Sie ist verheiratet mit Stephen V of Hungary and Croatia.
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Kind(er):
Erzsâ©bet of the Kumans, Queen consort of Hungary is your 23rd great grandmother.
You
‰ ᆒ Henry Marvin Welborn
your father ·Üí Henry Marvin Welborn, Sr.
his father ·Üí Calhoun H Welborn
his father ·Üí Younger Welborn
his father ·Üí William "Billy" Welborn
his father ·Üí Aaron Welborne
his father ·Üí James Welborn
his father ·Üí Ann B. Wellborn
his mother ·Üí Jane Ann Crabtree
her mother ·Üí Grace Halstead
her mother ·Üí Mary Courtenay
her mother ·Üí John Stucley, of Affeton
her father ·Üí Sir Lewis Stukley
his father ·Üí Frances Culpepper
his mother ·Üí Catherine Saint Leger
her mother ·Üí Sir George Neville, 5th and de jure 3rd Baron Bergavenny
her father ·Üí George Neville, 4th and de jure 2nd Baron Bergavenny
his father ·Üí Edward Neville, 3rd Baron of Bergavenny
his father ·Üí Joan Beaufort, Countess of Westmorland
his mother ·Üí John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster
her father ·Üí Philippa of Hainault, Queen consort of England
his mother ·Üí Jeanne de Valois, Countess of Hainault
her mother ·Üí Marguerite d'Anjou, comtesse d'Anjou et du Maine
her mother ·Üí Mary of Hungary, Queen of Naples
her mother ·Üí Erzsâ©bet of the Kumans, Queen consort of Hungary
her mother
Erzsâ©bet of the Kumans
Gender:
Female
Birth:
1239
Cumania
Death:
1290 (50-51)
Hungary
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Köten II, Khan of the Kumans and Erzsebet of Galicia, Russian Princess
Wife of Steven V, King of Hungary and Croatia
Mother of Katarina Uroâ°eviÆá (Arpad); Elizabeth Arpad; Mary of Hungary, Queen of Naples; âÅRPâÅD (hâ°zi) Anna, Empress Consort of Byzantine Emperor; âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) IV. 'Kââ«n' Lâ°szlâ⥠- Ladislav IV "the Cuman", King of Hungary; âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) Andrâ°s, Duke of Slavonia; âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) N/a, Princess of Hungary; âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) Salamon, Prince of Hungary; âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) Kâ°lmâ°n, Prince of Hungary and âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) Raimond, Prince of Hungary
Half sister of .... of JONAS of the Kumans; ÅúÅâÅΩÅâ¥âÉâà and Maria Kotjanovna of Polowzes (Sutoevich)
https://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kun_Erzsâ©bet_magyar_kirâ°lynâ©
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_the_Cuman
âÅRPâÅD(hâ°zi) = Arpad (home)
https://www.geni.com/people/KUN-Erzsâ©bet-of-the-Kumans-Queen-consort-of-Hungary/6000000002304359012
Magyar / Hungarian
Kun Erzsâ©bet magyar kirâ°lynâ©
English
Elizabeth the Cuman
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http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p405.htm#i5409
Erzsebet of the Kumans
b. 1240, d. after 1290
Erzsebet of the Kumans|b. 1240\nd. a 1290|p405.htm#i5409|Kuthen, Kahn of the Polowets|b. 1214\nd. 1241|p392.htm#i5410|N. N. of Galicia||p198.htm#i22328|||||||Mstislav U. M., Prince of Novgorod and Galicia|b. c 1153\nd. 1228|p389.htm#i22330|N. N. of the Polovets||p198.htm#i22331|
Father Kuthen, Kahn of the Polowets1,2 b. 1214, d. 1241
Mother N. N. of Galicia3
Also called Elizabeth of Bosnia. Erzsebet of the Kumans was born in 1240. She was the daughter of Kuthen, Kahn of the Polowets and N. N. of Galicia.1,2,3 Erzsebet of the Kumans married Istvâ°n V, Kirâ°ly Magyarorszâ°g, son of Bâ©la IV, Kirâ°ly Magyarorszâ°g and Maria Laskarina, in 1255; His father had him married for political reasons. "In the interests of protecting Christianity," Bela advised the Pope, "we married our first born son to a Cuman girl... to secure the possibility of converting these people to Christianity."4,1 Erzsebet of the Kumans died after 1290.
