence of
Bavarian clerics and nobles in Hungary. He also established friendly relationships with
Slovak nobles in present-day Slovakia (esp. the Poznans and the Hunts), who helped him in 997 to defeat
Koppány (the duke of
Somogy, member of a collateral branch of the Árpáds), who, supported by old Hungarian chieftain families, claimed Hungarian leadership after Géza's death.
11th century

Statue of St. Stephen in Esztergom
On
December 25 1000 (other sources:
January 1 1001), the Grand Prince
Stephen was crowned (the first) King of Hungary (1000–1038) by order of
Pope Sylvester II. Between 997 and c. 1006, he managed to unify Hungary, by subjugating
Transylvania and other domains that had been ruled by Hungarian tribal chieftains. He introduced the
county (comitatus) system, founded an ecclesiastic organization with ten bishoprics and the archbishopric of
Esztergom, and introduced taxes for common people, the minting of coins (initially in Posonium - Hungarian: ''Pozsony'', German: ''Pressburg'', today's
Bratislava), and the official use of Latin, which remained the official language of Hungary till 1836. He moved his seat from Esztergom to
Székesfehérvár.
In 1001, Stephen lost the Nitrian principality to
Poland. The Polish ruler made Stephen’s cousins
Ladislaus the Bold (1001–1029) and
Vazul (1029–1030), who had fled Hungary in 995, the rulers of the Nitrian principality (today
Slovakia) within the Polish principality. In 1030, Stephen reconquered the principality from Poland, Vazul was imprisoned, and in 1031 (when Stephen’s only son
Imre died) he was blinded in
Nitra so that he wouldn't succeed to the Hungarian throne.
However, Vazul’s three sons (
Levente and the two future kings
Andrew and
Béla) and
Domoslav (Bonuslaus), son of Ladislaus the Bold, managed to flee abroad. As a result, it were Stephen’s nephew from the female line,
Peter Urseolo (1038–41 and 1044–46) and Stephen’s brother-in-law
Samuel Aba (1041–1044), who were fighting for the throne. Peter Urseolo, supported by the German king
Henry III, was expelled by the brothers
Andrew and
Béla, who returned to Hungary from abroad. These two Árpáds were the ancestors of all the following Árpád rulers of Hungary.
Domoslav, in turn, was temporarily installed as the ruler of western Slovakia in 1042, when the territory was conquered by
Bretislav I and Henry III.
The Hungarian king
Andrew I (1046–63) had his son
Solomon marry Judith, the daughter of
Henry III, in order to stop the continuing German attacks (1042–1052). In 1048, Andrew shared power with his brother
Béla by making him
apanage ruler of one-third of Hungary („tercia pars regni“, Ducatus, Nitrian Frontier Principality), the capital of which was
Nitra, and which consisted of the
Nitrian Principality (modern-day south-eastern Slovakia) and the north-eastern part of historic Hungary (called Bihar, however not identical with the later
Bihar county). Béla received the title “duke” (1048-1063).
All the following dukes of Nitra were members of the Árpád dynasty and most of them were future Hungarian kings. Especially before 1077, the dukes had an independent foreign and internal policy and the duchy was accepted as a separate entity not only by Hungary, but also by the
Pope and by the German emperor. For example, when King Andrew I was in conflict with Byzantium, the
Byzantine emperor contacted Béla. In 1059, Béla fled to Poland to his brother-in-law
Boleslaus II, after king
Andrew I had his own son
Solomon crowned future king in 1057 (to be able to engage him with Judith).
In 1060, Béla returned to Hungary and defeated King Andrew I. The wounded Andrew sent his son Solomon to Germany, then he died (in 1061).
Béla I (1061–1063) became the new king of Hungary and parallelly remained the duke of Nitra. After Béla's death in 1063, Henry installed Solomon as the new king of Hungary and Béla's sons
Géza,
Ladislaus and Lampert fled to Poland (to their kin,
Boleslaus II). When Henry left Hungary, Boleslaus II attacked Solomon, defeated him and forced him to accept Géza as the king of Hungary.
