HUNGARIAN REGALIA

The most important items of the Hungarian regalia are kept at the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest and include:
-Saint Stephen’s Crown (11th century),
-Royal Sceptre (12th century),
-Royal Orb (14th century),
-Hungarian Coronation Sword (early 16th century),
-Hungarian Coronation Mantle (11th century).

Until 1918 the crown of Hungarian queens (early 19th c.) was kept in the Treasury at Vienna from where it was removed in 1918 by King Charles IV (Emperor Charles I of Austria) and taken to his Swiss exile. Its further wherabouts are unknown.


Saint Stephen’s Crown, 11th century.
Queen Zita wearing the crown of Hungarian queen following her coronation in 1916



THE HOLY CROWN OF ST STEPHEN
BY ALEXANDER BORG
Courtesy of Mr. Alexander Borg (This article was first published in "Royalty Digest")

The regalia of the Kingdom of Hungary ranks among the most ancient and complete in Europe. Though not all of it is quite as old as some Hungarians like to believe, parts of the regalia do reach back to the eleventh century, just decades after the founding of the Christian kingdom by King (later Saint) Stephen.

Hungarians have venerated the Holy Crown of St Stephen, not only as a symbol of power, but as a necessary prerequisite to the wielding of royal authority. Whereas in other European states the act of anointing was the most important moment of the coronation, in Hungary there were three laws that had to be complied with in order for the monarch to be considered legitimate: firstly, that he should be crowned with the Holy Crown; secondly, that the Archbishop of Esztergom should perform the coronation; and thirdly, that this should take place in Fehervar. The first of these laws gives us an indication of just how important the crown as an object was, and why it had such a chequered history over the centuries.

The idea that the royal crown is the very crown with which St Stephen was crowned is, sadly, probably a myth. Most of King Stephen's regalia were probably spirited away, to Bohemia or to Rome, during the earlier struggles for the Hungarian throne between 1045 and the early thirteenth century. What we call the Holy Crown of St Stephen today is very likely a replacement crown. lt originated as two separate crowns that were joined together at some point in the thirteenth century. These have been given the names of the corona graeca and the corona latina. The corona graeca is undoubtedly of Byzantine origin and was probably intended as a queen consort's crown. It consists of a gold band, at the top and bottom of which are single rows of pearls. In between these, gemstones and cloisonné enamels alternate, and the band is surmounted with triangular and arched crests made of gold and translucent enamel. lt is the presence of these crests that indicates this was originally a female consort's crown. The front of the crown is surmounted by an arched enamel, which depicts Christ the Pantocrator. The square enamels mounted on the band depict the archangels Michael and Gabriel, and Saints George, Demetrius, Cosmas and Damian. St George is the patron saint of soldiers. He and Dernetrius were thought to protect the empire from foreign incursions; while Cosmas and Damian are known as the physician saints, whose job it is to ensure the mortal well-being of the sovereign. On the back of the crown is a mount similar to that of the Pantocrator, depicting the Byzantine Emperor Michael VII Ducas, and beneath him, in squares fixed to the band, are two lesser mortals, his youthful co-emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitos, and King Geza I of Hungary. The two Byzantine Emperors' titles are rendered in red, while Geza's are in blue. His legend reads: "Geovitzas pistos krales Tourkias", which may be translated as "Geza the Believer King of Turkey." (The reference to Turkey is probably merely a reference to the fact that the Hungarians were not Greeks!) The reigns of all three sovereigns coincided between 1074 and 1077 and the corona graeca can therefore be dated to this period (1). It was possibly the crown of Synadene, the Byzantine wife of King Geza I. Suspended from the band of the corona graeca are nine pendants each made up of three gems: four pendants hang down from each side of the crown and a single one from the back. This was not an unusual feature of Byzantine crowns.


