Imre Czobor, the Glossary
Baron Imre Czobor de Czoborszentmihály (1520 – 8 June 1581) was a Hungarian noble and statesman, who served as Palatinal Governor of Hungary (nádori helytartó) from February 1572 to 8 June 1581.[1]
Table of Contents
7 relations: Erzsébet Czobor, György Thurzó, Juraj III Frankopan, Mihály Mérey, Miklós Istvánffy, Palatine of Hungary, Sombor.
- Czobor family
Erzsébet Czobor
Baroness Erzsébet Czobor de Czoborszentmihály (1572 – 31 March 1626) was the second wife of Palatine György Thurzó. Imre Czobor and Erzsébet Czobor are Czobor family.
See Imre Czobor and Erzsébet Czobor
György Thurzó
György Thurzó (Georg Thurzo, Juraj Turzo; 2 September 1567 – 24 December 1616) was a prominent Hungarian nobleman and Palatine of Hungary between 1609 and 1616, a position equivalent to a prime minister or viceroy, serving under the rule of the Habsburgs in the early 17th century.
See Imre Czobor and György Thurzó
Juraj III Frankopan
Juraj III Frankopan (English: George III Frankopan; ?–1553) was a Croatian nobleman, a member of the Slunj branch of the Frankopan noble family, very powerful and influential in the Croatian Kingdom.
See Imre Czobor and Juraj III Frankopan
Mihály Mérey
Baron Mihály Mérey de Kaposmére (Mérei; 1500 – 26 February 1572) was a Hungarian jurist and noble, who served as Palatinal Governor (nádori helytartó) in the Kingdom of Hungary, between 1562 and 1572.
See Imre Czobor and Mihály Mérey
Miklós Istvánffy
Baron Miklós Istvánffy de Baranyavár et Kisasszonyfalva (Nicolaus Istuanfius; 8 December 1538 – 1 April 1615) was a Hungarian politician, Humanist historian and poet, who served as Palatinal Governor of Hungary (nádori helytartó) from 19 January 1582 to November 1608.
See Imre Czobor and Miklós Istvánffy
Palatine of Hungary
The Palatine of Hungary (nádor or nádorispán, Landespalatin, palatinus regni Hungariae) was the highest-ranking office in the Kingdom of Hungary from the beginning of the 11th century to 1848.
See Imre Czobor and Palatine of Hungary
Sombor
Sombor (Сомбор) is a city and the administrative center of the West Bačka District in the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia.
See also
Czobor family
- Erzsébet Czobor
- Imre Czobor