Matthew III Csák

The native form of this personal name is Csák Máté. This article uses the Western name order.
Matthew (III) Csák
Palatine of Hungary
Reign 1296–1297
1302–1310
Predecessor Nicholas I Kőszegi (1st term)
Stephen Ákos (2nd term)
Successor Amade Aba &
Nicholas I Kőszegi (1st term)
James Borsa (2nd term)

Issue

Matthew IV
a daughter
Noble family gens Csák
Father Peter I
Mother unknown
Born between 1260 and 1265
Died 18 March 1321

Máté Csák or Matthew III Csák (between 1260–65 – 18 March 1321;[1] Hungarian: Csák (III) Máté, Slovak: Matúš Čák III), also Máté Csák of Trencsén[1] (Hungarian: trencséni Csák (III) Máté, Slovak: Matúš Čák III Trenčiansky) was a Hungarian[2] oligarch who ruled de facto independently the north-western counties of Medieval Hungary (today roughly the western half of present-day Slovakia and parts of Northern Hungary).[3] He held the offices of master of the horse (főlovászmester) (1293–1296), palatine (nádor) (1296–1297, 1302–1310) and master of the treasury (tárnokmester) (1310–1311).[4] He could maintain his rule over his territories even after his defeat at the Battle of Rozgony against King Charles I of Hungary. In the 19th century, he was often described as a symbol of the struggle for independence in both the Hungarian and Slovak literatures.[3]

Early years

He was a son of the Palatine Peter I Csák, a member of the Hungarian[2] genus ("clan") Csák.[4] Around 1283, Máté and his brother, Csák, who later served as bearer of the sword (kardhordó) in 1293,[5] inherited their father's possessions, Komárom (Slovak: Komárno) and Szenic (Slovak: Senica).[3] At about that time, they also inherited their uncles' (Matthew II and Stephen I Csák) possessions around Nagytapolcsány (Slovak: Veľké Topoľčany, now Topoľčany), Hrussó (Slovak: Hrušovo) and Tata.[3] Their father had started to expand his influence over the territories that surrounded his possessions, but following his death, the members of the rival Kőszegi family from the Héder clan strengthened in Pozsony and Sopron counties.[3]

King Andrew's partisan

Trenčín (Trencsén) Castle

In 1291, Máté took part in the campaign of King Andrew III of Hungary against Austria.[4] In the next year, when Nicholas I Kőszegi rebelled against King Andrew III and occupied Pozsony (German: Pressburg, Slovak: Prešporok, today Bratislava) and Detrekő (Slovak Plaveč), Máté managed to reoccupy the castles on behalf of the king.[4] Henceforward, the Danube became the border between the developing domains of the Kőszegi and Csák families.[3] King Andrew appointed him to master of the horse and he also became the ispán (comes) of Pozsony County (1293–1297).[5] On 28 October 1293, Máté issued a charter and promised that he would respect the liberties of the burghers of the city of Pozsony that King Andrew had confirmed before.[3]

During this period, Máté started to augment his possessions not only by the king's donations, but also by using force.[3] In 1296, he bought Vöröskő (Slovak: Červený Kameň) from its former holders for money; however, contemporary documents prove that he enforced several neighboring landowners to transfer their possessions either to him or his partisans.[3] He even was ready to occupy territories; e.g., around 1296, he took possession of the lands of the Archabbot of Pannonhalma north of the Danube and he also trespassed the possessions of the Collegiate Chapter of Pressburg.[3]

Around the end of 1296, Máté acquired Trencsén (Slovak: Trenčín) and afterwards, he was named after the castle.[3] In 1296 King Andrew appointed him Palatine,[4] but shortly afterwards the king absolved one of Máté's opponents, Andrew of Gimes from the Hont-Pázmány clan of all responsibility for the damage he had caused to Máté.[3] The document proves that the relationship of the king and Máté worsened and the king deprived him of his office of Palatine in 1297.[3] At the same time, the king granted Pozsony County to his queen, Agnes of Austria.[3]

