Tripartite Hungary The Ottomans annihilated the royal army at the
Battle of Mohács.
Louis II died fleeing from the battlefield and two claimants,
John Zápolya () and
Ferdinand of Habsburg (), were elected kings. Ferdinand tried to reunite Hungary after Zápolya died in 1540, but the
Ottoman Sultan,
Suleiman the Magnificent (), intervened and captured
Buda in 1541. The sultan allowed Zápolya's widow,
Isabella Jagiellon (d. 1559), to rule the lands east of the river
Tisza on behalf of her infant son,
John Sigismund (), in return for a yearly tribute. His decision divided Hungary into three parts: the Ottomans occupied
the central territories; John Sigismund's
eastern Hungarian Kingdom developed into the autonomous
Principality of Transylvania; and the Habsburg monarchs preserved the northern and western territories (or
Royal Hungary). Most noblemen fled from the central regions to the unoccupied territories. Peasants who lived along the borders paid taxes both to the Ottomans and their former lords. Commoners were regularly recruited to serve in the royal army or in the magnates' retinues to replace the noblemen who had perished during fights. The irregular foot-soldiersmainly runaway serfs and dispossessed noblemenbecame important elements of the defence forces.
Stephen Bocskai,
Prince of Transylvania (), settled 10,000 in seven villages and exempted them from taxation in 1605, which was the "largest collective ennoblement" in the history of Hungary. In addition to the Székely and Saxon leaders, the noblemen formed one of the three
nations (or Estates of the realm) in Transylvania, but they could rarely challenge the princes' authority. In Royal Hungary, the magnates successfully protected the noble privileges, because their vast domains were almost completely exempt from royal officials' authority. Their manors were fortified in the "Hungarian manner" (with walls made of earth and timber) in the 1540s. Noblemen in Royal Hungary could also count on the support of the Transylvanian princes against the Habsburg monarchs. Intermarriages among Austrian, Czech and Hungarian aristocrats gave rise to the development of a "supranational aristocracy" in the
Habsburg monarchy. Foreign aristocrats regularly received
Hungarian citizenship, and Hungarian noblemen were often
naturalized in the Habsburgs' other realms. The Habsburg kings rewarded the most powerful magnates with hereditary titles such as baron from the 1530s. The aristocrats supported the spread of the
Reformation. Most noblemen adhered to
Lutheranism in the western regions of Royal Hungary, but
Calvinism was the dominant religion in Transylvania and other regions. John Sigismund promoted
Unitarian views, but most Unitarian noblemen perished in battles in the early 1600s. The Habsburgs remained staunch supporters of the Catholic
Counter-Reformation and the most prominent aristocratic families converted to Catholicism in Royal Hungary in the 1630s. The Calvinist princes of Transylvania supported their co-religionists.
Gabriel Bethlen granted nobility to all Calvinist pastors. The kings and the Transylvanian princes regularly ennobled commoners, but often without granting landed property to them. Jurisprudence maintained that only those who owned land cultivated by serfs could be regarded as fully fledged noblemen.
Armalistsnoblemen who held a charter of ennoblement, but not a single plot of landand peasant-nobles continued to pay taxes, for which they were collectively known as taxed nobility. Nobility could be purchased from the kings who were often in need of funds. Landowners also benefitted from the ennoblement of their serfs, because they could demand a fee for their consent. The Diet was officially divided into two
chambers in Royal Hungary in 1608. All adult male members of the titled noble families had a seat in the Upper House. The lesser noblemen elected two or three delegates at the general assemblies of the counties to represent them in the Lower House. The Croatian and Slavonian magnates also had seats at the Upper House, and the (or Diet) of Croatia and Slavonia sent delegates to the Lower House.
Liberation and war of independence (d. 1703), mother of Prince
Francis II Rákóczi (d. 1735) Forces from the
Holy Roman Empire and the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth inflicted a
crushing defeat on the Ottomans at Vienna in 1683. The Ottomans were
expelled from Buda in 1686.
