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  1. Wojciech Kozłowski. In this paper I intend to investigate the methods and strategies Charles I and Wenceslas III used to win and secure the Hungarian throne for themselves through comparison. In 1301, Andrew III of the Árpád Dynasty died, leaving no immediate male heir.

    • Vinni Lucherini
  2. A Concise History of Hungary. This book offers a comprehensive thousand-year history of the land, people, society, culture and economy of Hungary, from its nebulous origins in the Ural Mountains to the elections of 1990 and afterwards. It tells above all the thrilling story of a people which became a great power in the region and then fought ...

  3. Vinni Lucherini. Published 2013. History, Art. The aim of this article is to reconstruct the journey of Charles I, King of Hungary (1310– 1342), from Visegrad to Naples in the year 1333. Through an analysis of documents written in the Angevin Chancellery in Naples from 1331 to 1333 (all physically lost, but accessible through transcripts ...

  4. June 15, 1309 August 27, 1310 Charles I is crowned for the second time, at the Church of Our Lady in Buda, by Tamás, Archbishop of Esztergom, with a crown made for the occasion and blessed by the papal legate, Cardinal Nicholas Boccasino. with the Holy Crown by Dénes Szécsi, Archbishop of Esztergom.

    • Endre Tóth
  5. The Kingdom of Hungary was a monarchy in Central Europe that existed for nearly a millennium, from the Middle Ages into the 20th century. The Principality of Hungary emerged as a Christian kingdom upon the coronation of the first king Stephen I at Esztergom around the year 1000; his family (the Árpád dynasty) led the monarchy for 300 years.

  6. Charles I was a courtly, pious king of Hungary who restored his kingdom to the status of a great power and enriched and civilized it. Charles was the son of Charles Martel of Anjou-Naples and Clemencia of Habsburg, daughter of the Holy Roman emperor Rudolf I. As great-grandson of Stephen V and with.

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  8. Charles I (Charles-Robert, 1301-42) became king. His reign was marked by the restoration of royal authority and the overhaul of State finances to the benefit of the crown. At this point the population reached three million. There were 49 free royal towns as well as 638 market towns, and the peasantry were largely free.

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