Boyar of Fogaras


The boyars of Fogaras were a group of Vlach conditional nobles in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania.

Background

The earliest royal charter which mentioned the Vlachs' presence in southern Transylvania was issued in the early 13th century. The document recorded that Andrew II of Hungary had deprived the local Vlachs from a small territory between the rivers Olt, Arpaș and Cârțișoara and granted it to the newly established Cistercian Kerc Abbey. A hoard of hacksilver discovered at Cârțișoara, which contained a Byzantine coin from the first half of the 12th century, also confirm the Vlachs' presence in the region. The earliest record about a permanent Vlach settlement in the regionKerch Olachorum was made in 1332. Decades later, the first place names of Romanian origin were also recorded: Cuciulata in 1372 and Mândra in 1401.
Louis I of Hungary forced Vladislav I of Wallachia to accept his suzerainty in 1366. To secure Vladislav's loyalty, the king also granted him landed property in southern Transylvania, including the district of Fogaras. Six years later, Vladislav donated estates to Wallachian boyars in the district. Most of Vladislav's successors who also held FogarasMircea the Elder, Vlad the Impaler, Radu the Fair and Basarab Laiotăregularly granted estates to their boyars or awarded the heads of the local communities with the title boyar.

History

In 1372 Vladislav I of Wallachia gave to the magistrate Ladislau de Dopca, his relative, five estates in the district of Fogaras. Mircea I of Wallachia gives the village of Szkore to Stanciul the hegumen and his brother Călin, and in 1400 he strengthens to his boyars Micul and Stoia the dominion over half of the village of Mondra. The boyars Ion, Borcea and Călin had during Mircea's reign three villages with the mountains that belonged to them, and the boyar Costea had two and a half villages.
Through a document from June 10, 1417, Mircea I of Wallachia strengthened Ion, Borcea and Calian,
We mention that the Borcea family name still exists in Vad, and the Calian family name is found in the neighboring village, Sinke.
In 1437 the boyar Stanciu and his brother Roman receive from Vlad II Dracul the village of Voivodeni/Vajdafalva. The increase of the boyar from Fogaras was observed in the richer donations, so in 1473 the family of the master Stoica Naneș obtained from Radu cel Frumos more than 13 villages and 3 mountains.
Towards the end of the 15th century and the beginning of the following century, the history of Fogaras disctrict experienced a more turbulent period. In 1508 a boyar revolt tried unsuccessfully to bring the country under the rule of the Muntenian voivode Mihnea cel Rău.
The 1640 conscription counts 248 boyars in the Fogaras domain. In 1648, 87 boyars appeared in the fields of Porumbáktanya and Kwmana.
Zsuzsanna Lorántffy, the wife of the prince of Transylvania George I Rákóczi, the mistress of the Făgăraș Citadel, issued 21 boyar diplomas, in some cases confirming "their old boyar rights". Residents of Bucsum, Also Uczya, Also Venechia, Dragos, Sinke, Hirszen received such diplomas.
In the conscription from 1720-1721 in 53 villages belonging to the Făgăraș, Porumbac and Comăna domains, 725 boyars have appeared.