Megjegyzések a Szent László korabeli magyar-bizánci kapcsolatok történetéhez
In the first phase of the reign of Saint Ladislaus — just as in the time of G6za I — Hungarian-Byzantine relations were friendly. These relations deteriorated in the 1080s when the Hungarian king began to support the „Eastern English" who had settled in the north of the Balkan Peninsula and wer...
Elmentve itt :
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| Dokumentumtípus: | Cikk |
| Megjelent: |
University of Szeged, Magyar Medievisztikai Kutatócsoport
Szeged
1992
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| Sorozat: | Acta Universitatis Szegediensis : acta historica
96 |
| Kulcsszavak: | Szent László - király, Magyar-bizánci kapcsolatok - 11. sz., Magyarország története - 11. sz. |
| Tárgyszavak: | |
| Online Access: | http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/2786 |
| Tartalmi kivonat: | In the first phase of the reign of Saint Ladislaus — just as in the time of G6za I — Hungarian-Byzantine relations were friendly. These relations deteriorated in the 1080s when the Hungarian king began to support the „Eastern English" who had settled in the north of the Balkan Peninsula and were striving towards the independence of Byzantium. In the author's opinion the extension of the Hungarian church's supremacy over the Balkan homeland of the English knights resulted above all in the relocation of the archbishopric of Kalocsa in Bics in the second half of the 1080s. In 1091 Ladislaus I used the title „rex Moesiae", by which he referred at once to the conquest of Byzantine territories south of the river Sava and also in this way he announced his imperial claim to the territory of the English knights , which included part of the ancient Roman province of Moesia. According to the author the Hungarian conquest of Croatia in 1091 gravely injured Byzantine imperial interests in the Adriatic region. As a result of expansion in Moesia and Croatia, the Balkan peninsula found itself at the centre or Hungarian foreign policy efforts for a long time. |
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| Terjedelem/Fizikai jellemzők: | 13-24 |
| ISSN: | 0324-6965 |