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Rodowan

Hungarian Palatine and Nobleman From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Rodowan (Latin: Rodoan, Hungarian: Radvány; fl. 1067—died after 1071) was a nobleman who served Solomon, the King of Hungary, as palatine (Latin: palatinus comes), the highest court title, around 1067.[1]

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Career

He was the son of Bogát (Bagath or Bugar).[2] He is an ancestor of the Bogát-Radvány family of Bohemia.[2] His name, as well as that of his father, suggests that he was a Slav.[3]

Rodowan acted as a testimony in 1067, when Peter Aba founded the Százd Abbey (laid near present-day Tiszakeszi) and donated his surrounding lands to the Benedictine monastery. Rodowan participated in the Byzantine–Hungarian War in 1071. He was present at the successful siege of Belgrade. According to the Illuminated Chronicle, Rodowan – alongside Vid Gutkeled and Bishop Franco – was one of those lords who advised Solomon to leave Duke Géza out of dividing the spoils of war, which caused the confrontation between them to deepen.[4] Rodowan died sometime after 1071.[5]

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