Michael I Apafi, the prince of Transylvania (), acknowledged the suzerainty of
Emperor Leopold I, who was also king of Hungary (), in 1687. Grateful for the
liberation of Buda, the Diet abolished the noblemen's right to resist the monarch for the defense of their liberties. In 1688, the Diet authorized the aristocrats to establish a special
trust, known as , with royal consent to prevent the distribution of their landed wealth among their descendants. In accordance with the traditional concept of , inherited estates could not be subject to the trust. Estates in were always held by one person, but he was responsible for the proper boarding of his relatives. The liberation of central Hungary continued, and the Ottomans were forced to
acknowledge the loss of the territory in 1699. Leopold set up a special committee to distribute the lands in the reconquered territories. The descendants of the noblemen who had held estates there before the Ottoman conquest were required to provide documentary evidence to substantiate their claims to the ancestral lands. Even if they could present documents, they were to pay a feea tenth of the value of the claimed propertyas compensation for the costs of the liberation war. Few noblemen could meet the criteria and more than half of the recovered lands were distributed among foreigners. They were naturalized, but most of them never visited Hungary. The Habsburg administration doubled the amount of the taxes to be collected in Hungary and demanded almost one third of the taxes (1.25 million florins) from the clergy and the nobility. The palatine,
Prince Paul Esterházy (d. 1713), convinced the monarch to reduce the noblemen's tax burden to 0.25 million florins, but the difference was to be paid by the peasantry. Leopold did not trust the Hungarians, because a
group of magnates had conspired against him in the 1670s. Mercenaries replaced the Hungarian garrisons, and they frequently plundered the countryside. The monarch also supported Cardinal
Leopold Karl von Kollonitsch's attempts to restrict the
Protestants' rights. Tens of thousands of
Catholic Germans and
Orthodox Serbs were settled in the reconquered territories. The outbreak of the
War of the Spanish Succession (1701–1715) provided an opportunity for the discontented Hungarians to rise against Leopold. They regarded one of the wealthiest aristocrats, Prince
Francis II Rákóczi (d. 1735), as their leader.
Rákóczi's War of Independence lasted from 1703 to 1711. Although the rebels were forced to yield, the
Treaty of Szatmár granted a general amnesty for them and the new Habsburg monarch,
Charles III (), promised to respect the privileges of the Estates of the realm.
Cooperation and absolutism , a palace of the
Esterházys at
Fertőd Charles III again confirmed the privileges of the Estates of the "
Kingdom of Hungary, and the Parts, Kingdoms and Provinces thereto annexed" in 1723 in return for the enactment of the
Pragmatic Sanction which established his daughters' right to succeed him.
Montesquieu, who visited Hungary in 1728, regarded the relationship between the king and the Diet as a good example of the
separation of powers. The magnates almost monopolized the highest offices, but both the
Hungarian Court Chancellerythe supreme body of royal administrationand the
Lieutenancy Councilthe most important administrative officealso employed lesser noblemen. In practice, Protestants were excluded from public offices after a royal decree, the , obliged all candidates to take an oath on the
Virgin Mary. The Peace of Szatmár and the Pragmatic Sanction maintained that the Hungarian nation consisted of the privileged groups, independent of their ethnicity, but the first debates along ethnic lines occurred in the early 18th century. The jurist Mihály Bencsik claimed that the burghers of Trencsén (now
Trenčín in Slovakia) should not send delegates to the Diet because their ancestors had been forced to yield to the conquering Magyars in the 890s. A priest, Ján B. Magin, wrote a response, arguing that ethnic Slovaks and Hungarians enjoyed the same rights. In Transylvania, a bishop of the
Romanian Greek Catholic Church, Baron
Inocențiu Micu-Klein (d. 1768), tried to speak "on behalf of the whole Romanian nation in Transylvania" at the Diet in 1737 but he could not finish the speech because other delegates stated that he could refer only to the Romanians or to the Romanian people for the Romanian Nation did not exist. Five years later, he unsuccessfully demanded the recognition of the Romanians as the fourth Nation on ethnic grounds.
Maria Theresa () succeeded Charles III in 1740, which gave rise to the
War of the Austrian Succession. The noble delegates offered their "lives and blood" for their new "king" and the declaration of the
general levy of the nobility was crucial at the beginning of the war. Grateful for their support, Maria Theresa strengthened the links between the Hungarian nobility and the monarch. She established the
Theresian Academy and the
Royal Hungarian Bodyguard for young Hungarian noblemen. Both institutions enabled the spread of the ideas of the
Age of Enlightenment.
