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See also: STEPHEN] (977-1038), See also: king of Hungary, was the son of Geza, duke of Hungary, and of Sarolta, one of the few Magyar Christian ladies, who obtained the best teachers for her infant son
.
These preceptors included the
See also: German See also: priest See also: Bruno, the See also: Czech priest Radla, and an See also: Italian knight, Theodate of See also: San Severino, who taught him arms and letters (a holograph See also: epistle by Stephen existed in the Vatican Library as See also: late as 1513)
.
In 996 Stephen married Gisela, the daughter of Duke See also: Henry II. of
See also: Bavaria, and in the following See also: year his See also: father died and the See also: young See also: prince was suddenly confronted by a formidable See also: pagan reaction under Kupa in the districts between the Drave and Lake See also: Balaton
.
Stephen hastened against the rebels, bearing before him the banner of St See also: Martin of
See also: Tours, whom he now See also: chose to be his See also: patron See also: saint, and routed the rebels at Veszprem (998), a victory from which the foundation of the Hungarian See also: monarchy must be dated, for Stephen assumed the royal title immediately afterwards
.
In 1oo1 his See also: envoy Asztrik
obtained See also: Pope See also: Silvester II.'s confirmation of this See also: act of See also: sovereignty
.
Silvester at the same See also: time sent Stephen a consecrated See also: crown, and approved of the erection of an See also: independent Hungarian See also: church, divided into the two provinces of Esztergom and Baca
.
But the power of pagan Hungary could not be broken in a
See also: day
.
The focus of the See also: movement was the Maros region, where the See also: rebel Ajtony built the fortress of Marosvar
.
The struggle proceeded for more than twenty-five years, the difficulties of Stephen being materially increased by the assistance rendered to the rebels by the See also: Greek emperors, his neighbours since their reconquest of See also: Bulgaria
.
As early as 1015 Stephen had appointed the Italian priest Gellert See also: bishop of Maros, but he was unable to establish the missionary in his see till 1030
.
The See also: necessity of christianizing his See also: heathen See also: kingdom by force of arms engrossed all the energies of Stephen and compelled him to adopt a pacific policy towards the emperors of the See also: East and West
.
When the emperorSee also: Conrad, with the deliberate intention of subjugating Hungary, invaded it in 1030, Stephen not only drove him out, but captured Vienna (now mentioned for the first timer and compelled the emperor to cede a large portion of the Ostmark (1031)
.
Of the five sons See also: borne to him by Gisela, only Emerich reached manhood, and this well-educated prince was killed by a See also: wild boar in 1031
.
• Stephen thereupon appointed as his successor his wife's See also: nephew See also: Peter See also: Orseolo, who settled in Hungary, where his intrigues and See also: foreign ways made him extremely unpopular
.
Stephen died at his palace at Esztergom in 1038 and was canonized in 1083
.
For an account of his epoch-making reforms see HUNGARY: See also: History
.
See Gyula Pauler, History of the Hungarian Nation, vol. i
.
(Hung.; Pest, 1893); Lajos Balics, History of the See also: Roman Catholic Church in Hungary, vol. i
.
(Hung.; Pest, 1885) ; Antal P6r, See also: Life of St Stephen (Hung.; Pest, 1871); Janos Kanccsonyi, Documents issued by Stephen I
.
(Hung
.
;Pest, 1892), idem, Life of St Gelleri(Hung
.
; Pest, 1887); E
.
See also: Horn, St Etienne, roi apostolique de Hongrie (See also: Paris, 1899); W
.
J . Winkler de Ketrszynski, Vita sancti See also: Stephan (See also: Cracow, 1897)
.
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