as depicted in the
Secretum Secretorum (Secret of Secrets) King Louis I of Hungary commissioned the
Chronicon Pictum and the
Secretum Secretorum, which were both produced in a Hungarian workshop. Miklόs Meggyesi, son of Hertul the court painter of Louis, has traditionally been identified as the illuminator, though there is no real evidence for this. The Illuminated Chronicle was written by
Mark of Kalt (, ) in 1358 in
Latin, with the last of the illuminations being finished between 1370 and 1373. According to historian
Bálint Hóman, the original source of all extant Hungarian chronicles was the lost
Gesta Ungarorum, which was written in the time of King
Saint Ladislaus. The basic premise of the Hungarian medieval chronicle tradition states that the
Huns, i.e. the
Hungarians, came out twice from the regions of
Scythia, the guiding principle being the Hun-Hungarian continuity. The chronicle was given by the Hungarian king
Louis I to the French king
Charles V, when the daughter of Louis,
Catherine, was engaged to Charles's son
Louis I, Duke of Orléans in 1374. The chronicle was later given to Serbian despot
Đurađ Branković as a gift from the French king
Charles VII. The chronicle was then copied in 1462. Between 1458 and 1490, it was kept in Hungary, in the court of King
Matthias Corvinus. It was later lost, possibly spending some time in the possession of the
Ottomans. There is evidence to suggest that in the second half of the 15th century the chronicle was again in Hungary, as it contains several handwritten Hungarian and Latin entries from the period. In three places researchers also found Turkish writing which make various comments regarding Hungary. Because of this, the researchers concluded that sometime between the 15th and 17th century the manuscript was owned by a Hungarian who knew Turkish very well. The chronicle may have been present in Vienna during the infamous Ottoman siege of the 16th century as from at least the 17th century, it belonged to the royal archives in
Vienna. Sebastian Tengnagel mentions it in the manuscript catalog of the court library from 1608 to 1636, which is why it is sometimes referred to as the
Vienna Illuminated Chronicle. As a result of the Venice Cultural Convention, the chronicle was returned to Hungary in 1934. The manuscript is now kept in the
National Széchényi Library in
Budapest,
Hungary. == Illuminations ==