Finally, however, in 1064, peace was made between Solomon and the sons of Béla, under which
Solomon (1063–1074) remained king and Geza and Ladislaus received the Nitrian Frontier Duchy; more precisely, Géza became the Duke of what is now Slovakia (11 counties), Ladislaus received Bihar (4 counties) and Lampert stayed in Nitra together with Géza without receiving own domains. New conflicts arose again soon and in 1074, Géza, Ladislaus and Lampert defeated Solomon. As a result, Géza I (1074–1077) became the new king of Hungary. His brother Ladislaus became the new Duke of the Nitrian Frontier Duchy (incl. Bihar) and later, in 1077, he succeeded his brother as the king of Hungary.
Under
Ladislaus I (1077–1095) and
Coloman (Géza's son and Ladislaus' successor; 1095–1116), Hungary annexed the coastal regions of old
Croatia,
Dalmatia,
Bosnian territories to the south of the
Sava river, and northern western and central
Slovakia. Ladislaus managed to defeat the
Pecenegs and
Cumanians.
The Arpadian kings usually supported the reform popes in quarrels between Rome and Germany. Ladislaus founded the bishoprics of
Nagyvárad and
Zagreb, and unified the Greek bishopric of
Bács with the Latin archbishopric of
Kalocsa. Coloman founded the (renewed) bishopric of
Nitra (1110, other sources: c. 1085). Ladislaus consolidated the proprietary relations by stricter penal laws; Coloman improved the organization of the kingdom. In
1077, Lampert became the new Duke of Nitra, however Ladislaus considerably restrained Lampert's powers and deprived him of an own army. In 1081, Ladislaus put an end to Solomon's rule in
Posonium, which the former king Solomon occupied in 1074, and Solomon renounced the throne.
Coloman's brother
Álmos was the duke of the newly conquered eastern Croatia (conquered 1081; duke since 1084) and later – on the request of the Croats – the king of eastern Croatia (1091–1095). In 1095, he was then dethroned by Coloman and appointed the duke of the Nitrian Frontier Duchy instead. A conflict arose between King Coloman and Álmos, who was supported by Germany and Bohemia, in 1098, after Coloman had even declared himself the king of Croatia in 1097 (crowned in 1102).
12th century
Finally in 1108, peace was made between the two brothers, but Coloman violated it and had Álmos and his son
Béla blinded and imprisoned in 1108 or 1109 to prevent them from becoming the future king. This act also marks the end of the Nitrian Frontier Duchy and thus a full integration of the territory of Slovakia into Hungary.
Coloman's childless son,
Stephen II was engaged in a number of unnecessary wars (1116 Bohemia, 1123 Russia, 1127–1129 Byzantium). He appointed
Béla II the Blind (1131–1141, see above) his successor. However
Boris, the illegitimate brother of Stephen (whom his father Coloman did not legitimize), also wanted to become king and in 1132, supported by Polish and Russian troops, invaded the country, but was defeated (later once again in 1146). Since Béla was blind, his wife, the Serbian
Ilona, and his brother-in-law
Ban Belos ruled instead of him. They had the supporters of Coloman killed during a
Diet meeting, but as for international politics, they were merciful rulers. Béla II also became King of
Bosnia.
Under Béla’s son
Géza II (1141–1161), Hungary became one of the most powerful countries in Europe for about a century. Géza successfully won battles in favor of his brother-in-law
Izjaslav (Prince of
Kiew 1148–1152), and defeated his kin
Manuel Komnenos (
Byzantine Emperor 1152–1156), who had attacked Hungary. It was Géza who (around 1150) invited the first German settlers to Slovakia (
Zipser Germans and
Transylvanian Saxons). Also, the
Knights Hospitaller and the
Knights of the Cross with the Red Star arrived in Hungary.
Géza's son
Stephen III (1162–1172) had to fight against
Manuel I Comnenus all the time, who supported the rival uncles of Stephen and managed to make them kings for a short time (
Ladislaus II (1162–63) and
Stephen IV (1163)), during which Stephen III controlled only the region around Pozsony.
Finally, it was
Béla III (educated in the Byzantium by Manuel) who became the new Hungarian king (1172–1196). Béla III annexed
Dalmatia and
Croatia to Hungary again, reformed the financial system of the country, and founded
Cistercian monasteries with his second wife
Marguerite of France.
