Apor Péc | |
---|---|
Palatine of Hungary | |
Reign | 1298–1299 1304–1307 |
Predecessor |
Amade Aba Nicholas Kőszegi (1st term) several office-holders (2nd term) |
Successor |
Amade Aba (1st term) several office-holders (2nd term) |
Noble family | gens Péc |
Father | Mark |
Born | ? |
Died | 1307 |
Apor from the kindred Péc (Hungarian: Péc nembeli Apor; died 1307) was a Hungarian baron and landowner, who held several secular positions during the reign of kings Ladislaus IV and Andrew III.
He was born into the Zala branch of the gens Péc as the son of ispán (comes) Mark (d. around 1245). He had four siblings, including Gregory, judge royal in 1288 and Lucas, ispán of Zala County from 1289 to 1291.
Apor Péc began his political career during the reign of Ladislaus IV; he served as master of the horse and ispán of Zala County in 1280. Three years later, he was appointed voivode of Transylvania, when a series of royal concessions to the aristocracy forced Roland Borsa to resign his voivodeship in favour of Apor Péc. However Borsa returned to Transylvania and retook the office in 1284.
When king Ladislaus IV led a campaign against Ivan Kőszegi and captured Kőszeg in 1286, Apor Péc, in alliance with Nicholas Kőszegi, besieged and occupied the castle of Pressburg (Pozsony; today Bratislava, Slovakia), as well as devastated its surrounding area in winter that year. However a local noble, John, son of Peter gathered his relatives and their forces and defeated the army of Péc, who seriously injured during the battle. After that John reconquered the castle of Pressburg. Apor Péc lost his political influence for several years after this betrayal.
After the coronation of Andrew III, he served as ispán of Pozsony County between 1291 and 1292. In this capacity, he and one of his brothers, Lucas conquered by force the Tátika Castle which owned by the Diocese of Veszprém and built by Zlaudus Kaplon decades earlier. The bishop, Benedict Rád vainly objected at the royal court, but the castle has been restored to its original owner only after the death of Apor Péc.