The Hungarian regalia exhibited in the Hungarian Parliament in Budapest
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Niels Diderik)

The corona latina, on the other hand, is much more obscure in its origins and might not have been intended as a crown at all. Traditionally this has been thought to be a remaining fragment of the original crown given to King Stephen by Pope Sylvester II. More recently, other suppositions have been made about it. It may have been fashioned from the ornamental part of a book cover, or a reliquary, or perhaps a portable altar. It could, alternatively, be what is known as an asterisk: in the Orthodox Church, this is a frame placed over Eucharistic bread to prevent the veil that covers the bread from actually touching it. Byzantine religious institutions were known to have survived in predominantly Roman Catholic Hungary long after the Schism that occurred between the two churches. The corona latina is no longer complete. Stylistically Romanesque, it is adorned with plaques depicting eight of the apostles, but there are indications that the missing four might have been attached at some time. Unlike the enamels on the corona graeca, which were most likely manufactured in Constantinople, those on the corona latina are believed to have been produced in Hungary. There is disagreerment on the precise dating of their manufacture, with suggestions ranging from 1160 to 1230.

Originally the crown was surmounted by a cross (or perhaps a lily) which might well have been a reliquary containing a fragment of the True Cross. It may be that this is the reason, why the crown came to be referred to as a holy crown. Queen Isabella broke off the cross in 1551 and gave it to her son, John Sigismund, to wear as a pectoral cross. The current cross is a replacement that dates from this time. We do not know why the cross came to be bent, but a diagram drawn in 1790 shows it already bent.

The crown has had a most turbulent history, due partly to the fact that after the death of the last king of the indigenous Arpad dynasty in 1301, the monarchy became an elective one. In 1307 the crown was captured, along with Otto, the King to whom it belonged, by Ladislas, Voivode of Transylvania, who kept the regalia until 1310, when, under threat of excommunication, he handed them back. The crown's absence caused such difficulties for Charles of Anjou - to whom the throne passed after Otto, and whose assumption of power many Hungarians could not properly accept without coronation with the Holy Crown - that the feudal lords of Hungary considered asking the Pope to ban the crown and deprive it of its holy status. Ladislas returned it in time, however, for this not to have to happen. Later, during a power struggle for the throne in 1440, the crown was stolen by King Albert's widow, Queen Elizabeth, who was pregnant and trying to stave off the possibility of Wladyslaw of Poland being crowned King of Hungary lest she should bear a son. In the ensuing struggle the Queen sent the crown to her relative, Emperor Frederick III, who had designs on the Hungarian throne himself and who refused to hand back the crown until 1464.

After Hungary's defeat by the Turks at the battle of Mohacs in 1526, the crown passed into the hands of Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent, who passed it on to the usurper King Janos Szapolyai, who kept it in Transylvania. A contemporary witness, who felt that Janos Szapolyai was unfit to be king on account of the blood on his hands, writes that the crown began to revolve on his head when placed on it as an indication of his unfitness for high office! When Szapolyai died, his widow handed the crown to the Emperor Ferdinand I and thereafter it was kept in the Habsburg treasury in either Vienna or Prague, along with the rest of the Hungarian regalia. From that time, Pozsony (Bratislava) was the chosen place of coronation for Hungarian kings, and in 1608 it was decided that the insignia should be kept at the castle at Pozsony. From there, it was removed three times: to Vienna and a number of other cities from 1616 to 1622 during a period of unrest and invasion; to Györ in 1644, when Hungary was invaded by the Prince of Transylvania; and to Austria in 1683, during the Turkish advance.

Between 1703 and 1712, the crown was kept in Vienna. The pretext for its removal had been that the castle of Pozsony had been struck by lightning and partially burnt down. This, however, coincided with a war of independence led by Ferenc Rakoczi II, during which the Hungarians attempted to dethrone the Habsburgs but failed. Thereafter, the crown was again deposited at Pozsony until 1784. Emperor Joseph II, with his policy of enlightened absolutism, refused to be crowned, and had all his crowns brought to Vienna, including the Hungarian one. In Hungary he was merely mocked for this, and as he was dying, he rescinded his decrees and allowed the regalia to be returned, which they duly were in 1790. Shortly thereafter, it became the custom to have kings crowned at Buda.

