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This war also ended in Stephen’s victory, but at the
price of many Hungarian lives.
In the final battle Kean himself perished. Following his death, all of Kean’s wealth came into Stephen’s possession.
He used the booty—gold, silver, pearls, and precious
stones—to build churches and to aid the work of the apostles
of Christianity.
King Stephen was the first of Hungary’s Christian heroes,
and for his work on behalf of the new faith he was soon
canonized by the church.
Hungary’s Christianization involved so much violence,
however, that one cannot but sympathize with some of its
victims. All the
more so, as there were many who were willing to fight and
even to die for their traditional faith.
The
legend of Thonuzóba
Some of eleventh-century Hungary’s pagan heroes were
just as honorable and upright as the best representatives
of Christianity. Their fate reflects both the merciless character
of the Christianization of central and eastern Europe and
the heroism of those who—albeit representing backward-looking
social and cultural views—may have demonstrated more honesty
and dedication than did the overzealous spokespersons of
the new faith.
Of these anti-Christian heroes, none can claim more
sympathy than the above-mentioned Thonuzóba, prince
of the Pechenegs, who settled in the country in the middle
of the tenth century. His life story, alluded to briefly in medieval
chronicles, has been romanticized by a number of modern
poets and novelists who viewed Stephen’s extermination of
their nation’s ancient cultural heritage with considerable
misgivings. Prince
Thonuzóba’s legend is reproduced on the basis of
these romanticized portrayals.
Following
his victory over the pagan Pechenegs, King Stephen had the
young prince of his defeated enemies brought to him. “Why don’t you let yourself be baptized?” asked
the king. “If you
do, no harm will come to you and to your people.
If you will only accept the new faith and swear allegiance
to me, you will be able to live and rule freely over your
own people.”
“I will swear allegiance to you, sire, but I cannot
relinquish the faith of my fathers!” replied Thonuzoba. Then, pointing to some of the German and Italian
priests, he said: “I and my people will never accept the
God of these foreigners.”
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