Golden Bull of 1242
Golden Bull of 1242 | |
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Golden Bull of Béla IV. | |
Created | 16 November 1242 |
Author(s) | Béla IV |
Purpose | Bela IV proclaimed a Free Royal Borough |
The Golden Bull of 1242 was a golden bull or edict, issued by King Béla IV of Hungary to inhabitants of Gradec (part of today's Zagreb in Croatia) during Mongol invasion of Europe. By this golden bull King Bela IV proclaimed a royal free city.[1]
The Golden Bull was a very important document by which Gradec was declared and proclaimed "a free royal city on Gradec, the hill of Zagreb". It stated that the towns were subject directly to the King, not to the nobles whose estate they were situated on. The citizens were given rights of different kinds; among other things they were entitled to elect their own "city judge" (Croatian: gradski sudac) fulfilling the role of a mayor. They were also entitled to manage their own affairs.
References
- ↑ "750TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GOLDEN BULL GRANTED BY BELA IV.". posta.hr. Croatian Post. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
Sources
- M. Šašić (1998-11-17). "»Zlatna bula« - temelj razvoja Zagreba kroz stoljeća". Vjesnik (in Croatian). Zagreb. Archived from the original on 2009-01-04.
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