The kings' rival

Máté continued to style himself Palatine even after 1297.[1] He managed to overcome Andrew of Gimes and his family and thus expanded his influence along the Zsitva River (Žitava River).[3]

Domain of Máté Csák

In 1298, King Andrew III allied himself with King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia; the alliance was probably directed against Máté whose possessions lay between the two monarchs' territories.[3] In the next year, King Andrew sent his troops against Máté, but he could resist the attack;[1] only Pozsony County was reoccupied by the king's partisans.[3]

Before 1300, Máté entered into negotiations with the representatives of King Charles II of Naples and reassured him that he would assist the claim of his grandson, Charles for the throne against King Andrew III.[3] However, in the summer of 1300, Máté visited Andrew's court, but the king, the last male member of the Árpád dynasty, died on 14 January 1301, and following his death a struggle commenced among the several claimants for the throne.[3] At that time, Máté's brother, Csák died childless and therefore Máté inherited his possessions.[3]

Following the death of King Andrew III, Máté became the Neapolitan prince's follower, but shortly afterwards, he joined the party that offered the crown to Wenceslaus, the son of King Wenceslaus II of Bohemia.[3] He was present at the coronation of the young Bohemian prince (27 August 1301) who granted him Trencsén and Nyitra counties;[4] therefore he became the lawful holder of all the royal castles and possessions in the two counties.[3] In the following years, Máté Csák occupied the possessions of the Balassa family in the two counties and he also took several castles in Nógrád and Hont counties.[3]

King Wenceslaus could not strengthen his rule against his opponent and he had to leave the kingdom (August 1304).[3] By that time Máté Csák had already left King Wenceslaus' party,[4] and shortly afterwards he made an alliance with Duke Rudolph III of Austria against the king of Bohemia.[3] Although he did not join to King Charles' partisans, but his troops took part in the campaign King Charles and Duke Rudolph lead against the Kingdom of Bohemia (September–October 1304).[3] The internal struggles, however, did not end, because on 6 December 1305 a new claimant, Otto III, Duke of Bavaria was crowned King of Hungary.[3] Máté Csák did not accept King Otto's rule, and his troops struggled together with King Charles' armies who occupied some castles on the northern part of the kingdom.[3]

On 10 October 1307, an assembly confirmed King Charles' rule, but Máté Csák and some other oligarchs (Ladislaus Kán, Ivan and Henry II Kőszegi) absented themselves from the assembly.[3] In 1308, Pope Clement V sent a legate to the kingdom in order to strengthen King Charles' position.[3] The legate, Cardinal Gentilis de Montefiori managed to persuade Máté Csák to accept King Charles' rule at their meeting in the Pauline Monastery of Kékes (10 November 1307).[3] Although Máté Csák himself was not present at the following assembly (27 November) in Pest where King Charles' reign was again confirmed, he sent his envoy to attend at the meeting.[3] Shortly afterwards, King Charles appointed Máté Palatine of the kingdom.[4] However, at the new coronation of King Charles (15 June 1309), he was only represented by one of his followers.[3] In the next year, King Charles appointed him to the office of master of the treasury.[1]

Máté Csák did not want to accept the king's rule; therefore, he did not attend King Charles' third coronation, when he was crowned with the Holy Crown of Hungary (27 August).[3] Moreover, Máté Csák still continued to expand the borders of his domains and occupied several castles in the northern part of the kingdom.[3] On 25 June 1311, he led his troops towards Buda and pillaged the surrounding territories and on this account the Cardinal Gentilis excommunicated him[1] on 6 July 1311.[3] However, he did not accept the punishment and persuaded some priests to continue their services on his territories.[3]

