Head of the Catholic Church in Hungary Following the death of Stephen III, his younger brother
Béla returned to Hungary from
Constantinople and was unanimously proclaimed King of Hungary. However, his coronation was delayed, because Archbishop Lucas refused to perform his ceremony; he feared that the influence of "
schismatics" would increase under Béla's rule (his resistance, however, even refused by Pope Alexander). Archbishop Lucas fell out of favor with Béla, and was ignored by him in the first years of his reign. Andrew elevated into the dignity of Archbishop of Kalocsa in 1176, replacing
Stephen, who also opposed Béla's rule. Because of Lucas' forced exile from state affairs, Andrew, also a skilled diplomat, became
de facto head of the Catholic Church in Hungary, his status was also acknowledged by Pope Alexander III. After
Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa deprived
Adalbert from his dignity of
Archbishop of Salzburg because of his pro-papal affiliation, Pope Alexander sent his papal legate
Walter,
Bishop of Albano to resolve the conflict. The pope sought assistance from Béla III to mediate the issue. During the summer of 1176, the newly elected Archbishop Andrew led a Hungarian ecclesiastical delegation to
Győr, also including
Mikod, Bishop-elect of Győr, Andrew's strong ally Gregory, the Provost of
Székesfehérvár Chapter and Raynald,
Abbot of Pannonhalma. They had met the papal legate there, who summoned both Adalbert and Frederick's candidate Henry,
Provost of Berchtesgaden. Only Adalbert appeared before the court at Győr in early August 1176, which ruled in his favor and deprived Henry from his office of Archbishop of Salzburg. According to Walter, Andrew and his companions assisted his judicial activity with advices. However, his relationship with Béla III had dramatically deteriorated at the turn of 1178 and 1179. According to the monarch, Andrew "insulted his royal authority", as a result Béla soon deprived the Archbishop and his supporter, Gregory, the Provost of Székesfehérvár Chapter, of their office and seized the revenues of the archbishopric. Around the same time, the king reconciled with Archbishop Lucas, who regained his influence at the royal court after a seven-year absence. Andrew fled Hungary and petitioned to the
Roman Curia, requesting an investigation at the
Third Council of the Lateran in March 1179. Pope Alexander III threatened Béla III with excommunication and punished him with ecclesiastic sanctions, but Lucas absolved him and excommunicated Andrew of Kalocsa and his clerical partisans. Lucas charged Andrew with unlawful domination of priests and clergymen of the royal churches, which were traditionally placed under the territorial authority of the
Archdiocese of Esztergom. Beside personal conflicts, this case was also a chapter of the long-time rivalry between the sees Esztergom and Kalocsa for the leadership of the Hungarian church organization. In the previous years, Andrew intended to extend his own authority as bishop and metropolitan at Lucas' expense, usurping the privileges of the Archdiocese of Esztergom. In his letter of harsh tone sent to Hungary in March 1179, Pope Alexander, threatened to excommunicate Lucas if he maintains the punishment he has imposed on Andrew. In another letter, Pope Alexander also urged the Hungary clergy not to obey to Lucas' instructions. In the same time, the pope also sent letter to Béla III, in which he asked the king to take back Andrew into his graces. The conflict ended with a compromise mediated by the
Holy See: Archbishop Andrew asked the monarch's pardon and the King restored him. Despite that, Andrew never regained his former influence at the royal court.
Later years Andrew was styled as "Archbishop of Bács" by the documents of the Third Council of the Lateran, after the second archiepiscopal see of the Archdiocese of Kalocsa (present-day
Bač, Serbia). Consequently, Andrew held his permanent seat there. After the fall of his influence in the royal court of Hungary, Andrew spent almost all time of his remaining tenure in
Rome, and dealt with only ecclesiastical affairs. Despite the resolutions of the council,
celibacy was not universal among the prelates in Hungary. Archbishop Andrew asked for guidance to the Holy See, what to do if a married man applies to be a priest. Pope Alexander answered in a letter in 1180 that a married man can be ordained a priest if he divorces with the consent of his wife and makes a vow of purity before ordination. Andrew also dealt with the insubordination polemics belonging the
Benedictine friars of the Kő monastery, established by
Ban Beloš decades earlier, in
Syrmia (which laid under the ecclesiastical authority of Kalocsa). Andrew confiscated the abbey from the Benedictines and handed it over to the monks of
Abraham of the Valley of Hebron. According to account from 1185, Andrew had revenue of 2500 silver
marks in that year. He died in the next year, in 1186, residing in Rome. He was succeeded by
Paul as Archbishop of Kalocsa around 1188. ==Notes==