Andrew Kaplon
Andrew from the kindred Kaplon was a Hungarian nobleman at the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries, who served as ispán of Ung County in 1273. He is ancestor of several noble families, including the illustrious Sztáray (Sztárai) family.
Ancestry and career
Andrew was born into the Nagymihály branch of the ancient kindred Kaplon as the son of Jakó (I), the first known member of the branch, who served as ispán of Zólyom County from 1243 to 1245 and in 1262. His mother was Catherine, the daughter of Peter, who himself was the son of Szoboszló and grandson of Apa, the Ban of Slavonia in the mid-12th century. Andrew had a brother Jakó (II), who served as Master of the cupbearers from 1279 to 1280.Andrew's career strongly connected to the social advancement of his brother Jakó in his entire life. Throughout from 1249 to 1258, the brothers were granted several villages from their maternal grandparents – the aforementioned Peter and his wife Agnes – and their aunt Petronilla as the only living male descendants of their family. Consequently, Andrew and Jakó became owners of Mihály and Tapolya, Zalacska, Vinna and Tarna, in addition to the right of patronage over the Benedictine monastery of Kána. These donations laid the foundation of the wealthy Nagymihályi lordship in Ung and Zemplén counties for the upcoming century.
The brothers used their wealth to advance their social progress in the Hungarian royal court under the minor Ladislaus IV in the 1270s. Andrew is referred to as ispán of Ung County in 1273, when, together with Jakó, was granted the estates Sztára and Perecse in the county for their loyalty by the monarch. The royal charter narrates that both of them served Béla IV and Stephen V already faithfully. These lands were the basis of the emerging Nagymihályi lordship. Sometime in the last third of the 13th century, they built the castle of Nagymihály, a fortified stronghold in the region. It is possible that they also erected the nearby Barkó Castle in the same period.
According to a royal charter of Ladislaus IV with the date February 1278, Andrew physically assaulted and beat the young monarch with a hooked stick during a harsh dispute. As a result, Ladislaus confiscated Jakóvár and its accessories near Meggyes in Szatmár County from Andrew because of his lese-majesty. Later, Ladislaus IV donated this castle and the surrounding lands to Nicholas Pok. Early historians – e.g. Károly Szabó – saw another episode of the drastic weakening of royal power during the era of feudal anarchy In Andrew's serious audacity. However, later Hungarian historiography classified this document as non-authentic because its list of dignitaries reflects a political situation in 1274. Historian Péter Németh considered that "Jakó's Castle" never existed, and the fort was merely a fabrication compiled by members of the Meggyesi family during a late 14th-century lawsuit, as an identification with their fortified manor in Meggyes.
Both Andrew and Jakó took part in the Battle on the Marchfeld in August 1278. In 1279, Ladislaus IV confirmed Andrew and Jakó as the rightful owners of Sztára and Perecse. These data prove the falsity of the aforementioned document. In the same year, they were also granted the fort of Jeszenő with the surrounding forest as a "lost heritage". The Kaplons' centre, Nagymihály was granted right to hold fair. The brothers were involved in a lawsuit over the estate Gelyénes in Szatmár County, which they eventually obtained. They sold the village Kerész in 1289. Both of them swore loyalty to Andrew III, who ascended the Hungarian throne in 1290. They participated in the 1291 Austrian–Hungarian War as military aides to the Hungarian king. They purchased the land Tiba in Ung County for 300 marks from local castle warriors in 1290. Andrew III approved the contract in 1291. The brothers erected a small castle there around 1300. Andrew is last mentioned as a living person in 1302, when they possessed the land Gerecse. His eldest son Lawrence is mentioned as the owner of the Kaplon possessions in his own right in 1307, implying that Andrew died by that time.