King Demetrius Zvonimir of Croatia, whose wife, …

Years: 1091 - 1091

King Demetrius Zvonimir of Croatia, whose wife, Helen was Ladislaus's sister, had died in 1089 or 1090.

His successor, Stephen II, had died childless in 1091.

Upon the request of the Dowager Queen Helen, Ladislaus decides to intervene in the conflicts emerging among the different parties of Croatian noblemen.

He informs Abbot Oderizius of Monte Cassino of the conquest of "Sclavonia" in a letter of 1091.

According to the chronicler Thomas the Archdeacon, Ladislaus "occupied the entire land from the River Drava to the mountains called the Iron Alps without encountering opposition" in Croatia.

However, a local nobleman Petar Svačić whom Ladislaus's opponents proclaimed king resisted in the Gvozd Mountains and the neighboring regions.

Ladislaus appointed his younger nephew, Álmos to administer the occupied territory.

Around the same time, Ladislaus also set up a separate diocese for these regions with its see in Zagreb.

The bishop of the new see becomes the suffragan to the archbishop of Esztergom in Hungary.

Ladislaus admits that he could not "promote the cause of earthly dignities without committing grave sins" in his letter of 1091 to Abbot Oderizius.

Ladislaus styles himself as "king of the Hungarians and of Moesia" in his letter to Abbot Oderizius.

No other documents refer to Ladislaus's rule in Moesia, suggesting that even if he occupied this region, the forces of Constantinople reoccupied it in short time.

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