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Koning Bela II van Hongarije

Mannelijk 1108 - 1141  (33 jaar)


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  • Naam Bela II van Hongarije  [1
    Prefix Koning 
    Geboorte 1108  Esztergom, Komaron-Estergom, Hongarije Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie 
    Geslacht Mannelijk 
    bijgenaamd de Blinde 
    Overlijden 13 feb 1141 
    Begraven Szekesfehervar, Fejer, Hongarije Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie 
    Persoon-ID I22087  DoeVos
    Laatst gewijzigd op 16 mrt 2019 

    Vader Almos van Hongarije, Koning van Slavonië,   geb. ca. 1075, Esztergom, Komaron-Estergom, Hongarije Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. 1 sep 1127, Domos, Griekenland Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatie (Leeftijd ~ 52 jaar) 
    Moeder Premislava Svyato Polkovna van Kiev,   geb. 1075, Polotsk, , Vitsyebskaya Voblasts', Belarus Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. na 1116 (Leeftijd 42 jaar) 
    Gezins-ID F1365445503  Gezinsblad  |  Familiekaart

    Gezin Ilona Nemanjics van Servië,   geb. ca. 1115, Belgrado, , Srbija, Yugoslavia Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. 1157 (Leeftijd ~ 42 jaar) 
    Huwelijk 28 apr 1126 
    Kinderen 
    +1. Koning Geza II van Hongarije,   geb. 1130, Tolna, , Tolna, Hungary Vindt alle personen met gebeurtenissen op deze locatieovl. 31 mei 1161 (Leeftijd 31 jaar)
    Gezins-ID F1365445502  Gezinsblad  |  Familiekaart
    Laatst gewijzigd op 16 mrt 2019 

  • Aantekeningen 
    • Béla II the Blind (Hungarian: II. (Vak) Béla, Croatian: Bela I., Slovak: Belo II), (c. 1110 – 13 February 1141), King of Hungary and Croatia (1131-1141). Still as a child, Béla was blinded by his uncle, King Coloman who wanted to ensure the succession of his own son, the future King Stephen II. During his childhood, Béla lived in different monasteries of the kingdom till the childless King Stephen II invited him to his court. Following King Stephen's death, Béla ascended the throne, but during his reign he had continously struggle with King Coloman's alleged son, Boris who tried to acquire the crown with the military assistance of the neighbouring countries. Early years Béla was the only son of Duke Álmos, the younger brother of King Coloman of Hungary. His mother was Predslava of Kiev. Duke Álmos led several rebellions against his brother, but finally, he and Béla were blinded in 1115. Father and son were living together in the Premonstratensian Monastery of Dömös till 1126, when Duke Álmos tried to organise a conspiracy against King Stephen II, King Coloman's son and heir, but he failed and had to escape to the Byzantine Empire. Following his father's escape, Béla was taken secretly to the Monastery of Pécsvárad by his father's partisans. In 1128, after the death of Duke Álmos, King Stephen was informed that his blind cousin was still living in Hungary, and he invited Béla to his court. Upon the king's request, Béla married Jelena, a daughter of Serbian Duke Uroš I of Raška, and the king granted the couple estates near Tolna. On 1 March 1131, the childless king died, and on 28 April, Béla was crowned in Székesfehérvár, although King Stephen II had designated his sister's son, Saul his successor in 1126, but Saul had died before his uncle, or Béla's partisans managed to defeat him. Struggles with Boris As Béla was blind, his wife played a decisive role in governing his kingdom. Shortly after ascending the throne, Queen Helena ordered the massacre of the people she considered responsible for her husband's blinding at an assembly in Arad. She implaced her brother, Beloš, as the count palatine, giving him supreme command over the Hungarian Army and a commendable place in the Hungarian Royal Court. Béla's entire reign was overshadowed by a conflict with Boris, a son of King Coloman of doubtful legitimacy, in which Boris was supported by Poland and Rus'. In 1132, King Boleslaus III of Poland led a campaign with Rus' and Polish troops on Boris' behalf. When Béla were informed that the Polish and Rus' armies entered to Hungary, he assembled a meeting of the barons where all the participants were killed who did not want to declare Boris bastard. King Boleslaus and Boris were defeated near the Sajó River on 22 July, but Boris was to prove a persistent claimant for a number of years to come. His policy Béla's reign was notable for his foreign policy - his sister Hedwig was married to a son of Margrave Leopold III of Austria and another sister to Duke Sobeslav I of Bohemia, thereby allying Hungary with two previously inimical states. His brothers-in-law convinced Emperor Lothair III, who had been struggling against Poland, to include into the terms of the Peace of Merseburg with Boleslaw III that the Polish king would not support Boris against Béla any more. In 1136, Béla managed to recover parts of Dalmatia from the control of the Republic of Venice, and sent an expedition into Bosnia. In 1137, he gave the title of Duke of Bosnia, with acceptance from the entire country, to his younger son Ladislaus. Béla died from the effects of an overindulgence of alcohol. Marriage and children

      c. 1129: Helena of Raška (after 1109 – after 1146), daughter of duke Uroš I of Raška and his wife, Anna: Elisabeth (c. 1129 – before 1155), wife of duke Mieszko III of Poland King Géza II of Hungary (c. 1130 – 3 May 1162) King Ladislaus II of Hungary (1131 – 14 January 1163) King Stephen IV of Hungary (c. 1133 – 11 April 1165) Sophia (c. 1136 – ?), nun at Admont

  • Bronnen 
    1. [S3195] Geneanet, https://gw.geneanet.org/bverfn?lang=nl&p=bela+ii&n=van+hongarije (Betrouwbaarheid: 3).