The indignant oligarch pillaged the possessions of the Archdiocese of Esztergom.[3] When the citizens of Kassa (Slovak: Košice) killed Amade Aba, the powerful oligarch of the north-eastern parts of the kingdom (5 September 1311) Máté made an alliance with his sons against the king who sided with Kassa.[3] Máté's troops liberated Sáros Castle (Slovak: Šarišský hrad), besieged by the king, and then marched against Kassa.[3] At the Battle of Rozgony, the king's armies defeated Máté's and his allies' troops (15 June 1312).[1] Following the battle, the king occupied the territories of Amade Aba's sons.[3] Although Máté's domain stayed undisturbed, the occupation of the neighboring territories by the king hindered his expansion.[3]

His last years

In 1314, the king's armies invaded Máté Csák's domain, but they could not occupy it.[3] In the meantime, Máté occupied some fortresses in the March of Moravia and therefore King John of Bohemia also invaded his territories (May 1315).[3] The Czech armies defeated his troops (whom he encouraged in Hungarian language) at Holics but they could not occupy the fortress.[3] King Charles also invaded Máté's domain and occupied Visegrád.[3]

The king attempted to weaken the unity among Máté's partisans through diplomatic means. According to a royal charter issued in September 1315, Charles I deprived three of the oligarch's servients of all their possessions and gave those to Palatine Dominic Rátót, because they absolutely supported Máté Csák's all efforts and did not ask for the king's grace. One of these sanctioned nobles was Felician Záh, who later unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate the entire royal family in 1330.[3]

In 1316, some of his former followers rebelled against Máté, and although he occupied their castle at Jókő, but some of them left his domain.[3] In 1317, he invaded the possessions of the Diocese of Nyitra, and his troops occupied and pillaged its see.[3] As a consequence, the Bishop of Nitra excommunicated him and his followers again.[3]

The king's armies continued to invade his territories and occupied Sirok and Fülek (Fiľakovo), but Máté could maintain his rule over his territories until his death.[3]

His domain

Máté Csák's domain had been developing gradually before the Battle of Rozgony, and it reached its greatest territorial extent around 1311.[3] By that time, 14 counties of the kingdom, and about 50 castles were under his and his followers' rule.[1]

Around 1297, he organized his own court, similar to the king's court and he usurped royal prerogatives on his domains, similarly to other oligarchs (e.g., Amade Aba, Nicholas Kőszegi) of the beginning of the 14th century.[3] Thus he became the de facto ruler of his domain and he made alliances independently of the king.[3] He refused to accept appeals against his decisions to the king and he denied to put claimants in possession of lands the king had granted them on his territories.[3] Although some of the local landowners did not want to accept Máté's supremacy, but sooner or later, they had to leave their possessions.[3]

Following his death, his cousin Stephen Sternberg (or Stephen the Bohemian) became the lord of his domain,[1] because his son (Matthew IV) had died and his grandsons (Matthew V and James) were still minors at the time of his death in 1321.[3] However, Stephen Sternberg could not resist the king's invasion and Máté Csák's former domain was occupied by the king's armies in some months.[3]

Legacy in the Slovak historiography

During the period of Slovak national revival in the 18th and 19th centuries, Máté Csák and his "realm" became the symbols of Slovak independence with the purpose to expropriate his historical heritage for the expectant national state of Slovakia.[3] According to Slovak historian Peter Macho, the national myth that a separate and independent Slovak state existed within Hungary during the age of "feudal anarchy" is very impressive.[6] It was Alexander Boleslavín Vrchovský, a Slovak lawyer from Pest, Hungary, who first proposed in 1836–37 at the Evangelical Lyceum in Pressburg that Máté Csák was a "Slovak king".[7] Later numerous Slovak poets and writers claimed the Hungarian oligarch for the Slovak national history.[7] Ľudovít Štúr, the most prominent personality in the period of the Slovak national revival presented Máté Csák in his poem Matúš z Trenčína ("Matúš of Trenčín") as champion of Slovak interests, predicting that the Slovak nation "will be free one day".[8] Ján Nepomuk Bobula, a Slovak journalist in Pest, described Máté Csák as an invincible patriot who fought for the Slovak nation's freedom until he had been betrayed by which his fate was sealed.[6] In 1881 Czech archeologist Josef Ladislav Píč identified the magnate's Upper Hungarian "realm" as "the first Slovakia independent of the Hungarian King".[7] Slovak historian and linguist Jozef Škultéty elevated Máté Csák into the Slovak national pantheon in 1938 with his work titled Matúš Čák Trenčiansky a jeho vláda na Slovensku ("Matúš Čák of Trenčín and His Rule in Slovakia").[7] The view of the older Slovak histography is that under the decades of Máté Csák's rule "Slovakia was an independent country" but after being defeated "Slovakia became part of Hungary again".[9] According to a new generation of Slovak scholars:[10]

