Hungarian Court Chancellery
The Hungarian Court Chancellery (Latin: Cancellaria Aulica Hungarica; German: ungarische Hofkanzlei; Hungarian: Magyar Udvari Kancellária) was an important institution in the Kingdom of Hungary's self-government under the Habsburg monarchy.
History
After the defeat at the Battle of Mohács in 1526, the Kingdom of Hungary became an internal state of the Habsburg Empire. In the period between the 16th and 19th centuries, the Hungarian Court Chancellery, established by the Habsburg monarch, played an important role in Hungarian self-government, which was headquartered in Vienna. The affairs of the Austrian hereditary provinces and Bohemia were handled by two similar offices, the Austrian and Bohemian Court Chancelleries. From 1694, it became a sister institution of the Transylvanian Court Chancellery.[1]
The primary task of the Court Chancellery was the exercise of the sovereign's rights, the granting of estates and various secular and ecclesiastical offices, the administration of ennoblements and other promotions, appointments, and contact with the various Hungarian government bodies. The direct connection with Hungary gave the Chancellery the opportunity to act as an intermediary between the monarch and the Hungarian estates. Thus, the chancellery and the chancellor became an indispensable factor in Hungarian estate politics.[1]
Establishment
The Hungarian Court Chancellery was established by Ferdinand I in Pressburg (present-day Bratislava). During the reign of Rudolf II, it operated in Prague between 1576 and 1612, and then again in Pressburg. In 1690, it was transferred to Vienna, where it moved to Bankgasse 6 in 1747, in the former Strattmann Palace. This building was built in 1692–94, during the reign of Leopold I, according to the plans of Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach, originally for Count Theodor Heinrich von Strattmann (1637–1693), Imperial Court Chancellor, and in 1747 was purchased by Count Lipót Nádasdy, head of the Hungarian Court Chancellery, for himself and his office. The late Baroque façade of the palace was rebuilt in Rococo style betwee 1766 and 1767 based on designs by Nicolò Pacassi, and the building was expanded to include house number 4, whose façade was designed by Franz Anton Hillebrandt in a style matching that of house number 6. Since the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, this building (Bankgasse 4-6) has housed the Hungarian Embassy in Vienna.[1]
Hungarian Court Chancellors
| Image | Name | Term Start | Term End | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
In 1526, Ferdinand I established the Hungarian Court Chancellery to manage Hungarian affairs.
| ||||
| Tamás Szalaházi | 1527 | 1536 | ||
| Ferenc Újlaki | 1539 | 1539 | Bishop of Győr, Vice-Chancellor
| |
| Péter Perényi | 1541 | 1542? | ||
| Miklós Oláh | 1543 | 1568 | 1543-1546: Vice-Chancellor
1546-1553: Chancellor 1553-1568: Chancellor Bishop of Eger, then Archbishop of Esztergom | |
| János Liszti | 1568 | 1577 | Bishop of Veszprém and then of Győr
| |
| Juraj Drašković | 1578 | 1586 | Bishop of Győr, Archbishop of Kalocsa, Cardinal
| |
| Péter Heresinczy | 1586 | 1590 | ||
| János Kutassy | 1592 | 1597 | ||
| Márton Pethe | 1598 | 1602 | ||
| Ferenc Forgách | 1602 | 1607 | ||
| Bálint Lépes | 1608 | 1623 | ||
| István Sennyey | 1623 | 1635 | ||
| György Lippay | 1635 | 1642 | ||
| István Bosnyák | 1642 | 1644 | ||
| György Szelepcsényi | 1644 | 1666 | ||
| Ferenc Lénárd Szegedi | 1666 | 1669 | ||
| Tamás Pálffy | 1669 | 1679 | Bishop of Vác, then of Nitra
| |
| János Gubasóczy | 1679 | 1686 | ||
| Péter Korompay | 1686 | 1690 | ||
| Balázs Jaklin | 1690 | 1695 | ||
| László Mattyasovszky | 1696 | 1705 | ||
| Miklós Illésházy | 1706 | 1723 | ||
| László Ádám Erdődy | 1725 | 1725 | ||
| Imre Esterházy | 1725 | 1725 | ||
| Ádám Péter Acsády | 1725 | 1732 | Bishop of Veszprém; the last Bishop-Chancellor
| |
| Lajos Batthyány | 1733 | 1746 | ||
| Lipót Flórián Nádasdy | 1746 | 1758 | ||
| Miklós Pálffy | 1758 | 1762 | ||
| Ferenc Esterházy | 1762 | 1785 | ||
| Károly József Jeromos Pálffy | 1787 | 1807 | ||
| József Erdődy | 1807 | 1819 | ||
| Ferenc József Koháry | 1820 | 1826 | ||
| Mihály Nádasdy | 1826 | 1827 | ||
| Ádám Reviczky | 1827 | 1836 | ||
| Fidél Pálffy | 1836 | 1838 | ||
| Antal Mailáth | 1839 | 1847 | ||
| György Apponyi | 1847 | 1848 | ||
On 12 April 1848, the Batthyány government dissolved the Chancellery. It was replaced by the Ministry of the King's Personal Affairs. On 13 November 1848, Prince Windisch-Grätz, the military commander of Vienna, declared the ministry's operations to be terminated.
20 October 1860 – The October Diploma restored the previous office system
| ||||
| Miklós Vay | 1860 | 1861 | ||
| Antal Forgách | 1861 | 1864 | ||
| Hermann Zichy | 1864 | 1865 | ||
| György Majláth | 1865 | 1867 | ||
On 17 February 1867, King Franz Joseph I of Hungary, in a letter addressed to Chancellor György Majláth, ordered the abolition of the Chancellery, and with the compromise the old court office finally gave way to a modern government. The officials and role of the Chancellery were taken over by the Ministry besides the King, headed by Count György Festetics.
| ||||
See also
- Imperial Court Chancellery
- Austrian Court Chancellery
- Bohemian Court Chancellery
- Transylvanian Court Chancellery
References
- ^ a b c Fazekas, István (2021). A Magyar Udvari Kancellária és hivatalnokai 1527-1690 között (in Hungarian). Bölcsészettudományi Kutatóközpont Történettudományi Intézet. ISBN 978-963-416-251-3. Retrieved 21 October 2025.
Further information
- *Fazekas István: A Magyar Udvari Kancellária és hivatalnokai 1527–1690 között; ELKH BTK TTI, Budapest, 2021 (Magyar történelmi emlékek. Értekezések)