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Decree of Turda

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Decree of Turda
Created28 June 1366
LocationTorda (present-day Turda, Romania)
Author(s)King Louis I of Hungary
PurposeDetermination of procedural rules

The Decree of Turda (Hungarian: tordai dekrétum; Romanian: Decretul de la Turda) was a 14th century decree by King Louis I of Hungary that granted special privileges to the Transylvanian noblemen to take measures against malefactors belonging to any nation, especially the Romanians.

Background

Transylvania in the 14th century experienced a development of the noble counties similar to the rest of the Kingdom of Hungary, albeit at a slower pace. Transylvanian nobles were exempted from paying taxes, such as the lodging and upkeep tax, to the voievod in 1324 by decree of Charles Robert and they were granted the right of jurisdiction over the inhabitants of their lands in 1342 by Voievod Thomas Szécsényi, a right that was later confirmed by Louis I of Hungary in 1365. However, this created a situation in which people who did not reside in the noble county but had properties in it or for any other reason were not in direct service to the local noble were in the legal gap between nobility's sphere and that of the voievod, and the sphere of customary law and the King's judgement, a situation addressed by the king in 1355:

We have ordered and are ordering with this letter that, from now on, each and every one of the dignitaries, barons, nobles and people of any other estate who own land in the said parts of Transylvania, but who live in other parts of our kingdom should have the duty to take part in the public assembly of the respective Transylvanian voivode, an assembly he will convene, under kingly order, in the name of the king and in front of the royal man ordered specifically for the aforementioned parts of Transylvania, at the legal times, and that they should be required to be fully subject to their judgment and decision, as if it were ours, and to answer to those who complain against them, without consideration of some of their acts of mercy or privileges, made, given and intended for them or any of them maybe even by us or by the other kings of Hungary, our ancestors, privileges that, with this letter, we dissolve, erase and decide that they should not have any power, but only in relation to the assembly and the day of the assembly.

As the rights and lands of the nobles increased, the serfs and commoners came increasingly more under the nobility's legal jurisdiction. Already in the late 13th century the majority of royal estates, where most Romanians lived, were gifted to seignorial authorities and the 14th century social stratification led to the formalization of the distinction between kenezes confirmed by royal decree and those who were not, together with the rest of Romanian commoners. The former would then be integrated in the Hungarian nobility.

Louis I of Hungary (Chronica Hungarorum)

King Louis I of Hungary stayed in Transylvania for six months—from October to April—in 1366. On 28 June 1366, while residing in Torda (present-day Turda), the monarch issued a decree at the request of the Transylvanian noblemen. The latter had informed the King that they "have been suffering, day by day, many troubles because of the evil arts of many malefactors, especially Romanians, ...because of their way of being and their disorderly behaviour".

The content of the decree

The royal decree granted special privileges to the Transylvanian noblemen "in order to remove, from this country, malefactors belonging to any nation, especially Romanians". For this purpose, the decree determines the rules of the legal procedure: If the culprint was not caught in the act but the guilt was obvious the death penalty was to be applied only if fifty oath-helpers agreed so. If the culprint was a noble, the oath-helpers had to be nobles, if the culprint was a commoner, the oath-helpers could be commoners. If the culprint was caught in the act the number of oath-helpers was reduced to seven. This first part is followed by considerations on particular cases and oath-helping equivalation: a Romanian caught in the act could be condemned by oath-helpers of any rank; a Romanian who accused another commoner of a different nation could be aided by commoner oath-helpers of any nation; a Romanian who accused a noble of a criminal deed without flagrant and who cannot be aided by the required number of nobles could have knezes or Romanian commoners as oath-helpers - the kneze's testimony was fully valid if they were vested by royal letter or they were village judges, else their testimony and the commoners counted only half as much; similar conditions for the oath-helpers were stipulated in the case of a Romanian accusing a noble that was caught in the act which required only seven nobles; nobles and their servants were not to be stoped in a free town or village if the accusation was not also done while caught in the act; all who were victims of a crime had to go through legal procedure and not take revenge with a similar act; and, finally, the serfs were to be judged by the local authorities and if the accuser did not find justice in the local decision he or she could appeal to the voievod judgement.

Regarding those outlawed, the decree states that commoners or Romanians found guilty in a local or voievodal assembly can be caught and executed anywhere in the country without further judgement, unless they were pardoned by the king. The nobles found guilty could be caught in any part of the country but had to be handed over alive to the voievod who was to carry their punishment.

If an accuser did not have an estate obtained through royal letter and the defender did, the royal court would take over the case. All other cases were to be judged at voievodal level.

The final part exempts the Transylvanian nobles and their estates from paying the upkeep tax and the lucrum camerae tax.

Context interpretation

Historians have not reached a consensual view of the exact circumstances of the issuing of the decree and its main purpose. István Petrovics writes that the mobile way of life of the increasing Romanian population caused their conflicts with the sedentary Hungarians. According to Ioan-Aurel Pop, the decree shows the Romanians' "muted resistance" against the monarch and the noblemen who had attempted to deprive them of their property, especially their inherited estates.

Notes

  1. "Front Matter". The Hungarian Historical Review. 7 (4). 2018. ISSN 2063-8647.
  2. ^ Barta, Gábor; Köpeczi, Béla, eds. (1994). History of Transylvania. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó. p. 206. ISBN 978-963-05-6703-9.
  3. ^ Popa-Gorjanu, Cosmin (January 2015). "Regional identity and the transylvanian nobility at the end of the 14th century and the beginning of the 15th century". researchgate.net. Retrieved 5 January 2025.
  4. Pop 2013, p. 467.
  5. Pop 2013, p. 458.
  6. Pop 2013, pp. 458–459.
  7. ^ Pop 2003, p. 122.
  8. Pop 2013, p. 459.
  9. ^ Pop, Ioan-Aurel (1997). "Un privilegiu regal solemn din 1366 si implicatiile sale [Un privilège royal solennel de 1366 et ses implications ]". Mediaevalia Transilvanica. 1: 69–86.
  10. "Front Matter". The Hungarian Historical Review. 7 (4). 2018. ISSN 2063-8647.
  11. Pop 2013, p. 461.
  12. Petrovics 2009, p. 461.
  13. Pop 2013, pp. 469–470.

Sources

  • Makkai, László (1994). "The Emergence of the Estates (1172–1526)". In Köpeczi, Béla; Barta, Gábor; Bóna, István; Makkai, László; Szász, Zoltán; Borus, Judit (eds.). History of Transylvania. Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 178–243. ISBN 963-05-6703-2.
  • Petrovics, István (2009). "Foreign Ethnic Groups in the Towns of Southern Hungary in the Middle Ages". In Keene, Derek; Nagy, Balázs; Szende, Katalin (eds.). Segregation-Integration-Assimilation: Religious and Ethnic Groups in the Medieval Towns of Central and Eastern Europe. Ashgate. pp. 67–88. ISBN 978-0-7546-6477-2.
  • Pop, Ioan-Aurel (2003). "Nations and Denominations in Transylvania (13th-14th Century)". In Lévai, Csaba; Vese, Vasile (eds.). Tolerance and Intolerance in Historical Perspective. Plus. pp. 111–123. ISBN 88-8492-139-2.
  • Pop, Ioan-Aurel (2013). "De manibus Valachorum scismaticorum...": Romanians and Power in the Mediaeval Kingdom of Hungary: The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries. Peter Lang Edition. ISBN 978-3-631-64866-7.
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