13th century
The elder son of Béla III
Imre (1196–1204) married
Constance of Aragon and his other son
Andrew II (1205–1235) married
Gertrude of Merania. Under these two kings, Western European influence was increasing in Hungary. The organization of the royal castles and court started to dissolve, the arising towns (mostly in Slovakia), received further foreign settlers (colonists). Under Imre's rule there were conflicts between the king and his brother Andrew (who was at that time the duke of Dalmatia and Croatia), so that Imre had Andrew imprisoned in 1203. Under Andrew's rule (1205–1235), the international position of Hungary was improved, but within Hungary there were fights between the higher and lower gentry and the church. As a result, the king issued the
Golden Bull, the
Magna Carta of Hungary, in 1222 (revised in 1231).
The rule of his son
Béla IV (1235–1270) was characterized by granting of the first civic privileges (town charter, town status) to arising towns in Hungary – in 1238 to
Tyrnavia (Hungarian: Nagyszombat, German: Tyrnau, modern-day
Trnava),
Selmecbánya (Today:
Banská Štiavnica),
Carpona (German: Karpfen, Hungarian: Korpona, modern-day
Krupina) and
Veterosolium (German: Sohl, Hungarian: Zólyom, modern-day
Zvolen) –, and by the disastrous invasion of the
Mongols (often erroneously called
Tatars) in 1241–1242 and the subsequent reconstruction of the country. As a result of the invasion, the king promoted the construction of castles made of stone and he also invited people living in Hungary, as well as foreign settlers, to settle in the depopulated territories (the Great Colonization). The nomadic
Cumanians were settled in present-day central Hungary, and German settlers came mainly to present-day Slovakia and to Transylvania.
By his decree of 1267, Béla also started to increase the power of lower gentry, which also triggered the change of the traditional Hungarian royal counties into quasi-autonomous territories under the control of certain nobles. The king had his ambitious son
Stephen (duke of Transylvania between 1257–1259 and after 1260, duke of
Styria between 1259–1260) marry the Cumanian princess Elizabeth and in 1262 he granted him the title ''Rex iunior'' and the eastern part of Hungary as fief, which entailed fightings between Béla and Stephen. As a result, Hungary was divided in two till Béla’s death in 1270, after which Stephen became the new king of whole Hungary.
The short rule of
Stephen V (1270–1272) was followed by the rule of his son, the young
Ladislaus IV (1272–1290), who was influenced by his Cumanian mother and her surroundings, which brought about royal conflicts with the church and the oligarchs. The oligarchs were certain magnate families in Hungary that started to behave like independent rulers on their respective territories (eastern present-day Hungary, western present-day Hungary, western present-day Slovakia, eastern present-day Slovakia, Transylvania, and Croatia) from the 1270s – 1280s onwards. There were also fights against
Bohemia and against the
Mongols.
After Ladislaus's death,
Andrew III (1290–1301), an Árpád from
Italy, was made king. He was a grandson of Andrew II by his third wife (but it is possible that his father was illegitimate). Due to the continuing rule of the oligarchs, total anarchy arose in the country in the late 1290s. The death of Andrew III on
January 14 1301 ended the male line of the Árpáds and his only daughter Elizabeth died in the
Dominican monastery in
Töss (
Switzerland) on
May 6,
1338. After a short interregnum the Neapolitan
Capet-Anjou dynasty seized power and
Charles Robert (grandson of Maria, sister of Ladislaus IV) became the new king.
Saints
Many members of the dynasty were canonized:
★
Saint Stephen, canonized in 1083 (also canonized by the
Eastern Orthodox Church, in 2000)
★
Blessed Giselle, canonized in 1975
★
Saint Emeric, canonized in 1083
★
Saint Ladislaus, canonized in 1192
★
Saint Elizabeth, canonized in 1235
★
Saint Kinga, canonized in 1999
★
Blessed Yolanda, canonized 1631
★
Saint Margaret, canonized in 1943
★ Saint Ágnes of Prague
★ Saint Piroska (Eiréne), daughter of Ladislaus I of Hungary, canonized by the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
See also
★
List of Hungarian rulers,
List of rulers of Slovakia,
List of rulers of Croatia
★
History of Hungary,
History of Croatia,
History of Romania,
History of Slovakia
External links
★
The Vazul-line : Kings of the Árpád dynasty after St. Stephen (1038—1301)