Levedi
First voivode of the Hungarians / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Levedi, or Lebed,[1][2][3] Levedias, Lebedias, and Lebedi[4] (Greek: Λεuεδίας)[5] was a Hungarian chieftain, the first known leader of the Hungarians.[6][7][8][9]
Levedi | |
---|---|
first voivode of the Hungarians | |
Reign | early 9th century (?) |
Successor | Álmos (?) |
Spouse | Khazar lady |
Issue | none |
According to Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus' De administrando imperio, because of the alliance and the courage shown by the Hungarian people in all the wars they fought with the Khazars, Levedi, the "first voivode" ("protos voevodos", Greek: πρώτος βοέβοδος) of the Hungarians, who was also famous for his valor, was given a Khazar noble lady in marriage "so that she might have children by him".[10] However, as it turned out, Levedi did not produce offspring with this lady.
Later, after the Khazars defeated the Pechenegs and forced them to resettle in the land of the Hungarians, whom they defeated and split in two, the Khazars picked Levedi, the "first among the Hungarians"[10] and sought to make him the prince of the Hungarian tribes so that he "may be obedient to the [Khazars'] word and [their] command". Thus, according to Constantine, the Khazar khagan initiated the centralization of the command of the Hungarian tribes in order to strengthen his own suzerainty over them.[11][12] Levedi, however, refused, because he wasn't "strong enough for this rule". Instead, Constantine claims, Levedi proposed another Hungarian voivode, Álmos or his son Árpád as prince of the Hungarians.
The Magyar settlement between the Volga river and the Urals the mountains were named Lebedia, soon to become Levedia, after Levedi.[13][1][14][15]