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Béla IV c.1270
'Béla IV' (
Croatian: ''Bela III.'';
1206–
May 3,
1270) was the king of
Hungary and Croatia between
1235 and
1270 and member of
Árpád dynasty.
Early life and family
Béla was the son of
King András II and
Gertrude of Merania. In
1213 his mother was murdered by Hungarian magnates. His father failed to avenge Queen Gertrude's murder so it was left to Béla to track down and punish them, a campaign he finally completed some thirty years after her death.
In
1218 Béla was married to Maria Laskarina, a daughter of Emperor
Theodore I Lascaris of Nicaea and
Anna Angelina. They had two sons and seven daughters, of whom the most notable were:
#
Kunegunda, also known as Kinga, who was married to King
Boleslaus V of Poland, after his death becoming a nun and abbess; she was
canonized by
Pope John Paul II in
1999
#
Yolanda (Jolenta) married to the Grand Duke
Boleslaus the Pious, and who also later became a nun and abbess, who has been declared as a candidate for
sainthoood
# Stephen, who succeeded him and ruled as
Stephen V of Hungary
# Elizabeth, married to Duke
Henry XIII of Lower Bavaria
# Constance, married to
Knyaz Leo I of Halych in 1247
#
Margaret of Hungary, canonized by the Roman Catholic Church in 1943, for whom
Margaret Island in
Budapest is named, having been the place where a royal monastery was established by her parents for her.
Béla's reputation as monarch, compared to that of his father, is generally perceived to have been good. He was a good administrator and on his accession, sought to counter corruption and to recover lost territory which had been given over to the magnates by his father.
Mongol invasions
In
1238, Hungary was invaded by
Cuman tribes fleeing the advancing Mongol hordes. Béla sought an alliance with the Cumans, and so he granted them asylum and betrothed his son and heir, Stephen, to the daughter of a
Cuman khan named
Kuthen. The Cumans (originally a pagan shamanist people) converted to Christianity and were baptised.
Béla tried with little success to reestablish royal preeminence by reacquiring lost crown lands. His efforts, however, created a deep rift between the crown and the magnates just as the
Mongols were sweeping westward across
Russia toward
Europe. Aware of the danger, Béla ordered the magnates and lesser nobles to mobilize. Few responded. Béla also sent messages to
Pope Gregory IX and the
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II but to no avail. The Mongols eventually routed Béla's army at the
Battle of Mohi on
April 11,
1241. His ally Kuthen had been killed by mistrustful Hungarian lords in
Pest just prior to the invasion.
Béla fled to
Austria, where Duke
Frederick of
Babenberg held him for ransom, then to
Trogir in
Dalmatia. The Mongols reduced
Hungary's towns and villages to ashes and slaughtered half the population before news arrived in
1242 that the Great
Ögedei Khan had died in
Karakorum. The Mongols withdrew, sparing Béla and what remained of his kingdom.
Upon his return to power, Béla began rebuilding his country, including a massive construction campaign which produced the system of castles as a defence against the threat of a Mongol return. This eventually happened in
1261 but this time Béla was successful in defeating them. He is greatly respected in Hungary and commonly known as "the second founder" of the kingdom.
Other wars
Béla was determined to regain the western part of Hungary which had been seized by
Frederick II of Austria as his price for giving Béla assistance in the first war against the Mongols (help which never came). Béla finally defeated Frederick in battle in
1246, Frederick being trampled to death by his own cavalry. Béla also engaged in a long war with
Otakar II of Bohemia to gain control of Austria and
Styria, but he finally had to give up all claims after a defeat in the first battle of Marchfeld (or battle of Kroisenbrunn) in
1260. He was regularly engaged in protecting the outer extremities of his realm including Dalmatia, Bosnia and Serbia.
The final years of Béla's reign were marred by the rebellion of his son Stephen. Béla was eventually forced to divide his kingdom in two, with Stephen crowned to junior king of Hungary, setting up his own capital, and adopting foreign policies directly contrary to those of his father.
Sources
★ Parsons, John Carmi. ''Medieval Queenship'', 1997