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LADISLAUS [I.]

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 59 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LADISLAUS [I.]  , Saint (1040–1095), king of Hungary, the son of Bela I•., king of Hungary, and the
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Polish princess Richeza, was born in Poland, whither his
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father had sought
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refuge, but was recalled by his elder
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brother Andrew I. to Hungary (1047) and brought up there . He succeeded to the
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throne on the
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death of his
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uncle Geza in 1077, as the eldest member of the royal
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family, and speedily won for himself a reputation scarcely inferior to that of Stephen I., by nationalizing
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Christianity and laying the
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foundations of Hungary's
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political greatness . Instinctively recognizing that Germany was the natural enemy of the
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Magyars, Ladislaus formed a close
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alliance with the pope and all the other enemies of the emperor Henry IV., including the anti-emperor Rudolph of Swabia and his chief supporter
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Welf, duke of Bavaria, whose daughter Adelaide he married . She
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bore him one son and three daughters, one of whom, Piriska, married the
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Byzantine emperor John
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Comnenus . The collapse of the German emperor in his struggle with the pope
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left Ladislaus
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free to extend his dominions towards the south, and colonize and Christianize the wildernesses of Transylvania and the
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lower Danube . Hungary was still semi-savage, and her native barbarians were being perpetually recruited from the hordes of Pechenegs, Kumanians and other races which swept over her during the 11th century . Ladislaus himself had fought valiantly in his youth against the Pechenegs, and to defend the
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land against the Kumanians, who now occupied
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Moldavia and Wallachia as far as the Alt, he built the fortresses of Turnu-Severin and Gyula Fehervar . He also planted in Transylvania the Szeklers, the supposed remnant of the ancient Magyars from beyond the
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Dnieper, and founded the bishoprics of Nagy-Varad, or
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Gross-Wardein, and of Agram, as fresh foci of Catholicism in south Hungary and the hitherto uncultivated districts between the Drave and the Save . He subsequently conquered Croatia, though here his authority was questioned by the pope, the Venetian republic and the Greek emperor . Ladislaus died suddenly in 1095 when about to take
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part in the first Crusade . No other Hungarian king was so generally beloved . The whole nation mourned for him for three years, and regarded him as a saint long before his
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canonization .

A whole

cycle of legends is associated with his name . See J . Babik,
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Life of St Ladislaus (Hung.) (Eger, 1892) ; Gyorgy Pray, Dissertatio de St Ladislao (Pressburg, 1774) ; Antal Gan6czy,
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Diss. hist. crit. de St Ladislao (Vienna, 1775) . (R . N .

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