During the Napoleonic Wars the coronation regalia were taken to provincial towns for safety. Subsequently, they were stored at Buda. When it became evident that the Revolution of 1848-9 had failed, the entire regalia were spirited away by rebel ministers who buried them in a chest by a riverbank, and there they remained until 1853, when they were discovered and carried back to Budapest in triumph. The Emperor Francis Joseph was duly crowned in Buda in 1867, although he had reigned since 1848. This was particularly symbolic as the coronation marked the end of the unitary Austrian Empire and the beginning of the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary.


The Hungarian Parliament in Budapest where the Hungarian regalia are kept
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Niels Diderik)

Thereafter, the Holy Crown was used for only one more coronation, that of King Karl in 1916. A set of stamps issued to mark the occasion portrays the young king adorned with St Stephen's crown. During the period when Hungary was a monarchy with out a monarch - from 1919 to 1946, and particularly up to 1944, the Holy Crown remained as the focus of national sovereignty. It appeared on postage stamps and currency, on public buildings and on the national flag. Even Ferenc Szalasi, the leader of the Nazi - inspired Arrow Cross Party, who was installed as leader by Hitler after the Regent, Admiral Horthy, had been arrested, swore an oath on the crown in 1944. As the Russians advanced towards Budapest in 1945, Szalasi and his government fled towards Austria, taking the crown and other regalia with them. Upon the defeat of the Axis, those who had been entrusted with guarding the regalia buried them and turned over the empty chest to the Arnericans, who were unaware that it was empty. Some weeks later, one of those who had buried the regalia disclosed their whereabouts, and they were turned over to the Americans. They were transported to Fort Knox during the Cold War years and held in trust there. After a great deal of negotiation, and perhaps to indicate that Janos Kadar's government had earned the seal of approval, the regalia were returned to Hungary on 6th January, 1978 and are new on display in the capital for all to see.

In the years immediately before the downfall of communism, when the authorities were quietly restoring pre-communist street narnes and dismantling their particular socialist monolith in various other ways, the Holy Crown of St Stephen started making its own quiet reappearance: in the Castle Hill district of Budapest, upon newly restored lamp-posts, the old royal arms, complete with crown, suddenly became visible. The average man in the street did not seem to be able to state categorically whether they had been newly put back, or whether they had always been there but had been allowed to "fade" in the flaking paint and the rust. After the downfall of communism, the hated socialist symbols were quickly dispensed with. After a debate as to whether the old national arms should be restored with the crown or without - there were those who felt that a crown was unnecessary in a democratic republic - the decision was taken to restore the arms in their entirety. One of the first post-communist stamps depicts the arms in glorious colour. Once again, the Holy Crown of St Stephen is to be seen gracing public buildings of every kind, restored to its position as the symbol of Hungarian nationhood.

Notes
1.The whole story of the regalia has by no means been established. Other scholars claim that the corona graeca might be even older, dating back to 1067.

Sources
With the exception of the last paragraph, this article is drawn in its entirety from two books: primarily, The Hungarian Crown and Other Regalia, by Eva Kovacs and Zsuzsa Lovag, Budapest, Corvina, 1988; and to a lesser extent from a book also called The Hungarian Crown and Other Regalia, by Zsuzsa Lovag, Budapest, Hungarian National Museum, 1986.



