Gyula

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gyula
Given Name

Gender Male
Region of Origin Hungarian
Wikipedia articles All pages beginning with Gyula
Look up Gyula in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Gyula is a Hungarian male given name. It was adopted as a given name sometime after the establishment of the Kingdom of Hungary. It was revived in the 19th century and is often associated with the Latin name Julius.
  • A gyula is a Magyar leader. This title was mentioned by Arabic chroniclers such as Ibn Rusta, by the Persian historian and geographer Gardizi and also in the annals of the monastery at Altaich. It is the Hungarian form of an originally Turkic title which entered the Hungarian language at some point before 950 CE.

[edit] History

Under the system of dual kingship which the Magyars used in the 9th century, the two kings of the tribal confederation were the kende (or kündü) and the gyula. While the former was the nominal leader, the latter was the chief warlord or military commander. This kind of dual leadership was usual in the Khazar Empire of which the Magyar tribes were earlier subjects. At the time of the settlement in the Pannonian plain, the kende was Kurszán while the gyula was Álmos and then his son Árpád. Kurszán was killed during a raid in 904 and Árpád became the sole ruler of the nation. After having secured the succession for his son Zoltán, he conferred the office of gyula on another tribal chief.

The word gyula was used as the title of the semi-indepedendent rulers of Transylvania during the 10th century[1]. The gyula and the horka a held a rank in Hungarian society second only to the fejedelem (ruling prince), and slightly above the rank of úr which was used to refer to the other tribal chieftains, who each ruled as prince in their own domain. The title gyula is sometimes translated into English as duke, which is not entirely equivalent as Hungary at this time was still a tribal society based on kinship ties, rather than a feudal society. It is possible that during the 10th century some of the holders of the title of gyula also used Gyula as a personal name, but the issue has been confused because the chronicler of one of the most important primary sources (the Gesta Hungarorum) has been shown to have used titles or even names of places as personal names in some cases. The word gyula, like other ancient Magyar titles, was not used after the establishment of the Kingdom of Hungary.

The following persons mentioned in the Hungarian Gestas and De Administrando Imperio are considered by Hungarian historians as an erroneous interpretation of the title gyula by the chroniclers. Romanian authors consider them to have been the names of persons with a possible proto-Romanian descent:

  • Gylas - mentioned in De Administrando Imperio - a 'Tourk' (the name for Magyars used in the chronicle) chieftain who was baptised as an Orthodox Christian in Constantinople, probably in 953, and received the title of patricius. He was accompanied on his way back by a Greek Orthodox monk named Hierotheus who had been ordained Metropolitan of Tourkias (the name for Hungary employed by the Byzantines). According to De Administrando Imperio, Tourkias was bordered by the Cris river in the east, and laid a distance of four days from Patzinakia, which had its western limits on the Eastern Carpathian mountains. Gylas constructed a Basilica, and received missionaries in his domains along the river Tisza. The metropolis (diocese) of Tourkias was centered at Bács in today's Hungary. Gylas is identified by some historians with Geula the old from the Hungarian Gestas (see below).
  • Geula the old (also Gyyla, Jula) - mentioned by the Hungarian Gestas - a ruler (dux magnus et potens) in Transylvania during the middle of the 10th century. According to Gesta Hungarorum, Geula was the grandson of Tuhutum, a captain of Árpád who defeated Gelou, the former ruler of Transylvania. According to the Chronicon Pictum, Geula discovered the city of Alba (now Alba Iulia) during a hunt, made it his residence, and enlarged his territory to the Tisza, proving himself an enemy of the Magyars from Pannonia. According to the Gesta Hungarorum, Geula was the father of Sarolt who married Geza, the ruling prince of the Magyars during the last three decades of the tenth century. Although born a pagan, Sarolt was brought up as an Orthodox Christian, writing with cyrilic letters. The name Sarolt is of Turkic origin (šar-oldu means "white weasel")
Image:Képes Krónika 1360 2.jpg
St. Stephen captures Gyula the duke of Transylvania
  • Geula the young (also Gylla, Jula) - mentioned by the Hungarian Gestas - was a ruler in Transylvania during the late 10th century. According to the Gesta Hungarorum, he was the son of Zombor and nephew of Geula the old. Geula the young was an independent ruler, antagonising King Stephen I of Hungary by giving refuge to the latter's political and religious opponents and maintaining control of the economically important Transylvanian salt mines. He was defeated and his domain taken by king in 1003. Two other chronicles maintain that this gyula was the king's uncle. In the first of the these - the Altaich Annals - he is referred to as Iulus rex while the second - written by Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg - gives him the personal name of Prokuj.

An Arabic source Ibn Hayyan's Kitab al-Muktabis also mentions a Gyula among the leaders of a Magyar army, which invaded Iberia in 942.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bóna, István (2001), “II. From Dacia to Erdoelve: Transylvania in the Period of the Great Migrations (271-896)”, in Köpeczi, Béla, History of Transylvania. Volume I. From the Beginnings to 1606, New York: Columbia University Press 
Languages