Maximilianus Transylvanus' origins and paternity are a matter of dispute among historians. In spite of his surname, Transylvanus is said to have come from Flanders, not Transylvania, and to have been a natural or
bastard son of Archbishop
Lang von Wellenburg, which is impossible because when he was born in 1490, Mathäus Lang was a poor student in
Tübingen, and the father of Transylvanus was then a wealthy goldsmith, living in Brussels. Lang von Wellenberg, born in 1469 to a burgher family, took holy orders much later in life (in 1519).
Flemish origins Scholars point to a Flemish provenance due to the fact that: • Transylvanus was married to Frances, who was a niece of
Christopher de Haro, the
Lisbon-based merchant who was a friend of Magellan's as well as his financial backer. She was the daughter of Jacob de Haro, the head of a commercial firm based in
Antwerp. • Transylvanus had many ties with Brussels. A piece of Latin poetry he wrote in Faria argues that Transylvanus received his surname from the fact that he was a member of one of the many diplomats sent to Transylvania, which was part of the
Kingdom of Hungary. • Transylvanus died in
Brussels around 1538. •
Sigismund von Herberstein (1486–1566), the diplomat, writer, historian mentions him as Maximilian von
Sibenpergen , while
Konrad Peutinger (1465–1547) the humanists knows him as Maximilian
Sybenberger, both clearly referring to his real surname "van Sevenbergen" which may have also derived from the Dutch town of "Zevenbergen" which is also the German name for Transylvania :
Siebenbürgen. Both were also contemporaries and probably personal friends of Maximilianus.
The legend of a Transylvanian origin In an 1891 letter to
Notes and Queries, a scholar (identified only as "L.L.K.") wrote: :"I am anxious to trace the origin of the fable about the parentage of this writer. In several books and booksellers' catalogues, he is stated to be the natural son of
Matthew Lang, Archbishop of Salzburg, (cf., e.g.,
The Life of Ferdinand Magellan, by
Dr. Guillemard, p. 146). This is absolutely false. The father of Maximilian was a Transylvanian nobleman, who was killed in the
battle of Mohács in 1526. Cf. the letter of Don Martin de Salinas to King Ferdinand, dated Valladolid, 11 March 1527, in
Gayango's 'Spanish Calendar.' It has been suggested to me that a passage in Peter Martyr's
Epistola DXLIII., dated "Guadaluppe III. Kal. Jan. 1515," might have given rise to the fable; but the passage is so clear that it is difficult to imagine how it could be mistranslated". In 1916, the same scholar wrote in to state: :"The Catalogue of the fifth portion of the Huth Collection is still repeating that ancient myth that Maximilian had addressed his famous letter
De Moluccis Insulis to 'his father, the Cardinal Archbishop of Salzburg.' His father was 'Maître Luc dit Transilvain ou de Transilvanie (Van Sevenborge)," according to a deed seen by the late M. Alphonse Wauters. Cf.
Histoire des Environs de Bruxells (1855), vol. ii. p. 288."
Francis Henry Hill Guillemard, however, in the work referred to in the first letter, only wrote that "Maximilian was a natural son of the Archbishop of Salzburg," without naming the archbishop in question. One of the main arguments in favor of Maximilianus' Transylvanian origin: The renowned humanist and Bishop of
Pécs (later archbishop of
Esztergom,
Hungary)
Nicolaus Olahus' 1534 dated letter mentions "
noster Maximilianus Transylvanus", that is "
our Transylvanian Maximilianus", with whom he became a close friend in Brussels bonded by the shared heritage: "Based on our common fatherland we are in great intimacy with one another, as he says, and I believe (pro ea, quae inter nos ob patriam communem intercedit familiaritas ut ipse dicit, ergo qouque ita credo, non vulgaris)". It is also well known that Nicolaus Olahus was born in Hermannstadt (in Hungarian: Nagyszeben; today in Rumanian:
Sibiu) in Transylvania. == Works ==