Review
"A unique contribution to medieval studies, highly recommended." --
Julian Wasserman, Loyola University of New Orleans -1998"A unique contribution to medieval studies, highly recommended." (Julian Wasserman, Loyola University of New Orleans, 1998) "It should be read by all those whose interest lies not only with Central Europe, but with medieval history in general." (Pl Engel, Hungarian Academy of Sciences,1998) "This slender volume, the translated work of a remarkable Hungarian historian, contains new information about feudal relations in late Medieval Hungary. This remarkable compilation of the laws of Hungary defined noble privileges - and the fiction of the equality of the nobility - determining social and political relations for centuries to come. There are few translators who could do justice to foreign texts and this book is no exception." --
Professor Joseph Held, State University of New Jersey, 1998"It should be read by all those whose interest lies not only with Central Europe, but with medieval history in general." --
Pal Engel, Hungarian Academy of Sciences -1998
Book Description
In an exploration of the life and customs of the Hungarian nobility, this book compares historical reality and legal literature with the example of one noble kindred: the Elefanthy of northern Hungary (present-day Slovakia). The book begins by outlining the customary laws regarding noble status, inheritance and marriage, as summarized in the famous tripartitus of Stephen Werboczy (1514). The author then compares these norms with the documentary evidence and establishes that the legal literature differs in regard to social mobility and kindred solidarity. With this in mind, the fate of the Elefanthy family is traced through several generations, enabling the author to draw conclusions about the inheritance, the rise and fall of various branches, marriage strategies, and the 'survival skills' of the kindred. In his summary Fugedi outlines some of the major avenues for further research, including the peculiar Hungarian form of retainership (familiaritas), and the relationships between noble families and between the nobility and local communities.