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See also: king of Hungary, was the son of Andrew II., whom he succeeded in 1235
.
During his
See also: father's lifetime he had greatly distinguished himself by his administration of Transylvania, then a See also: wilderness, which, with incredible See also: patience and energy, he colonized and christianized
.
He repaired as far as possible the ruinous effects of his father's wastefulness, but on his accession found everything in the utmost confusion, " the See also: great lords," to cite the old chronicler Rogerius (c
.
1223–1266), " having so greatly enriched themselves that the king was brought to naught." The whole See also: land was full of violence, the very bishops storming See also: rich monasteries at the See also: head of armed retainers
.
See also: Bela resolutely put down all disorder
.
He increased the dignity of the See also: crown by introducing a stricter See also: court See also: etiquette, and its See also: wealth by recovering those of the royal domains which the magnates had appropriated during the troubles of the last reign
.
The See also: pope, naturally on the See also: side of See also: order, staunchlysupported this regenerator of the See also: realm, and in his own See also: brother See also: Coloman, who administered the See also: district of the Drave, Bela also found a loyal and intelligent co-operator
.
He also largely employed Jews and Ishmaelites,l the See also: financial specialists of the See also: day, whom he rewarded with lands and titles
.
The salient event of Bela's reign was the terrible Tatar invasion which reduced three-quarters of Hungary to ashes
.
The terror of their name had long preceded them, and Bela, in 1235 or 1236, sent the Dominican See also: monk Julian, by way of Constantinople, to
See also: Russia, to collect information about them from the " See also: ancient See also: Magyars " settled there, possibly the Volgan Bulgarians
.
He returned to Hungary with the tidings that the Tatars contemplated the immediate See also: conquest of See also: Europe
.
Bela did his utmost to place hisSee also: kingdom in a See also: state of defence, and appealed betimes to the pope, the duke of See also: Austria and the emperor for assistance; but in See also: February and See also: March 1241 the Tatars burst through the Carpathian passes; in
See also: April Bela himself, after a gallant stand, was routed on the See also: banks of the See also: Saki and fled to the islands of Dalmatia; and for the next twelve months the kingdom of Hungary was merely a See also: geographical expression
.
The last twenty-eight years of Bela's reign were mainly devoted to the reconstruction of his realm, which he accomplished with a single-minded thoroughness which has covered his name with See also: glory
.
(See HUNGARY: See also: History.)
Perhaps the most difficult See also: part of his task was the recovery of the western portions of the kingdom (which had suffered least) from the hands of See also: Frederick of Austria, who had seized them as the price of assistance which had been promised but never given
.
First Bela solicited the aid of the pope, but was compelled finally to resort to arms, and See also: crossing the Leitha on the r5th of See also: June 1246, routed Frederick, who was seriously wounded and trampled to See also: death by his own horsemen
.
With him was extinguished the male See also: line of the See also: house of See also: Babenberg
.
In the See also: south Bela was less successful
.
In 1243 he was obliged to cede to Venice, See also: Zara, a perpetual See also: apple of discord between the two states; but he kept his hold upon Spalato and his other Dalmatian possessions, and his wise policy of religious tolerance in Bosnia enabled Hungary to See also: rule that province peaceably for many years
.
The new Servian kingdom of the Nemanides, on the other See also: hand, gave him much trouble and was the occasion of many bloody See also: wars
.
In 1261 the Tatars under Nogai Khan invaded Hungary for the second See also: time, but were defeated by Bela and lost 50,000 men
.
Bela reached the apogee of his See also: political greatness in 1264 when, shortly after his crushing defeat of the Servian king, See also: Stephen L'rosh, he entertained at his court, at See also: Kalocsa, the ambassadors of the newly restored See also: Greek emperor, of the See also: kings of See also: France, See also: Bulgaria and Bohemia and three Tatar rnirzas
.
For a time Bela was equally fortunate in the See also: north-west,where the ambitious and enterprising Piemyslidae had erected a new Bohemian See also: empire which absorbed the territories of the old Babenbergers and was very menacing to Hungary
.
With Ottakar II. in particular, Bela was almost constantly at war for the possession of Styria, which ultimately See also: fell to the Bohemians
.
The last years of Bela's See also: life were embittered by the ingratitude of his son Stephen, who rebelled continuously against his father and ultimately compelled him to See also: divide the kingdom with him, the younger See also: prince setting up a capital of his own at Sarospatak, and following a See also: foreign policy directly contrary to that of his father
.
Bela died on the 3rd of May 1270 in his sixty-See also: fourth See also: year
.
With the See also: people at large he was popular to the last; his services to his country had been inestimable
.
He married, while still crown-prince, Maria, daughter of the Nicaean emperor, See also: Theodore Lascaris, whom his own father brought home with him from his crusade
.
She See also: bore him, besides his two sons Stephen and Bela, seven daughters, of whom St See also: Margaret was the most famous
.
No See also: special monograph for the whole reign exists
.
For the Tatar invasion see the contemporary Rogerius, Epistolae super destructione Regni Hungariae per Tartaros facia (See also: Budapest, 1885)
.
A vivid but somewhat chauvinistic history of Bela's reign will be found in Acsady's History of the Hungarian Realm (Hung.), i
.
2 (Budapest, 1903)
.
(R
.
N
.
B.)
1 See also: Mahommedan itinerant chapmen, from the Volga
.
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