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  1. Géza I (Hungarian pronunciation:; Hungarian: I. Géza; c. 1040 – 25 April 1077) was King of Hungary from 1074 until his death. He was the eldest son of King Béla I. His baptismal name was Magnus.

  2. Géza (c. 940 – 997), also Gejza, was Grand Prince of the Hungarians from the early 970s. He was the son of Grand Prince Taksony and his Oriental— Khazar , Pecheneg or Volga Bulgarian —wife. He married Sarolt , a daughter of an Eastern Orthodox Hungarian chieftain.

  3. Sep 9, 2023 · Géza I (Hungarian: I. Géza) (c. 1040 – 25 April 1077), King of Hungary (1074-1077). During King Solomon's rule he governed, as Duke, one third of the Kingdom of Hungary. Afterwards, Géza rebelled against his cousin's reign and his followers proclaimed him king.

  4. Hungarian history. In Hungary: The Christian kingdom. …was taken by Árpád’s great-grandson Géza, who succeeded to the hereditary office of fejedelem (duke) sometime before 972 and reestablished its authority over the tribal chiefs.

  5. Nov 16, 2022 · Géza (c. 945 – 997), Grand Prince of the Magyars (before 972 - 997) [1]. Géza was the son of Taksony of Hungary, Grand Prince of the Magyars and his Pecheneg or Bulgar wife [2]. Géza's marriage with Sarolt, the daughter of Gyula of Transylvania, was arranged by his father.

  6. In Ladislas I. …Hungary, he and his brother Géza refused to contest the throne against their cousin Salomon; however, they quarreled with him and drove him from the country (1073). Géza took the throne, and, on his death, in 1077, Ladislas succeeded him as king of Hungary.

  7. Géza II (Hungarian: II. Géza; Croatian: Gejza II.; Slovak: Gejza II.; 1130 – 31 May 1162) was King of Hungary and Croatia from 1141 to 1162. He was the oldest son of Béla the Blind and his wife, Helena of Serbia. When his father died, Géza was still a child and he started ruling under the guardianship of his mother and her brother, Beloš.

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