Freemasonry became popular, especially among the magnates, but
masonic lodges were also open to untitled noblemen and professionals. Cultural differences between the magnates and lesser noblemen grew. The magnates adopted the lifestyle of the imperial aristocracy, moving between their summer palaces in Vienna and their newly built splendid residences in Hungary. Prince
Miklós Esterházy (d. 1790) employed the celebrated composer
Joseph Haydn. Count János Fekete (d. 1803), a fierce protector of noble privileges, bombarded the French philosopher
Voltaire with letters and dilettante poems. Count Miklós Pálffy (d. 1773) proposed to tax the nobles to finance a standing army. Most noblemen were unwilling to renounce their privileges. Lesser noblemen also insisted on their traditional way of life and lived in simple houses, made of timber or packed clay. Maria Theresa did not hold Diets after 1764. She regulated the relationship of landowners and their serfs in a royal decree in 1767. Her son and successor,
Joseph II (), mocked as the "king in hat", was never crowned, because he wanted to avoid the coronation oath. He introduced reforms which clearly contradicted local customs. He replaced the counties with districts and appointed royal officials to administer them. He also abolished serfdom, securing all peasants the right to free movement after the
revolt of Romanian serfs in Transylvania. He ordered the first census in Hungary in 1784. According to its records, the nobility made up about 4.5 percent of the male population in the Lands of the Hungarian Crown (with 155,519 noblemen in Hungary proper, and 42,098 noblemen in Transylvania, Croatia and Slavonia). The nobles' proportion was significantly higher (six–sixteen percent) in the northeastern and eastern counties, and less (three percent) in Croatia and Slavonia. Poor noblemen, who were mocked as "nobles of the seven plum trees" or "sandal-wearing nobles", made up almost 90 percent of the nobility. Previous investigations of nobility show that more than half of the noble families received their rank after 1550.
National awakening (d. 1841), an ancestress of the
British royal family through the marriage of her granddaughter
Mary of Teck (d. 1953) to
King George V () The few reformist noblemen greeted the news of the
French Revolution with enthusiasm. (d. 1795) translated the
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen into
Latin, and (d. 1795) published its Hungarian translation. To appease the Hungarian nobility, Joseph II revoked almost all his reforms on his deathbed in 1790. His successor,
Leopold II (), convoked the Diet and confirmed the liberties of the Estates of the realm, emphasizing Hungary was a "free and independent" realm, governed by its own laws. News about the
Jacobin terror in France strengthened royal power. Hajnóczy and other radical (or "Jacobin") noblemen, who had discussed the possibility of the abolition of all privileges in secret societies, were captured and executed or imprisoned in 1795. The Diets voted in favor of the taxes and the recruits that Leopold's successor,
Francis (), demanded between 1792 and 1811. The last general levy of the nobility was declared in 1809, but
Napoleon easily defeated the noble troops
near Győr. Agricultural bloom encouraged the landowners to borrow money and to buy new estates or to establish mills during the war, but most of them went bankrupt after peace was restored in 1814. The concept of prevented both the creditors from collecting their money and the debtors from selling their estates. Radical nobles played a crucial role in the reform movements of the early 19th century.
Gergely Berzeviczy (d. 1822) attributed the backwardness of the local economy to the peasants' serfdom already around 1800.
Ferenc Kazinczy (d. 1831) and
János Batsányi (d. 1845) initiated
language reform, fearing the disappearance of the Hungarian language. The poet
Sándor Petőfi (d. 1849), who was a commoner, ridiculed the conservative noblemen in his poem
The Magyar Noble, contrasting their anachronistic pride and their idle way of life. From the 1820s, a new generation of reformist noblemen dominated political life. Count
István Széchenyi (d. 1860) demanded the abolition of the serfs' labour service and the entail system, stating that, "We, well-to-do landowners are the main obstacles to the progress and greater development of our fatherland". He established clubs in Pressburg and Pest and promoted horse racing, because he wanted to encourage the regular meetings of magnates, lesser noblemen and burghers. Széchenyi's friend, Baron
Miklós Wesselényi (d. 1850), demanded the creation of a
constitutional monarchy and the protection of
civil rights. A lesser nobleman,
Lajos Kossuth (d. 1894), became the leader of the most radical politicians in the 1840s. He declared that the Diets and the counties were the privileged groups' institutions, and that only a wider social movement could secure the development of Hungary. Since the end of the Age of Enlightenment, nationality was more and more associated with the vernacular. Predictions by the
German Romantic philosopher
Johann Gottfried Herder (d. 1803) about the inevitable assimilation of small peoples to a large linguistic group fanned the flames of linguistic nationalism. Although ethnic Hungarians made up only about 38 percent of the population, the official use of the
Hungarian language spread from the late 18th century. Kossuth declared that all who wanted to enjoy the liberties of the nation should learn Hungarian. In contrast, the Slovak
Ľudovít Štúr (d. 1856) stated that the Hungarian nation consisted of many nationalities and their loyalty could be strengthened by the official use of their languages. Count
Janko Drašković (d. 1856) recommended that
Croatian should replace Latin as the official language in Croatia and Slavonia.