Family
Istvâ°n V, Kirâ°ly Magyarorszâ°g b. 18 October 1239, d. 6 August 1272
Children
* Erzsâ©bet, Hercegnâµ Magyarorszâ°g b. 1255, d. bt 1313 - 13261
* Katalina, Hercegnâµ Magyarorszâ°g+ b. c 12561
* Mâ°ria, Hercegnâµ Magyarorszâ°g+ b. 1258, d. 25 Mar 13234,1,5
* Anna, Hercegnâµ Magyarorszâ°g b. c 1260, d. c 12814,1
* Lâ°szlâ⥠IV "the Cuman", Kirâ°ly Magyarorszâ°g b. 1262, d. 10 Jul 12904,1
* Andrâ°s, Herceg of Slovenia b. 1268, d. 12781
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0814241.html
Cumans or Kumans (both: kOO'mâ§nz) [key], nomadic East Turkic people, identified with the Kipchaks (or the western branch of the Kipchaks) and known in Russian as Polovtsi. Coming from NW Asian Russia, they conquered S Russia and Walachia in the 11th cent., and for almost two centuries warred intermittently with the Byzantine Empire, Hungary, and Kiev. They founded a nomadic state in the steppes along the Black Sea, and were active in commerce with Central Asia and Venice. In the early 12th cent. the main Cuman forces were defeated by the Eastern Slavs. The Mongols decisively defeated the Cumans c.1245. Some were sold as slaves, and many took refuge in Bulgaria and also in Hungary, where they were gradually assimilated into the Hungarian culture. Others joined the khanate of the Golden Horde (also called the Western Kipchaks), which was organized on the former Cuman territory in Russia.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elisabeth_von_Cumania
Elizabeth the Cuman was the Queen consort of Stephen V of Hungary.
She was born c. 1239/40, a daughter of Kuthen, leader of the Kun (or Kuni) clan of Cumans and his Russian wife, Galicie of Halicz. The Cumans were the western tribes of the Kipchaks. The Kipchaks were a confederation of Turkic peoples who spoke the Kipchak language. Her people followed a Shamanist religion and were considered Pagans by their contemporary Christians of Europe.
In 1238, Kuthen led the Kuni and a number of other clans in invading the Kingdom of Hungary while fleeing from the advancing hordes of the Mongol Empire. In time, Bâ©la IV of Hungary negotiated an alliance with Kuthen and his people, granting them asylum in exchange for their conversion to the Roman Catholic Church and loyalty to the King.
The agreement was eventually sealed with the betrothal of Elizabeth to Stephen, oldest son Bâ©la IV. The agreement seems to have occurred while Stephen was an infant. Elizabeth is considered unlikely to have been older than her future husband. In 1241, the Mongol invasion of Europe under the leadership of Batu Khan and Subutai begun with Hungary among its primary targets. Kuthen was assassinated by Hungarian nobles fearing he could lead a defection to the other side.
Bâ©la IV and the Hungarian forces suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of Mohi (11 April 1241). The King fled to the Duchy of Austria while Batu Khan and Subutai tried to set up the Mongol occupation of Hungary until the end of 1242. However news eventually reached them that their overlord âñgedei Khan, Khagan of the Mongol Empire, had died in 1241. His widow Tââregene Khatun was serving as regent until a successor could be elected in a Kurultai. Batu decided to return to Karakorum for the Kurultai. He called off the invasion and Mongol troops were withdrawn from most of Europe, in the process evacuating Hungary.
Princess of Hungary
Bâ©la IV returned from Austria following the Mongol evacuation. Upon his return to power, Bâ©la began rebuilding his country, including a massive construction campaign which produced the system of castles as a defense against the threat of a Mongol return.
Kuthen was deceased but the betrothal was still in effect. Elizabeth was converted to Roman Catholicism in preparation of her marriage. The marriage of Stephen and Elizabeth occurred in 1253. The groom was twelve-years-old and the bride close in age to him.
In 1262, Stephen convinced his father to give him twenty-nine counties as a reward of assistance in the war against Ottokar II of Bohemia. He was crowned junior co-ruler and in practice ruled his regions as a separate kingdom, setting up his own capital and adopting foreign policies directly contrary to those of his father. Elizabeth was now his Queen.
[edit]Queen consort
Bâ©la IV died on 3 May 1270. Stephen succeeded him as senior King. Among his successes were the conclusion of the war against Ottokar II of Bohemia. According to the Peace of Pressburg (2 July 1271, Stephen renounced his claims on parts of present-day Austria and Slovenia while Ottokar renounced his claims on territories of Hungary briefly conquered by him during the war.
Stephen died on 6 August 1272. Elizabeth became Regent for their ten-year-old son Ladislaus IV of Hungary. Her regency lasted until 1277 and saw palace revolutions and civil wars.
Her upbringing of her son would cause further problems for his reign. Ladislaus favored the society of the "semi-pagan" Cumans, from whom he was descended through his mother. He wore Cuman dress as his court wear, surrounded himself with Cuman concubines and thus alienated the Hungarian nobility. His later attempts to regain Hungarian loyalty instead alienated parts of the Cumans. He was murdered in his tent by Cumans while camped in Bihar county on 10 July 1290.
By that time Elizabeth herself seems to have also been deceased. There is no mention of her in the reign of his successor Andrew III of Hungary.There is a tradition that she died in the year 1290.
