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  1. Matthew Csák did not want to accept the king's rule; therefore, he did not attend King Charles' third coronation, when he was crowned with the Holy Crown of Hungary (27 August). Moreover, Matthew Csák still continued to expand the borders of his domains and occupied several castles in the northern part of the kingdom. [3]

  2. Felician became the familiaris and confidant of Matthew Csák. On 10 November 1308, Felician attended a meeting in the Pauline Monastery of Kékes at the side of his lord at which the papal legate, Cardinal Gentile Portino da Montefiore, managed to persuade Matthew to accept King Charles' rule.

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  4. condition but their faith. They recognized Him as the King of heaven come to earth, and, like the man with leprosy in our passage, they believed in Him with their whole hearts. THE KING OF KINGS: A STUDY OF MATTHEW The King’s Kingdom: A Study of Matthew 8–13 Study One Out of the Crowd . . . a Leper! Matthew 4:23–25; 8:1–4

  5. Jun 1, 2022 · After the death of the most powerful oligarch, Matthew Csák, in 1321, Charles became the undisputed ruler of the whole kingdom, with the exception of Croatia where local noblemen were able to preserve their autonomous status.

  6. The new king had no intention of sacrificing prudence to vindictiveness. But the regicides who had signed his father’s warrant of execution – 40 of whom were still alive – lay beyond the pale.

  7. The Tripartitum gave Hungary's king and nobles, or magnates, equal shares of power: the nobles recognized the king as superior, but in turn the nobles had the power to elect the king. The Tripartitum also freed the nobles from taxation, obligated them to serve in the military only in a defensive war, and made them immune from arbitrary arrest .

  8. How Mendelssohn helped bring Bach's St Matthew Passion back to life - Classical Music.

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