Hartvik
Hartvik or Hartvic was a prelate in the Kingdom of Hungary under King Coloman the Book-lover. He wrote a new Life of St Stephen I of Hungary based on the holy king's two earlier hagiographies.
Identification
The author of the Legenda Hartviciana called himself Cartuicus or Hartuicus episcopus, without mentioning his episcopal see. Several historians in the 19th century claimed Hartvik was of German origin, and perhaps served as bishop of Regensburg or Meissen. Other historians considered he is identical with that Hartwig, who was abbot of Hersfeld from 1072 to 1090, and was installed as pro-imperial anti-Archbishop of Magdeburg in 1085. According to this theory, Hartvik was deprived of his position by Pope Urban II in 1088 and fled Hungary thereafter. It is possible that King Ladislaus I was that monarch, who appointed him Bishop of Győr.Based on the fact that Arduin of Ivrea, an 11th-century claimant to the title King of Italy, was referred to as Hartvigus in contemporary German sources, historian Gyula Pauler considered that Hartvik is identical with that episcopus Ioviensis Arduin, who – alongside a certain comes Thomas – was sent by King Coloman of Hungary to the court of Roger I of Sicily in 1097 to propose marriage to Roger's daughter. Their legation is appeared in De rebus gestis Rogerii et Roberti by Benedictine historian Goffredo Malaterra. Pauler argued the episcopal see Ioviensis is a result of distortion of text and can be matched with Iaurinensis, i.e. the Diocese of Győr.
His theological proficiency is shown by the fact that he used the 9th-century Pseudo-Isidore decretals in his work. A late 11th-century pontifical liturgical book, kept in Zagreb, was compiled for a certain bishop Chartuirgus. Church historian Károly Kniewald identified this person with Hartvik, the bishop of Győr, based on the listed churches and procession routes. The pontifical was compiled before 1100. A now lost royal charter of Coloman issued in 1103, recorded by 18th-century historian Miklós Schmitth, mentioned Bishop Arduin of Győr among the witnesses. Hartvik was described as an "excellently skilled and educated scholar in the moral and scriptural sciences" by a contemporary friar. His successor, George is first mentioned as bishop in 1111, implying that Hartvik died by then.