The realm of St. Stephen : a history of medieval Hungary, 895-1526
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The realm of St. Stephen : a history of medieval Hungary, 895-1526
(The international library of historical studies, 19)
I.B. Tauris, 2001
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Note
Bibliography: p. 396-429
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a comprehensive textbook on the historiography of medieval Eastern and Central Europe. It traces the medieval kingdom of Hungary - which covered the vast territory of the Carpathian basin - from the conquest by the Magyar tribes in 895 until defeat by the ottomans at the battle of Mohacs in 1526. The book is divided into two broad periods: the "national" Magyar kings of the Arpadian dynasty who had ruled from 895 were replaced in 1301 by rulers from a number of European dynasties, culminating in the radical changes to political and social structures of the 13th century.
Table of Contents
- The Carpathian basin before the Hungarians
- the pagan Hungarians
- the first century of the Christian kingdom
- the 12th century
- early Hungarian society
- the age of the golden bulls
- the last Arpadians
- Charles I of Anjou (1301-1342)
- the new monarchy
- Louis the Great (1342-1382)
- the monarchy of Louis the Great
- the years of crises (1382-1403)
- Sigismund's consolidation
- Sigismund's foreign policy (1403-1437)
- trade and towns
- the rural landscape
- the age of John Hunyadi (1437-1457)
- King Matthias Corvinus (1458-1490)
- Hungary at the end of the Middle Ages
- the age of the Jagiellonian kings (1490-1526).
by "Nielsen BookData"