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  1. Judge royal. References. Sources. Alexander Köcski. Alexander (II) Köcski ( Hungarian: Köcski (II.) Sándor; died January or February 1328) was an influential Hungarian nobleman and soldier, who served as Judge royal from 1324 until his death.

  2. Simon's only daughter Clara married the military leader Alexander Köcski, Paul's predecessor in the position of Judge royal. Michael and his wife, an unidentified Austrian noblewoman, had five sons and a daughter. Unlike their cousins, his sons did not run into a bright career, probably due to their relatively early death.

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  3. Mar 7, 1991 · March 7, 1991. Drug murder could lead to first execution under new federal law. CHICAGO -- Alexander 'Ghost' Cooper was convicted Thursday on 44 counts of a federal drug-murder indictment,...

  4. In the Late Middle Ages, the Kingdom of Hungary, a country in Central Europe, experienced a period of interregnum in the early 14th century. Royal power was restored under Charles I (1308–1342), a scion of the Capetian House of Anjou. Gold and silver mines opened in his reign produced about one third of the world's total production up until ...

  5. Andrew Kőszegi. Andrew Kőszegi ( Hungarian: Kőszegi András; died May/December 1324) was a Hungarian lord in the early 14th century, who was a member of the powerful Kőszegi family. His failed rebellion against Charles I of Hungary in 1317 contributed to the gradual collapse of the family's rule in Transdanubia .

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    • 1314–1317, 1321–1324
  6. Alexander (II) Köcski (Hungarian: Köcski (II.) Sándor; died January or February 1328) was an influential Hungarian nobleman and soldier, who served as Judge royal from 1324 until his death. Initially, as a familiaris and possibly distant relative of the powerful Kőszegis, he did not involve in the conflicts of civil war which characterized the Hungarian kingdom in the first two decades of ...

  7. After his ultimate victory over most of the oligarchs, including the Kőszegi kinship, Charles I turned against Nicholas and declared him as treacherous. In early 1321, Charles' generals, Alexander Köcski and Lawrence Csornai (Nicholas' former familiaris) again led a royal campaign in Transdanubia. At first, they captured Pölöske, then ...

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