HUNGARIAN CORONATIONS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER (Year, venue, name of the crowned):
1001 ESZTERGOM: Saint Stephen I
1044 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Peter Orseolo
1047 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Andrew I
1058 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Salomon (first coronation)
1061 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Béla I
1063 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Salomon and Judith Mary of Germany
1074 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Geza I
1077 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Saint Ladislaus
1095 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Koloman the Beauclerc
1114 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Stephen II
1131 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Béla II the Blind
1141 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Geza II
1161 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Stephen III
1161 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ladislaus II
1162 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Stephen IV
1174 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Béla III
1185 and 1196 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Emerich
1204 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ladislaus III
1205 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Andrew II and Gertrude of Andechs
1207 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Béla IV (1st coronation)
1235 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Béla IV and Mary of Nicaea
1266 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Stephen V and Elizabeth
1272 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ladislaus IV the Cumanian and Elizabeth of Sicily
1290 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Andrew III
1296 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Agnes of Austria, consort of King Andrew III
1301 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Wenceslaus I
1305 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Otto I
1309 BUDA: Charles I Robert (the Buda coronation)
1310 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Charles I Robert (Székesfehérvár coronation)
1320 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Elizabeth of Poland, consort of Charles I Robert
1342 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Louis I the Great
1382 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Maria
1385 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Charles II the Little
1387 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Sigismund of Luxembourg
1408 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Barbara of Cilli, consort of King Sigismund of Luxembourg
1437 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Albrecht Habsburg and Elizabeth of Bohemia and Hungary
1440 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ulaszlo I
1440 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ladislaus V the Posthumous
1464 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Matthew I Corvinus
1476 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Beatrice of Naples, consort of King Matthew I Corvinus
1490 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ulaszlo II Rex Bene
1502 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Anne of Foix, consort of King Ulaszlo II
1516 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Louis II
1526 SZEKESFEHERVAR: John I
1527 SZEKESFEHERVAR: Ferdinand I and Anna Jagiellonian
1563 BRATISLAVA: Maximilian I and Maria of Spain
1572 BRATISLAVA: Rudolph I
1608 BRATISLAVA: Matthew II
1613 BRATISLAVA: Anna of Tyrol, consort of Matthew II
1618 BRATISLAVA: Ferdinand II
1622 BRATISLAVA: Eleanor of Mantua, consort of Ferdinand II
1625 SOPRON: Ferdinand III
1638 SOPRON: Maria Anna of Spain, consort of Ferdinand III
1646 BRATISLAVA: Ferdinand IV
1655 BRATISLAVA: Leopold I
1655 SOPRON: Eleanor of Mantua-Nevers-Gonzaga, consort of Ferdinand III
1681 SOPRON: Eleanor Magdalen of the Palatinate-Neuburg, consort of Leopold I
1687 BRATISLAVA: Joseph I
1712 BRATISLAVA: Charles III
1714 BRATISLAVA: Elizabeth Christina of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
1741 BRATISLAVA: Maria Theresa
1790 BRATISLAVA: Leopold II
1792 BUDA: Francis I
1808 BRATISLAVA: Maria Lodovica of Modena, consort of Francis I
1825 BRATISLAVA: Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, consort of Francis I
1830 BRATISLAVA: Ferdinand V
1867 BUDA: Francis Joseph I and Elizabeth of Bavaria
1916 BUDA (BUDAPEST): Charles IV and Zita of Bourbon-Parma




HUNGARIAN CORONATIONS

ESZTERGOM:
1001: Saint Stephen I



BRATISLAVA (POZSONY), ST MARTIN’S CATHEDRAL/SLOVAKIA (Bratislava, Dóm sv. Martina):
1563: Maximilian I and Maria of Spain
1572: Rudolph I
1608: Matthew II
1613: Anna of Tyrol, consort of Matthew II
1618: Ferdinand II
1622: Eleanor of Mantua, consort of Ferdinand II
1646: Ferdinand IV
1655: Leopold I
1687: Joseph I
1712: Charles III
1714: Elizabeth Christina of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
1741: Maria Theresa
1790: Leopold II
1808: Maria Lodovica of Modena, consort of Francis I
1825: Caroline Augusta of Bavaria, consort of Francis I
1830: Ferdinand V

King Joseph II was never crowned


St Martin's Cathedral in Bratislava and the list of monarchs crowned in the church. ©ARB



BUDA (now Budapest), FRANCISCAN CHURCH OF ST MARY MAGDALEN
(Buda, Maria Magdolna templom; the church was destroyed during the Second World War)
1792: Francis I



BUDA/BUDAPEST, ST MATTHEW’S CORONATION CHURCH (Budapest, Matyas-templom, koronazó templom):
1309: Charles I Robert (the Buda coronation)
1867: Francis Joseph I and Elizabeth of Bavaria
1916: Charles IV and Zita of Bourbon-Parma


Budapest, St Matthew's Church
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Niels Diderik)



SOPRON, CHURCH OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN (Sopron, Boldogasszony templom, Kecske templom):
1625: Ferdinand III
1638: Maria Anna of Spain, consort of Ferdinand III
1655: Eleanor of Mantua-Nevers-Gonzaga, consort of Ferdinand III
1681: Eleanor Magdalen of the Palatinate-Neuburg, consort of Leopold I