Children
She and her husband Stephen V of Hungary were parents to six known children:
Elizabeth of Hungary (c. 1255 - 1313). Married firstly Zavis Vââ tkovci, Lord of Rosenberg, Skalitz and Falkenstein. Married secondly Stefan Uroâ° II Milutin of Serbia.
Catherine of Hungary (c. 1256 - after 1314). Married Stefan Dragutin of Serbia.
Maria of Hungary (c. 1257 - 25 March 1323). Married Charles II of Naples.
Anna of Hungary (c. 1260 - 1281). Married Andronikos II Palaiologos.
Ladislaus IV of Hungary (August, 1262 - 10 July 1290).
Andrâ°s, Duke of Slavonia (1268 - 1278).
Elizabeth the Cuman was the Queen consort of Stephen V of Hungary.
She was born c. 1239/40, a daughter of Kuthen, leader of the Kun (or Kuni) clan of Cumans and his Russian wife, Galicie of Halicz. The Cumans were the western tribes of the Kipchaks. The Kipchaks were a confederation of Turkic peoples who spoke the Kipchak language. Her people followed a Shamanist religion and were considered Pagans by their contemporary Christians of Europe.
She and her husband Stephen V of Hungary were parents to six known children:
Elizabeth of Hungary (c. 1255 - 1313). Married firstly Zavis Vââ tkovci, Lord of Rosenberg, Skalitz and Falkenstein. Married secondly Stefan Uroâ° II Milutin of Serbia.
Catherine of Hungary (c. 1256 - after 1314). Married Stefan Dragutin of Serbia.
Maria of Hungary (c. 1257 - 25 March 1323). Married Charles II of Naples.
Anna of Hungary (c. 1260 - 1281). Married Andronikos II Palaiologos.
Ladislaus IV of Hungary (August, 1262 - 10 July 1290).
Andrâ°s, Duke of Slavonia (1268 - 1278).
She was born c. 1239/40, a daughter of Kuthen, leader of the Kun (or Kuni) clan of Cumans and his Russian wife, Galicie of Halicz. The Cumans were the western tribes of the Kipchaks. The Kipchaks were a confederation of Turkic peoples who spoke the Kipchak language. Her people followed a Shamanist religion and were considered Pagans by their contemporary Christians of Europe.
In 1238, Kuthen led the Kuni and a number of other clans in invading the Kingdom of Hungary while fleeing from the advancing hordes of the Mongol Empire. In time, Bâ©la IV of Hungary negotiated an alliance with Kuthen and his people, granting them asylum in exchange for their conversion to the Roman Catholic Church and loyalty to the King.
The agreement was eventually sealed with the betrothal of Elizabeth to Stephen, oldest son Bâ©la IV. The agreement seems to have occurred while Stephen was an infant. Elizabeth is considered unlikely to have been older than her future husband. In 1241, the Mongol invasion of Europe under the leadership of Batu Khan and Subutai begun with Hungary among its primary targets. Kuthen was assassinated by Hungarian nobles fearing he could lead a defection to the other side.
Bâ©la IV and the Hungarian forces suffered a crushing defeat at the Battle of Mohi (11 April 1241). The King fled to the Duchy of Austria while Batu Khan and Subutai tried to set up the Mongol occupation of Hungary until the end of 1242. However news eventually reached them that their overlord âñgedei Khan, Khagan of the Mongol Empire, had died in 1241. His widow Tââregene Khatun was serving as regent until a successor could be elected in a Kurultai. Batu decided to return to Karakorum for the Kurultai. He called off the invasion and Mongol troops were withdrawn from most of Europe, in the process evacuating Hungary.
Elizabeth the Cuman was the Queen consort of Stephen V of Hungary.
She was born c. 1239/40, a daughter of Kuthen, leader of the Kun (or Kuni) clan of Cumans and his Russian wife, Galicie of Halicz. The Cumans were the western tribes of the Kipchaks. The Kipchaks were a confederation of Turkic peoples who spoke the Kipchak language. Her people followed a Shamanist religion and were considered Pagans by their contemporary Christians of Europe.
She and her husband Stephen V of Hungary were parents to six known children:
Elizabeth of Hungary (c. 1255 - 1313). Married firstly Zavis Vââ tkovci, Lord of Rosenberg, Skalitz and Falkenstein. Married secondly Stefan Uroâ° II Milutin of Serbia.
Catherine of Hungary (c. 1256 - after 1314). Married Stefan Dragutin of Serbia.
Maria of Hungary (c. 1257 - 25 March 1323). Married Charles II of Naples.
Anna of Hungary (c. 1260 - 1281). Married Andronikos II Palaiologos.
Ladislaus IV of Hungary (August, 1262 - 10 July 1290).
Andrâ°s, Duke of Slavonia (1268 - 1278).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_the_Cuman
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Elizabeth Erzsâ©bet the Cuman KUN of the Kumans (Of Cumenia) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stephen V of Hungary and Croatia |
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