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COLOMAN OF HUNGARY

A miniature of the king from the Chronicon Pictum, 1360.

:''For the saint and martyr, see Saint Coloman.''
'Coloman' also spelled ''Koloman'' (Hungarian: ''Könyves Kålmån'') (1070February 3, 1116) byname 'Coloman The Possessor Of Books'[1] was King of Hungary from 1095 to 1116.
He was the son of Géza I and Zsófia (Sophia) von Looz.
Låszló wanted Kålmån's younger brother Álmos to succeed him as King of Hungary. (According to the chronicles, Kålmån may have had a physical deformity, which would have made him unfit to be king per medieval beliefs about such things, although this deformity may be a later falsification of this appearance as in the case of England's Richard III, as the chronicles reflected the image of Coloman created by his successors, who were in fact descendants of his brother Álmos blinded by him). Not wanting to abandon his nephew completely, he wished instead to make him a bishop. Kålmån was accordingly sent abroad to acquire his subsequently famous learning, which earned him the appellation "''Könyves''", literally "bookish" (usually translated "the Booklover"). (At the time, this was not a compliment. History has been kind to Kålmån, however, so modern histories are more apt to translate the nickname as "The Wise" or similar.)
The exact circumstances of how KĂĄlmĂĄn acquired the throne after LĂĄszlĂł's death are unknown; among other difficulties, he may have had to get papal dispensation, because ordained clergy could not become king. (The sources are unclear on whether KĂĄlmĂĄn was actually ordained. His later laws show that he had no problem with married clergy, so his eventual marriages are no evidence in this matter.)
LĂĄszlĂł died before he could fulfill his promise of leading a Crusade. His nephew KĂĄlmĂĄn who was in Poland, had returned just in time to receive his blessing before he expired, after a reign of nineteen years. KĂĄlmĂĄn did not find it necessary to fulfil the promise of his predecessor, but did concede at first to let the crusading armies go through Hungary. When the first such army (the First Crusade in 1096) proceeded to pillage its way through the country, he put greater and greater restrictions on subsequent armies, such as taking hostages and mustering his own army to guard the progress. These actions did not endear him to contemporary chroniclers; descriptions of an ugly, hairy, crosseyed man are certainly exaggerated.
KĂĄlmĂĄn changed Hungary's foreign policy: while LĂĄszlĂł I. had asked for the Holy Roman Emperor's help (instead of the pope's) when waging war on Croatia, KĂĄlmĂĄn wanted to stay on good terms with the Holy See. This didn't prevent him from subjugating Croatia, nor from conquering Dalmatia ahead of the similarly-inclined Venetians. The pope eventually acceded him the right of appointing bishops.
Kålmån's court was a center of learning and literature. Bishop Hartvik's Life of St. Stephen, a chronicle of Hungary, the shorter of the extant Legends of St. Gellért, and several collections of laws all stem from his reign. One of his most famous laws was half a millennium ahead of its time: ''De strigis vero quae non sunt, nulla amplius quaestio fiat'' (As for the matter of witches [more exactly "strigas", which isn't exactly the same as "witch"], there is no such thing, therefore no further investigations or trials are to be held).
Álmos made several attempts to take over Kålmån's throne, but all were unsuccessful. After repeatedly forgiving his wayward brother, Kålmån was finally forced to bring justice against him in 1115, although even then he commuted the familial death sentence required by law to the sentence of blinding Álmos and his young son Béla.
Kålmån died February 3, 1116. He was buried in Székesfehérvår, next to St. Stephen.
He married twice, first in 1097 to Felicia (called Busila in Hungary), daughter of Roger I of Sicily. They had three children:
# ZsĂłfia (Sophia)
# IstvĂĄn (II) (1102-1131)
# LĂĄszlĂł (1101-1112)
Felicia died in 1102, and a second marriage was arranged in 1104 between Kålmån and Eufemia of Kiev, daughter of Prince Vladimir II of Kiev. However a few months later she was caught in adultery and immediately divorced and sent back to her father. Eufemia bore a son in Kiev, named Boris Conrad, in 1112. After Stephen II died in 1131, Boris became a contender for the throne, but because Kålmån had refused to acknowledge Boris as his son, the Hungarian magnates ignored him and gave the Hungarian throne to a cousin, the blinded son of Álmos, Béla.

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1. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9024807/Coloman



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