Holy Crown of Hungary

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.LOCAL_NAMEUngarn-Denkmal
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.LOCATIONMattsee, Østerrike

The Holy Crown of Hungary, also known as the Crown of Saint Stephen, named in honour of Saint Stephen I of Hungary, was the coronation crown used by the Kingdom of Hungary for most of its existence; kings were crowned with it since the twelfth century. The Crown symbolized the King's authority over the Lands of the Hungarian Crown, and it was a key mark of legitimacy. Through the history of Hungary, more than fifty kings were crowned with it, with the last being Charles IV in 1916. The only kings not crowned were Wladyslaw I, John Sigismund Zápolya, and Joseph II.

The enamels on the crown are mainly or entirely Byzantine work, presumed to have been made in Constantinople in the 1070s. The crown was presented by the Byzantine Emperor Michael VII Doukas to the King Géza I of Hungary; both are depicted and named in the Greek language on enamel plaques in the lower crown.

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.TAGS Minnesmerke
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.DOWNLOAD landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.BUTTONS.SEE_MORE
Bild (Holzschnitt) aus… @ Franz Bock, Karl Freiherr von Czoernig, Scan und postprocessing by Hubertl
 

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.MORE_INFORMATION_AND_CONTACT

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Crown_of_Hungary

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.ADDRESS 8 Schloßbergweg, Mattsee 5163, Austria

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.DETAIL.COORDINATES 47°58'16.401" N 13°6'28.571" E

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.HEADER

landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.SUB_HEADER
landingPages.LANDING_PAGE.MOBILE_PANEL.FOOTER
landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.TITLE landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.DESCRIPTION
landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.USE landingPages.MOBILE.BANNER.NOT_NOW