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See also: king of Hungary, was the second son of King Geza II
.
Educated at the
See also: Byzantine See also: court, where he had been compelled to seek See also: refuge, he was fortunate enough to win the friendship of the brilliant emperor See also: Manuel who, before the See also: birth of his own son Alexius, intended to make See also: Bela his successor and betrothed him to his daughter
.
Subsequently, however, he married the handsome and promising youth to See also: Agnes of Chatilion, duchess of See also: Antioch, and in 1173 placed him, by force of arms, on the Hungarian See also: throne, first expelling Bela's younger See also: brother Geza, who was supported by the Catholic party
.
Initiated from childhood in all the arts of See also: diplomacy at what was then the focus of See also: civilization, and as much a See also: warrior by nature as his imperial kinsman Manuel, Bela showed himself from the first fully equal to all the difficulties of his See also: peculiar position
.
He began by adopting Catholicism and boldly seeking the assistance of See also: Rome
.
He then made what had hitherto been an elective a hereditary throne by crowning his infant son Emerich his successor
.
In the beginning of his reign he adopted a prudent policy of amity with his two most powerful neighbours, the emperors of the See also: East and West, but the See also: death of Manuel in 1180 gave Hungary once more a See also: free See also: hand in the affairs of the See also: Balkan Peninsula, her natural sphere of influence
.
The attempt to recover Dalmatia, which involved Bela in two bloody See also: wars with Venice (1181–88 and 1190-91), was only partially successful
.
But he assisted the Rascians or Serbs (see HUNGARY: See also: History) to throw off the See also: Greek yoke and establish a native dynasty, and attempted to made See also: Galicia an appanage of his younger son Andrew
.
It was in Bela's reign that the emperor See also: Frederick I., in the spring of 1189, traversed Hungary with roo,000 crusaders, on which occasion the country was so well policed that no harm was done to it and the inhabitants profited largely from their commerce with the See also: German See also: host
.
In his last years Bela assisted the Greek emperor Isaac II .See also: Angelus against the Bulgarians
.
His first wife See also: bore Bela two sons, Emerichyand Andrew
.
On her death he married See also: Margaret of See also: France, See also: sister of King See also: Philip
See also: Augustus
.
Bela was in every sense of the word a See also: great statesman, and his court was accounted one of the most brilliant in See also: Europe
.
For an account of his See also: internal reforms see HUNGARY
.
Though the poet Ede See also: Szigligeti has immortalized his memory in the See also: play Bela III., we have no See also: historical monograph of him, but in Ignacz Acs'ady, History of the Hungarian See also: Realm (Hung.), i
.
2 (See also: Budapest, 1903), there is an excellent account of his reign
.
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