STEPHEN III BáTHORY
'Stephen III Báthory' (Hungarian: '''Báthory István'''; d. 11 November 1444) was a Hungarian nobleman and commander. His most prestigious position was Palatine of Hungary.
Stephen belonged to the Ecsed branch of the Báthory family. His parents were John V Báthory and Catherine, daughter of John Zanti. His older brother Bartholomew I Báthory fell in 1432 fighting against the Hussites.
Stephen first appears in 1419 as ''dapiferorum regalium magister'' (mater of the royal stewards), aand later as a royal judge.
In 1435 he was appointed Palatine of Hungary by King Sigismund.
Sigismund's short-lived succesor, King Albert of Habsburg awarded him with the castle Bujak.
In 1444 he was the flag-bearer of Wladyslaw, King of Poland and Hungary in the Battle of Varna, in which he fell alongside his King.
Stephen was married twice:
#Ursula, daughter of George de Kis Tapolcsa
#Barbara, widowed Csapy
After his death, his second wife Barbara went to court against Christine, the widow of Stephen's younger brother Thomas, with which she disputed a mill's revenue.
Stephen fathered nine children:
★ Catherine, who married George of Marczal
★ Ladislaus (d. 1474), supreme count of the counties Szatmár and Szarand
★ Andrew III Báthory (d. 1495), who was confirmed in his possession of Bujak. He is the only one among Stephen's son to produce male isue.
★ Stephen V Báthory (d. 1493), served first as royal judge, excelled as a military commander and was made Voivod of Transylvania, the first of a long line of Báthory rulers of that country.
★ Peter Báthory
★ Thomas II Báthory, whose daughter married into the Zanoler family
★ Paul I Báthory, surnamed ''the Mute''
★ Nicolaus III Báthory (d. 1506) was bishop first of Syrmia and after 1474 of Vác, rennaisance scholar and advisor to King Matthias Corvinus
★ Margaretha, who married first Nucgaek Szilággi, and then Paul Banfi.
★ Moritz Wertner, "Urgeschlechter in Siebenbürgen. 10. Gutkeled: a) Báthory.", in Archiv des Vereins für siebenbürgische Landeskunde. Neue Folge, Bd. 29, Heft 1 (1899), Hermannstadt 1899 - quoted in Michael Farin, ''Heroine des Grauens. Elisabeth Báthory''. Munich: P. Kirchheim, 2003. ISBN 3-87410-038-3.
Stephen belonged to the Ecsed branch of the Báthory family. His parents were John V Báthory and Catherine, daughter of John Zanti. His older brother Bartholomew I Báthory fell in 1432 fighting against the Hussites.
Stephen first appears in 1419 as ''dapiferorum regalium magister'' (mater of the royal stewards), aand later as a royal judge.
In 1435 he was appointed Palatine of Hungary by King Sigismund.
Sigismund's short-lived succesor, King Albert of Habsburg awarded him with the castle Bujak.
In 1444 he was the flag-bearer of Wladyslaw, King of Poland and Hungary in the Battle of Varna, in which he fell alongside his King.
Stephen was married twice:
#Ursula, daughter of George de Kis Tapolcsa
#Barbara, widowed Csapy
After his death, his second wife Barbara went to court against Christine, the widow of Stephen's younger brother Thomas, with which she disputed a mill's revenue.
Stephen fathered nine children:
★ Catherine, who married George of Marczal
★ Ladislaus (d. 1474), supreme count of the counties Szatmár and Szarand
★ Andrew III Báthory (d. 1495), who was confirmed in his possession of Bujak. He is the only one among Stephen's son to produce male isue.
★ Stephen V Báthory (d. 1493), served first as royal judge, excelled as a military commander and was made Voivod of Transylvania, the first of a long line of Báthory rulers of that country.
★ Peter Báthory
★ Thomas II Báthory, whose daughter married into the Zanoler family
★ Paul I Báthory, surnamed ''the Mute''
★ Nicolaus III Báthory (d. 1506) was bishop first of Syrmia and after 1474 of Vác, rennaisance scholar and advisor to King Matthias Corvinus
★ Margaretha, who married first Nucgaek Szilággi, and then Paul Banfi.
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| References |
References
★ Moritz Wertner, "Urgeschlechter in Siebenbürgen. 10. Gutkeled: a) Báthory.", in Archiv des Vereins für siebenbürgische Landeskunde. Neue Folge, Bd. 29, Heft 1 (1899), Hermannstadt 1899 - quoted in Michael Farin, ''Heroine des Grauens. Elisabeth Báthory''. Munich: P. Kirchheim, 2003. ISBN 3-87410-038-3.
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