Revolution and neo-absolutism (d. 1849), the first
Prime Minister of Hungary in 1848 News of the
Revolutions of 1848 reached Pest on 15 March 1848. Young intellectuals proclaimed a radical program, known as the
Twelve Points, demanding equal civil rights to all citizens. Count
Lajos Batthyány (d. 1849) was appointed the first prime minister of Hungary. The Diet quickly enacted the majority of the Twelve Points, and
Ferdinand V () sanctioned them in April. The
April Laws abolished the nobles' tax-exemption and the , but the magnates' 31 remained intact. Although the peasant tenants received the ownership of their plots, a compensation was promised to the landowners. Adult men who owned more than of arable lands or urban estates with a value of at least 300 florinsabout one quarter of the adult male populationwere granted the right to vote in the parliamentary elections. The noblemen's exclusive franchise in county elections was confirmed, otherwise ethnic minorities could have easily dominated the general assemblies in many counties. Noblemen made up about one quarter of the members of the new parliament, which assembled after the general elections on 5 July. The Slovak delegates
demanded autonomy for all ethnic minorities at their assembly in May. Similar demands were adopted at the Romanian delegates' meeting. Ferdinand V's advisors persuaded the
ban (or governor) of Croatia, Baron
Josip Jelačić (d. 1859), to invade Hungary proper in September. A new war of independence broke out and the Hungarian parliament dethroned the Habsburg dynasty on 14 April 1849.
Nicholas I of Russia () intervened on the legitimist side and Russian troops overpowered the Hungarian army, forcing it to surrender on 13 August. Hungary, Croatia (and Slavonia) and Transylvania were incorporated as separate realms in the
Austrian Empire. The advisors of the young emperor,
Franz Joseph (), declared that Hungary had lost its historic rights and the conservative Hungarian aristocrats could not persuade him to restore the old constitution. Noblemen who had remained loyal to the Habsburgs were appointed to high offices, but most new officials came from other provinces of the empire. The vast majority of noblemen opted for a passive resistance: they did not hold offices in state administration and tacitly obstructed the implementation of imperial decrees. An untitled nobleman from Zala County,
Ferenc Deák (d. 1876), became their leader around 1854. They tried to preserve an air of superiority, but their vast majority was assimilated to the local peasantry or petty bourgeoisie during the following decades. In contrast to them, the magnates, who retained about one quarter of all lands, could easily raise funds from the developing banking sector to modernize their estates.
Austria-Hungary Deák and his followers knew the great powers did not support the disintegration of the Austrian Empire. Austria's defeat in the
Austro-Prussian War of 1866 accelerated the rapprochement between the king and the
Deák Party, which led to the
Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867. Hungary proper and Transylvania were united and the autonomy of Hungary was restored within the Dual Monarchy of
Austria-Hungary. Next year, the
Croatian–Hungarian Settlement restored the union of Hungary proper and Croatia, but secured the competence of the Croatian in internal affairs, education and justice. The Compromise strengthened the position of the traditional political elite. Only about six percent of the population could vote in the general elections. More than half of the prime ministers and one third of the ministers were appointed from among the magnates from 1867 to 1918. Landowners made up the majority of the members of parliament. Half of the seats in municipal assemblies were preserved for the greatest taxpayers. Noblemen also dominated the state administration, because tens of thousands of impoverished nobles took jobs at the ministries, or at the state-owned railways and post offices. They were ardent supporters of
Magyarization, denying the use of minority languages. An emigrant aristocrat Baroness
Emma Orczy (d. 1947) wrote her novels in English in the United Kingdom. She had left Hungary with her parents when farm workers fearing of losing their job set the Orczy manor on fire at
Abádszalók in 1868. Her first novel featuring the
Scarlet Pimpernel"the first character who could be called a
superhero" (
Stan Lee)was published in 1905. Only nobleman who owned an estate of at least were regarded as prosperous, but the number of estates of that size quickly decreased. The magnates took advantage of lesser noblemen's bankruptcies and bought new estates during the same period. New were created which enabled the magnates to preserve the entailment of their landed wealth. Aristocrats were regularly appointed to the boards of directors of banks and companies. Jews were the prime movers of the development of the financial and industrial sectors. Jewish businessmen owned more than half of the companies and more than four-fifths of the banks in 1910. They also bought landed property and had acquired almost one-fifth of the estates of between by 1913. The most prominent Jewish burghers were awarded with nobility and there were 26 aristocratic families and 320 noble families of Jewish origin in 1918. Many of them
converted to Christianity, but other nobles did not regard them as their peers.
