Derencsényi family

The Derencsényi (Croatian: Derenčin) was a Hungarian noble family from the 14th century to the end of the 16th century.

House of Derencsényi
Parent houseGenus Balog(h)
CountryKingdom of Hungary
  • Kingdom of Croatia
Founded14th century
FounderPeter
Final rulerStephen
Titles
Dissolution16th century

Origins

The Derencsényi family belonged to the Balog, a clan of Hungarian nobles, which traced its descent to a German knight, Altmann von Friedberg who immigrated into Hungary during the second reign of King Peter (1044–1046).[1]

The first member of the family was Peter Derencsényi ("of Derencsény"), Vice-voivode of Transylvania who obtained the lordship of Derencsény, Gömör County (today: Drienčany, Slovakia). The Derencsényis also possessed Eszterény (today part of Hrušovo) and Laponya.[2]

Paul Derencsényi lost Derencsény and Kápolna because of his tyrannical behavior in 1544. The related House of Szécsi (Széchy) acquired those lands. The last member of the family was Stephen in the end of the 16th century.

Notable members of the family

gollark: As GEORGE is all, by commutativity of equality I am also GEORGE.
gollark: I am GEORGE, on some weekdays.
gollark: Yes. My taste in memes is perfect and without flaw, and all others are wrong.
gollark: But with advances in deep learning nowadays, and my extremely large dataset of "good" memes, I could probably autofilter them.
gollark: See, it is very easy to obtain vast quantities of memes, by crawling reddit. Unfortunately, they're mostly bad.

See also

References

  1. Simon Kezai, Lázló Veszprémy, Frank Schaer (ed.), Gesta Hungarorum: The Deeds of the Hungarians (Central European Medieval Texts). Central European University Press, 1999. ISBN 963-9116-31-9
  2. Karácsonyi, János: Gömör vármegye nemesi családai.
  3. Engel 1996, p. 192.
  • Marek, Miroslav. "Derencsényi family". Genealogy.EU.
  • Engel, Pál (1996). Magyarország világi archontológiája, 13011457, I. ("Secular Archontology of the Kingdom of Hungary, 13011457, Volume I."). História, MTA Történettudományi Intézete. Budapest. ISBN 963-8312-44-0.


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