Csák was the name of a gens (Latin for "clan"; nemzetség in Hungarian) in the Kingdom of Hungary.

Genus (gens) Csák
LandKingdom of Hungary
Gegründet10th century
GründerCsák (grandson of chieftain Szabolcs?)
Cadet branches12 branches, including:
Újlak branch
Trencsén branch

Origin

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The Gesta Hunnorum et Hungarorum ("Deeds of the Huns and Hungarians") records that the ancestor of the family was Szabolcs, son of chieftain Előd, the leader of one of the seven Magyar tribes.[1][2]

The gens divided into 12 branches and several families in the course of the centuries. The Csáky de Mihály family also belongs to the Csák gens.[2]

Notable members of the clan

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  • Csák, ancestor and denominator of the gens Csák
  • Ugrin (12th century), ispán

Ugod branch

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The numbering means within the branch.
  • Luka
    • Demetrius I (fl. 1217–1254), judge royal (1233–1234; 1242–1245)
      • Ugod (fl. 1264–1270)
        • Demetrius II (fl. 1277–1285; d. before 1287), wildgrave of Bakony (1281); married N Kőszegi
        • (?) Michael (fl. 1270–1277), ispán of Nyitra County (according to Pál Engel)
      • Unknown daughter (fl. 1232), married Csépán II Győr
      • Csák I (fl. 1264–1270), wildgrave of Bakony (1270)
    • (?) Adam
      • Paul
        • Peter (fl. c. 1305)

Kisfalud branch

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  • Ugrin (d. 1204), archbishop of Esztergom, maybe son of ispán Ugrin
  • Nicholas, his testament of 1231 mentions archbishop Ugrin as his pater, but more likely that he was Nicholas' uncle

Dobóc (Orbova) branch

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The numbering means within the branch.

  • Peter I
    • Dominic I (fl. 1262–1300), palatine for younger king Stephen (1266), possibly married N, daughter of Ivan Kőszegi
      • Nicholas (fl. 1280)
        • John ("the Red", fl. 1323)
        • Michael II (fl. 1323)
      • Stephen I ("Cimba", fl. 1280–1322)
        • Dominic II (fl. 1325–1338, d. before 1351)
          • Csala (fl. 1355)
          • Clara (fl. 1355)
          • Anna (fl. 1355–1356)
          • Bagó (fl. 1355–1356)
        • Peter III (fl. 1328–1351)
        • Stephen II (fl. 1351–1356), died without descendants
      • Peter II (fl. 1280, d. before 1308), married N, daughter of comes Ladislaus
    • Michael I (fl. 1264–1277), ispán of Veszprém County (1272)
    • Simon (fl. 1267)
    • Beers (fl. 1267)

Újlak branch

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The numbering means within the branch.

Trencsén branch

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The numbering means within the branch.
  • Matthew I (d. 1245/1249), first known member of the branch, master of the treasury (1242–1245)

Kendertó branch

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The numbering means within the branch.
  • Nicholas I
    • Matthew I (fl. 1263)
      • Nicholas II (fl. 1315–1336; d. before 1367), died without male descendants
        • Matthew II (fl. 1336)
        • Ladislaus (fl. 1336)
        • Catherine (fl. 1336–1367), heir, married Demetrius Málasi
          • Nicholas III (fl. 1367), canon of Fehérvár
          • Michael (fl. 1367)
            • Anne (fl. 1398), married Francis Apáti
          • Elizabeth (fl. 1383), married Klemens, a citizen of Fehérvár
      • a possible daughter

Nadab branch

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Fragments

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  • Gúg I
    • Csák (fl. 1219–1246), ispán of Sopron County (1235–1240)
      • Stephen (fl. 1228–1269, d. before 1276), Ban of Severin (1243); married N Győr
      • Gúg II (fl. 1237–1263)
      • four other unidentified sons (fl. 1237)

References

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  1. ^ Pál Engel, Andrew Ayton, Tamás Pálosfalvi, The realm of St. Stephen: a history of medieval Hungary, 895-1526, 895-1526, I.B.Tauris, 2005, p. 85.
  2. ^ a b Iván Nagy, István Friebeisz, Magyarország családai: Czimerekkel és nemzékrendi táblákkal, Volumes 3-4, Kiadja Friebeisz I., 1858, p. 67
  • Kristó, Gyula (editor): Korai Magyar Történeti Lexikon - 9-14. század (Encyclopedia of the Early Hungarian History - 9-14th centuries); Akadémiai Kiadó, 1994, Budapest; ISBN 963-05-6722-9.