MARTINUZZI, GYRGY


Meaning of MARTINUZZI, GYRGY in English

original name Juraj Utje-enovic, byname Brother, or Friar, George, Latin-Hungarian Frater Gyrgy, Latin Frater Georgius born 1482, Kamicic, Croatia died Dec. 17, 1551, Alvinc, Transylvania, Hung. Hungarian statesman and later cardinal who worked to restore and maintain the national unity of Hungary. Born of a Croatian father and a mother of the patrician Venetian family of Martinuzzi, Gyrgy became a Paulist friar at the age of 28 after a brief military career. A skilled diplomat, he later became the close adviser to King John of Hungary in his struggle against the rival claims of Ferdinand of Austria to the Hungarian throne. Martinuzzi was in 1534 consecrated bishop of Nagyvrad in Transylvania. In 1538 he concluded with Ferdinand the Treaty of Nagyvrad, which left John with the royal title and most of Hungary and Ferdinand as successor to the Hungarian crown. On his deathbed, however, John repudiated the treaty. The Turks recognized John Sigismund, the infant son of John, as king, but occupied Buda, the capital of Hungary; Martinuzzi, as guardian and regent, managed to retain Transylvania as an independent principality under Turkish suzerainty. Fighting off the intrigues of Isabella, the mother of John Sigismund, Martinuzzi returned to the original plan of unification of Hungary under the Austrian Habsburg dynasty in order to resist Turkish expansion. He finally concluded the agreement with Ferdinand in 1551, by which he continued to be governor of Transylvania and was rewarded with the archbishopric of Esztergom (Gran) and a cardinal's hat. To forestall attack by the Turks, Martinuzzi resumed payment of tribute to the Porte in December 1551. Ferdinand, however, suspected the cardinal's loyalty and had him killed.

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