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Beloš

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Beloš
Grand Prince of Serbia
comes palatinus of Hungary;
Ban of Croatia
Grand Prince of Serbia
Reign1162
PredecessorUroš II
SuccessorDesa
Ban of Slavonia
Reign1146–1157, 1163
PredecessorAlexius
Apa
SuccessorApa
Ampud
Regent of Hungary
Reign1141–1146
PredecessorBéla II
SuccessorGéza II
Bornafter 1083
Diedbefore 1198
Hungary
Issuedaughter
DynastyVukanović
FatherUroš I
MotherAnna Diogenissa
ReligionEastern Orthodox Christian

Beloš (Template:Lang-sr[a]; fl. 1141–1163), was a Serbian prince and Hungarian palatine (comes palatinus, the highest court title) who served as the Regent of Hungary in 1141-1146, alongside his sister Helena, the queen consort of King Béla II with whom she had a son, Géza II, still an infant upon succession. Beloš held the title of duke (dux), and served as the viceregal (ban) of Croatia in 1142-1158 and briefly in 1163. Beloš, as a member of the Serbian Vukanović dynasty, also briefly ruled his patrimony as the Grand Prince of Serbia in 1162. He lived during a period of Serbian-Hungarian alliance, amid a growing threat from the Byzantines, who had earlier been the overlords of Serbia.

Origin

Beloš was the middle son of Uroš I, the Grand Prince of Serbia (r. ca 1112-1145), and Anna Diogenissa, the granddaughter of Romanos IV Diogenes, the Byzantine Emperor (r. 1068–1071). He had two brothers, Uroš II Primislav and Desa, and two sisters, Helen (the mother of Géza of Hungary) and Maria. Zavida, the father of future Grand Prince Stefan Nemanja, is possibly a fourth brother, this is however undisclosed.

Hungarian Regency

His sister Helen, married the Hungarian heir apparent, Béla II in 1129. In 1131, Béla II was crowned the King of Hungary, succeeding the child-less Stephen II. Beloš joined his sister at the Hungarian court, and received the title of dux (Duke, Herzog). Béla II died on 13 February 1141, and the eldest son and heir Géza II was still a child, thus Helen and Beloš became regents in his place. The brother and sister governed the Kingdom of Hungary until Géza II's coming of age, in September 1146. In 1145, he received the title of comes palatinus (Count palatine), the highest court title of the Kingdom. During his time as tutor to Géza II, the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Comnenus attacked Hungary, supporting the rival Boris Kalamanos (son of Coloman), however Beloš successfully managed to defend Hungary.

Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia, Grand Prince of Serbia

Beloš received the title of Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia (the latter is later given to a younger son of the dynasty), as a viceroy in Croatia, in 1142. In 1149, Géza II and Beloš aids Uroš II in the attacks of Emperor Manuel I on Serbia. In 1154, he assists Ban Borić of Bosnia to conquer Braničevo from the Byzantines.

In 1158 he leaves Hungary and returns to Serbia. When Manuel I had removed his brother Uroš II in 1161, Beloš came to rule briefly in 1162, then gave the throne to his younger brother Desa. He returns to Croatia, once again serving as Ban of Croatia. After the death of Géza II in 1162, Byzantines wanted to instate a member of the dynasty, Stephen IV, who had lived in Constantinople. Beloš ousts Stephen IV after he briefly rules, taking him as prisoner. He releases Stephen IV to the Byzantines after an agreement.

Later years

He married his daughter to the Russian prince Vladimir III Mstislavich in 1150. He founded a monastery in present-day Banoštor (then known as Kewe), which made the locals call the town Banov manastir (Ban's Monastery, Template:Lang-hu), hence the modern name Banoštor. Throughout his tenure in Hungary, he maintained excellent relations with Serbia, which was ruled by his brothers. After 1163 there are no more mentions of him.

See also

Family of Beloš
16. Mihailo I Vojislavljević
Serbian King
8. Petrislav Vojislavljević
Serbian Prince
17. Unnamed Greek wife
4. Vukan Petrislavov
Serbian Grand Prince
2. Uroš I Vukanović
Serbian Grand Prince
1. Beloš of Serbia
24. Constantine Diogenes
strategos of Serbia
12. Romanos IV Diogenes
Byzantine Emperor
25. X Argyra
6. Constantine Diogenes II
26. Alusian Cometopuli
Bulgarian Tsar
13. Anna of Bulgaria
3. Anna Diogenissa
28. Manuel Erotikos Komnenos
14. Ioannis Komnenos
7. Theodora Komnene Dalassene
30. Alexios Charon
imperial lieutenant in Italy
15. Anna Dalassene
31. Adriana Dalassene
Regnal titles
Preceded by Tutor of
King of Hungary
with Helena

1141–1146
Succeeded by
coming of age
Géza II
Preceded by Grand Prince of Serbia
1162
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
(?) Saulus
Palatine of Hungary
1146–1157
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Alexius
Ban of Slavonia
1146–1157
Succeeded by
Apa
Preceded by
Apa
Ban of Slavonia
1163
Succeeded by

Notes

  1. ^
    Name: His given name was Beloš (Белош), also rendered as Beluš or Bjeloš, while in Latin as Albeus. He was the son of Uroš, and a descendant of the Vukanović, hence, his name according to the name system was Beloš Urošević Vukanović.

References

Sources

  • Kalić, J. 1997, "Le joupan Belos", Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta, no. 36, pp. 63–81.
  • V. Klaić, Hrvatski bani za Arpadovića (1102—1301), u Vjesniku kraljevskog zemaljskog arhiva, l (1899), 129—138;
  • Dr. M. Wertner, Ungarns Palatine und Bane im Zeit-alter der Arpaden (Ungarische Revue, 14, 1894, 129—177).