Matúš Čák was hardly a Slovak patriot as some 19th century historians have claimed. He pursued the ordinary goals of a Hungarian magnate and never did establish a sufficiently well-defined territory or political organization to support any Slovak claims to a heritage.
Anton Špiesz, Dušan Čaplovič, Ladislaus J. Bolchazy; Illustrated Slovak history: a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe (2006); p. 51.

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 1.10 Kristó, Gyula; Engel, Pál; Makk, Ferenc. Korai magyar történeti lexikon (9–14. század).
  2. 2.0 2.1 Peter A. Toma; Dušan Kováč (2001). Slovakia: from Samo to Dzurinda. Hoover Institution Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-8179-9951-3. ...The greatest magnates were Matus Cak (Matthew Cak) of Trencin and the Amadeis of the Aba...The Caks, of Magyar origin, had begun their rise during the rules of Stephen V and Ladislas IV...
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 3.26 3.27 3.28 3.29 3.30 3.31 3.32 3.33 3.34 3.35 3.36 3.37 3.38 3.39 3.40 3.41 3.42 3.43 3.44 3.45 3.46 3.47 3.48 3.49 3.50 3.51 3.52 3.53 3.54 3.55 3.56 3.57 3.58 Kristó, Gyula. Csák Máté.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Markó, László. A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Zsoldos, Attila. Magyarország világi archontológiája, 1000–1301.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Macho, Peter; KREKOVIČ, E.; MANNOVÁ, E.; KREKOVIČOVÁ, E. (2005). "Matúš Čák Trenčiansky – slovenský kráľ?". Mýty naše slovenské. Bratislava: Academic Electronic Press. pp. 104–110. ISBN 80-88880-61-0.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Kamusella, Tomasz (2009). The Politics of Language and Nationalism in Modern Central Europe. Basingstoke, UK (Foreword by Professor Peter Burke): Palgrave Macmillan. p. 815. ISBN 978-0-230-55070-4.
  8. Stanislav J. Kirschbaum (16 September 1996). A history of Slovakia: the struggle for survival. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-312-16125-5.
  9. Joseph M. Kirschbaum (1960). Slovakia: nation at the crossroads of central Europe. R. Speller. p. 185. Matus Cak succeeded in upholding his rule in Slovakia until 1321, but was defeated, and Slovakia became a part of old Hungary
  10. Anton Špiesz; Duśan Čaplovič; Ladislaus J. Bolchazy (30 July 2006). Illustrated Slovak history: a struggle for sovereignty in Central Europe. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-86516-426-0.

Sources

External links

Matthew III
Born: between 1260 and 1265 Died: 18 March 1321
Political offices
Preceded by
Thomas Hont-Pázmány
Master of the horse
1293–1296
Succeeded by
John Csák
Preceded by
Apor Péc
Ispán of Pozsony
1293–1297
Succeeded by
Demetrius Balassa
Preceded by
Nicholas I Kőszegi
Palatine of Hungary
alongside Amade Aba in 1296

1296–1297
Succeeded by
Amade Aba
Nicholas I Kőszegi
Preceded by
Stephen Ákos
Palatine of Hungary
alongside others

1302–1310
Succeeded by
James Borsa
Preceded by
Ugrin Csák
Master of the treasury
1310–1311
Succeeded by
Nicholas II Kőszegi