Hungary Stephen I
St. Stephen
Courtesy Sam and Sarah Stulberg
Stephen (997-1038) became chieftain when Geza died, and
he
consolidated his rule by ousting rival clan chiefs and
confiscating their lands. Stephen then asked Pope
Sylvester II to
recognize him as king of Hungary. The pope agreed, and
legend
says Stephen was crowned on Christmas Day in the year
1000. The
crowning legitimized Hungary as a Western kingdom
independent of
the Holy Roman and Byzantine empires. It also gave Stephen
virtually absolute power, which he used to strengthen the
Roman
Catholic Church and Hungary. Stephen ordered the people to
pay
tithes and required every tenth village to construct a
church and
support a priest. Stephen donated land to support
bishoprics and
monasteries, required all persons except the clergy to
marry, and
barred marriages between Christians and pagans. Foreign
monks
worked as teachers and introduced Western agricultural
methods. A
Latin alphabet was devised for the Magyar (Hungarian)
language.
Stephen administered his kingdom through a system of
counties, each governed by an ispan, or magistrate,
appointed by the king. In Stephen's time, Magyar society
had two
classes: the freemen nobles and the unfree. The nobles
were
descended in the male line from the Magyars who had either
migrated into the Carpathian Basin or had received their
title of
nobility from the king. Only nobles could hold office or
present
grievances to the king. They paid tithes and owed the
crown
military service but were exempt from taxes. The
unfree--who had
no political voice--were slaves, freed slaves, immigrants,
or
nobles stripped of their privileges. Most were serfs who
paid
taxes to the king and a part of each harvest to their lord
for
use of his land. The king had direct control of the
unfree, thus
checking the nobles' power.
Clan lands, crown lands, and former crown lands made up
the
realm. Clan lands belonged to nobles, who could will the
lands to
family members or the church; if a noble died without an
heir,
his land reverted to his clan. Crown lands consisted of
Stephen's
patrimony, lands seized from disloyal nobles, conquered
lands,
and unoccupied parts of the kingdom. Former crown lands
were
properties granted by the king to the church or to
individuals.
Data as of September 1989
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