Revolutions and counter-revolution The
First World War brought about the
dissolution of Austria-Hungary in 1918. The
Aster Revolutiona movement of
the left-liberal Party of Independence,
the Social Democratic Party and the
Radical Citizens' Partypersuaded
Charles IV (), to appoint the radical Count
Mihály Károlyi (d. 1955), prime minister on 31 October. After the Lower House dissolved itself, Hungary was
proclaimed a republic on 16 November. The
Hungarian National Council adopted a
land reform setting the maximum size of the estates at and ordering the distribution of any excess among the local peasantry. Károlyi, whose inherited domains had been mortgaged to banks, was the first to implement the reform. The
Allied Powers authorized
Romania to occupy new territories and ordered the withdrawal of the
Royal Hungarian Army almost as far as the Tisza on 26 February 1919. Károlyi resigned and the
Hungarian Communist Party leader
Béla Kun (d. 1938) announced the establishment of the
Hungarian Soviet Republic on 21 March. All estates of over and all private companies employing more than 20 workers were
nationalized. The Bolsheviks could not stop the
Romanian invasion and their leaders fled from Hungary on 1 August. After a short-lived temporary government, the industrialist
István Friedrich (d. 1951) formed a coalition government with the support of the Allied Powers on 6 August. The Bolsheviks' nationalization program was abolished. The Hungarian Social Democratic Party boycotted the
general elections in early 1920. The new one-chamber Diet of Hungary restored the
Hungarian monarchy, but without restoring the Habsburgs. Instead, a Calvinist nobleman,
Miklós Horthy (d. 1957), was elected regent on 1 March 1920. Hungary had to acknowledge the loss of more than two thirds of its territory and more than 60 percent of its population (including one third of the ethnic Hungarians) in the
Treaty of Trianon on 4 June. Horthy was never crowned king, and therefore could not grant nobility, but he established a new
order of merit, the
Order of Gallantry. Its members received the hereditary title of ("brave"). They were also granted parcels of land, which renewed the "medieval link between land tenure and service to the crown" (
Bryan Cartledge). Two Transylvanian aristocrats, Counts
Pál Teleki (d. 1941) and
István Bethlen (d. 1946), were the most influential politicians in the
interwar period. The events of 1918–19 convinced them that only a "conservative democracy", dominated by the landed nobility, could secure stability. Most ministers and the majority of the members of the parliament were nobles. A conservative agrarian reformlimited to 8.5 percent of all arable landswas introduced, but almost one third of the lands remained in the possession of about 400 magnate families. The two-chamber parliament was restored in 1926, with an Upper House dominated by the aristocrats, prelates and high-ranking officials.
Antisemitism was a leading ideology in the 1920s and 1930s. A law limited the admission of Jewish students in the universities. Count
Fidél Pálffy (d. 1946) was one of the leading figures of the
national socialist movements, but most aristocrats disdained the radicalism of "petty officers and housekeepers". Hungary participated in the
Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 and joined the
war against the Soviet Union after the
bombing of Kassa in late June. Fearing the defection of Hungary from the war,
Nazi Germany occupied the country in
Operation Margarethe on 19 March 1944. Hundreds of thousands of Jews and tens of thousands of
Romani were transferred to
Nazi concentration camps with the local authorities' assistance. The wealthiest business magnates of Jewish origin were forced to renounce their companies and banks to redeem their own and their relatives' lives.
The fall of the Hungarian nobility () in Austria, still held by the Almásy family The Soviet
Red Army reached the Hungarian borders and took possession of the Great Hungarian Plain by 6 December 1944. Delegates from the region's towns and villages established the Provisional National Assembly in
Debrecen, which elected a new government on 22 December. Three prominent
Anti-Nazi aristocrats had a seat in the assembly. The
Provisional National Government soon promised land reform, along with the abolishment of all "anti-democratic" laws. The last German
Wehrmacht troops left Hungary on 4 April 1945.
Imre Nagy (d. 1958), the Communist Minister of Agriculture, announced land reform on 17 March 1945. All domains of more than were confiscated and the owners of smaller estates could retain a maximum of land. The land reform, as Cartledge noted, destroyed the nobility and eliminated the "elements of feudalism, which had persisted for longer in Hungary than anywhere else in Europe". Similar land reforms were introduced in
Romania and
Czechoslovakia. In both countries, ethnic Hungarian aristocrats were sentenced to death or prison as alleged war criminals. Hungarian aristocrats could retain their estates only in
Burgenland (in Austria) after 1945. Soviet military authorities controlled the general elections and the formation of a coalition government in late 1945. The new parliament declared the
Second Hungarian Republic on 1 February 1946. An opinion poll showed that more than 75 percent of men and 66 percent of women were opposed to the use of noble titles in 1946. The parliament adopted an
act that abolished all noble ranks and related
styles, also banning their use. The new act came into force on 14 February 1947. ==Unofficial nobility==