Sopron, the Church of the Blessed Virgin. ©ARB



SZEKESFEHERVAR, ST PETER'S CHURCH (Székesfehérvár, Szt. Péter-templom):
1207: Béla IV (1st coronation)



SZEKESFEHERVAR CORONATION BASILICA (Székesfehérvár, Koronazó-bazilika):
1044: Peter Orseolo
1047: Andrew I
1058: Salomon (first coronation)
1061: Béla I
1063: Salomon and Judith Mary of Germany
1074: Geza I
1077: Saint Ladislaus
1095: Koloman the Beauclerc
1114: Stephen II
1131: Béla II the Blind
1141: Geza II
1161: Stephen III
1161: Ladislaus II
1162: Stephen IV
1174: Béla III
1185 and 1196: Emerich
1204: Ladislaus III
1205: Andrew II and Gertrude of Andechs
1235: Béla IV and Mary of Nicaea
1266: Stephen V and Elizabeth
1272: Ladislaus IV the Cumanian and Elizabeth of Sicily
1290: Andrew III
1296: Agnes of Austria, consort of King Andrew III
1301: Wenceslaus I
1305: Otto I
1310: Charles I Robert (Székesfehérvár coronation)
1320: Elizabeth of Poland, consort of Charles I Robert
1342: Louis I the Great
1382: Maria
1385: Charles II the Little
1387: Sigismund of Luxembourg
1408: Barbara of Cilli, consort of King Sigismund of Luxembourg
1437: Albrecht Habsburg and Elizabeth of Bohemia and Hungary
1440: Ulaszlo I
1440: Ladislaus V the Posthumous
1464: Matthew I Corvinus
1476: Beatrice of Naples, consort of King Matthew I Corvinus
1490: Ulaszlo II Rex Bene
1502: Anne of Foix, consort of King Ulaszlo II
1516: Louis II
1526: John I
1527: Ferdinand I and Anna Jagiellonian


Remains of Székesfehérvár Coronation Basilica
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Alexander Krischnig)




HUNGARIAN ROYAL RESIDENCES
(The list includes only the most important and existing royal residences)

BUDAPEST:
Royal Castle (Vár; official royal residence from 18th c. to 1918).


The Royal Castle in Budapest
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Niels Diderik)



BRATISLAVA (POZSONY)/SLOVAKIA:
Royal Castle (Hrad; official royal residence 16th-18th c.).


The Royal Castle in Bratislava (Pozsony). ©ARB



GÖDÖLLÖ:
Grassalkovich Mansion (royal residence purchased by the Hungarian state in 1867 for the Hungarian Royal Family. A favourite residence of Queen Elizabeth, consort of Francis Joseph I, king of Hungary and emperor of Austria).


The Palace of Gödölö
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Niels Diderik)



MISKOLC:
Diósgyör Royal Castle (Diósgyöri Vár), formerly outside the city, now at the outskirts of Miskolc. This mediaeval fortress, now partly ruined, served as Hungarian royal residence from 14th to 16th cent.


The Royal Castle of Diósgyör near Miskolc
(reproduced courtesy of Mr Jerzy Pazdziora)





TRANSYLVANIAN REGALIA

The Crown of Stephen Bocskai (c. 1605), a corona clausa, made of gold and adorned with numerous pearls and gems. The crown was commissioned in Persia by the Ottoman sultan, Ahmet I, and sent to the Prince of Transylvania, Stephen Bocskai. The sultan addressed him as King of Hungary. The crown is kept in the Treasury of Vienna’s Hofburg Palace.


The Crown of Transylvania and the Tresury of Vienna's Hofburg Palace where it is kept. ©ARB




TRANSYLVANIAN PRINCELY RESIDENCES
(The list includes only the most important and existing royal residences)

GYULAFEHERVAR/ROMANIA (now Alba Iulia):
Princely Palace (former residence of princes of Transylvania, now state property).


Former Princely Palace at Gyulafehérvár (Alba Iulia). ©ARB



Select Bibliography
Hankó Ildikó: Királyaink tömegsírban, 2004 Magyar Ház