Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Elizabeth the Cuman

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Tenure
  
1270–1272

Parents
  
Koten

Died
  
1290, Hungary


Name
  
Elizabeth Cuman

Signature
  

House
  
Arpad dynasty

Elizabeth the Cuman

Issue
  
Elizabeth, Queen of SerbiaCatherine, Queen of SerbiaMary, Queen of NaplesAnne, Byzantine EmpressLadislaus IV of HungaryAndrew, Duke of Slavonia

Father
  
Seyhan (Cuman chieftain)

Spouse
  
Children
  
Ladislaus IV of Hungary

Similar People
  
Stephen V of Hungary, Ladislaus IV of Hungary, Maria Laskarina, Charles Martel of Anjou, Bela IV of Hungary

Elizabeth the Cuman was the Queen consort of Stephen V of Hungary. She was regent of Hungary during the minority of her son in 1272-1277.

Contents

Elizabeth the Cuman Elizabeth the Cuman Polyvore

Birth and family

Historians point out that a charter of her father-in-law, Béla IV refers to a Cuman chieftain Seyhan as his kinsman, implying that Seyhan was Elizabeth's father. The Cumans were the western tribes of the Cuman-Kipchak confederation. Her people followed a shamanist religion and were considered pagans by contemporary Christians of Europe. She had an unidentified sister, who married Hungarian noble Gregory Monoszló.

In 1238, Khan Köten, her father according to other historians, led the Cumans and a number of other clans in invading the Kingdom of Hungary while fleeing from the advancing hordes of the Mongol Empire. In time, Béla IV of Hungary negotiated an alliance with Köten and his people, granting them asylum in exchange for their conversion to Roman Catholicism and loyalty to the King. The agreement was sealed with the betrothal of Elizabeth to Stephen, eldest son of Béla IV. The agreement seems to have occurred while Stephen was an infant. Elizabeth was unlikely to have been older than her future husband. In 1241, the Mongol invasion of Europe under the leadership of Batu Khan and Subutai began, with Hungary among its primary targets. Köten was assassinated by Hungarian nobles fearing he would lead a defection to the other side.

Queen

Béla IV returned from Austria following the Mongol evacuation. Upon his return to power, Béla began rebuilding his country, including a massive construction campaign which produced the system of castles as a defense against the threat of a Mongol return. Köten was deceased but the betrothal was still in effect. Elizabeth was converted to Roman Catholicism in preparation for her marriage. The marriage of Stephen and Elizabeth occurred in 1253. The groom was twelve-years-old and the bride close in age to him. She became queen of Hungary upon her father-in-law's death on 3 May 1270.

Regent

Stephen died on 6 August 1272. Elizabeth became regent for their ten-year-old son, Ladislaus IV. Her regency lasted until 1277 and saw palace revolutions and civil wars. Her upbringing of her son would cause further problems for his reign. Ladislaus favored the society of the "semi-pagan" Cumans, from whom he was descended through his mother. He wore Cuman dress as his court wear, surrounded himself with Cuman concubines and thus alienated the Hungarian nobility. His later attempts to regain Hungarian loyalty instead alienated parts of the Cumans. He was murdered in his tent by Cumans while camped in Bihar county on 10 July 1290. By that time Elizabeth herself seems to have also been deceased. There is no mention of her in the reign of his successor, Andrew III. There is a tradition that she died in the year 1290.

Children

Elizabeth and Stephen V of Hungary were parents to six known children:

  • Elizabeth (c. 1255 - 1313), married firstly to Zavis Vítkovci, Lord of Rosenberg, Skalitz and Falkenstein, and secondly to King Stefan Uroš II Milutin of Serbia
  • Catherine (c. 1257 - after 1314), married to King Stefan Dragutin of Serbia
  • Maria (c. 1258 - 25 March 1323), married to King Charles II of Naples
  • Anna (c. 1260 - 1281), married to the Byzantine emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos
  • Ladislaus IV (August, 1262 - 10 July 1290), married to Elizabeth of Sicily
  • Andrew (1268 – 1278), Duke of Slavonia
  • References

    Elizabeth the Cuman Wikipedia