The HOLY CROWN of HUNGARY & The AMERICAN PRESIDENT

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 18. 05. 2024
  • #hungary #crown #regalia
    The Holy Crown of Hungary, also known as St Stephen's Crown, is one of Hungary's greatest cultural treasures. Dating back to the eleventh century, the crown has witnessed many vicissitudes in the nation's history; it has been stolen and hidden, and it has even left the country entirely. In this video, I look at this object in some detail, its importance in the political life of Hungary and how, for over thirty years, it was kept in the United States.
    Join this channel to get access to perks:
    / @allanbarton
  • Zábava

Komentáře • 238

  • @allanbarton
    @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +189

    Forgive my extremely poor grasp of US Geography! What can I say, I’m an Englishman. I do realise now that Fort Knox is in Kentucky. 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @russbear31
      @russbear31 Před 26 dny +16

      Thanks for correcting this, Allan. I was about to comment on Fort Knox. This is a fascinating story. I knew that a lot of European treasures were moved to Fort Knox for safekeeping during the war, but I had never heard the story of this crown.
      BTW, it's also been widely reported that the Bank of England moved much of its gold reserve to Fort Knox during the war to ensure that Hitler would never plunder it.

    • @SMichaelDeHart
      @SMichaelDeHart Před 26 dny +5

      I just started listening to the video and stopped to post a correction on the Fort Knox location. I'm glad you figured it out!!

    • @joemungus6063
      @joemungus6063 Před 26 dny

      arizona mentioned!!! lets go

    • @deniseatkins9407
      @deniseatkins9407 Před 26 dny +3

      I wouldn't have a clue where it was either

    • @SMichaelDeHart
      @SMichaelDeHart Před 26 dny +1

      @deniseatkins9407 Even though A LOT of Americans know of UK bases like RAF Wethersfield (USAFE), RAF Mildenhall (SAC/USAFE/AMC), RAF Lakenheath (SAC/USAFE), RAF Mendlesham and even in Germany...Ramstein Air Base. Maybe because there's a large contingency of American troops helping to protect the UK and Europe. I guess we look at it a little differently.

  • @barkasz6066
    @barkasz6066 Před 21 dnem +76

    As a Hungarian this crown is like the ark of the covenant. No king was considered legitimate until it was crowned by the bishop of Esztergom in Székesfehérvár by this crown on the coronation mound built from dirt gathered from all parts of the country.
    You can see it in the Parliament during a tour. Itself being a beautiful neogothic building it really is an almost otherwordly experience seeing it for real, especially after seeing it and hearing about it in so many places from the Hungarian coat of arms to the pages of history books.

    • @e1gr3co
      @e1gr3co Před 20 dny +1

      Let's say Alba Regia rather (Székesfehérvár)

    • @kightsun
      @kightsun Před 19 dny

      If this were true Hungarians would demand their king back 🤷‍♂️

    • @farseverosapirico6248
      @farseverosapirico6248 Před 19 dny +1

      ABOUT THE RADIATIONS OF THIS CROWN .
      IN THE MEDIEVAL AGES SOMEWHEN THERE WAS A DYNASTY WAR , AND THERE WERE 2 KINGS . THE ONE HAS HAD ALL WEAPONS , MEN AND ARMY , AND THE OTHER , IN THE END HAD ONLY A TENT , BUT THE HOLY CROWN . HE HAS LEFT THE TENT , WAS WALKING SLOWLY TO THE CONTRAKING HAVING THE SAINT CROWN ON THE HEAD , AND THE OTHER KING GOT OFF FROM HIS HORSE AND WENT TOWARDS THE KING OF THE CROWN WHO SAID : YOU ARE MY CAPTURED , ARREST HIM ! AND THE MEN OF THE CONTRA KING HAS ARRESTED THEIR "KING"...
      ANOTHER SOMETHING . WE HAVE LOST ALL WARS OF OURS , AND THE GOVERNOR IN 1849 AND A TEAM OF HIS BEST MEN HAD TO ESCAPE FROM HUNGARY TO ISTANBUL , BUT , SOMEWHERE THEY HAVE HIDDEN THE SAINT CROWN. LATER THE HABSBURG WINNING GOVERNMENT HAS HIRED A MERCENARY , A HEAD HUNTER SO THAT HE SHALL FIND THE CROWN .
      HE HAS FOUND IT , AND HASN'T SOLD IT FOR GOOD MONEY ANYWHERE BUT HAS GIVEN IT TO HIS LORDS (!) . ON THE CONTRARY WITH THE CASE OF THE GERMANS HAVING TAKEN THE POLISH NATIONAL CROWN , OR THE CHINESE ABOUT THE MONGOLIAN CROWN , WELL , THE HABSBURGS HAVEN'T PERISHED OUR HOLY CROWN...
      UNBELIEVABLE ??? :-)

    • @andras8911
      @andras8911 Před 18 dny +1

      With the Crown comes the King’s Laws “ Aranybulla”!
      I think I’ve seen one law saying who ever steals the crown or shames it, there’s a great punishment for it.
      And I believe the punishment can be Enforced by Saints or God directly!
      They have shamed the Hungarian Holy Crown by illegally taking it!
      They have shamed Saints, God directly!
      It is phenomenal powers of God directly that they will face, if not have faced already..

  • @gammamaster1894
    @gammamaster1894 Před 26 dny +62

    As a student of Hungarian (and lover of all things Hungarian) this should prove to be very interesting!

    • @Erinn620
      @Erinn620 Před 26 dny +4

      my grandmother was Hungarian ❤

    • @yougottabekiddiing
      @yougottabekiddiing Před 26 dny

      My French bulldogs are from Hungary, imported to me in the USA! ❤

    • @msjannd4
      @msjannd4 Před 26 dny +1

      I'm interested in learning the language and have tooled around a bit on CZcams for lessons. It's not easy!

  • @bcoldgoalie
    @bcoldgoalie Před 26 dny +20

    I'm always amazed how well these artifacts stand the test of time. Surviving wars and unrest is no small feat. Fascinating history! 👏

  • @apmoy70
    @apmoy70 Před 21 dnem +17

    The Greek inscription on the enamel panel for Geza, reads «Γεωβίτζας Πιστός Κράλης Τουρκίας» = "Geovídzas (the Hellenised name of Geza) faithful Kral of Turkey"; note that he's described as Kral and not Βασιλεύς-Basileus, the latter is reserved only for the emperor in Constantinople. Turkey is the name by which Hungary was known to the Byzantines

  • @bbenjoe
    @bbenjoe Před 19 dny +7

    In medieval times if someone wanted to be a legitimate king of Hungary, three criteria had to be fulfilled: 1. He had to be crowned with the Holy Crown. 2. ... by the archbishop of Esztergom. 3. In the royal capital of Székesfehérvár. Any three of these were lacking, and the king's legitimacy could be disputed.

  • @popcult
    @popcult Před 26 dny +32

    Thank you for a very much needed summary about Hungary’s Holy Crown.
    You are right about its unique role in Hungary’s public life -even today. As someone who grew up in Hungary I was always aware of the Crown’s mystical, spiritual powers as well its significance in public law.
    Your comparison of the locations of Saint Edward’s Crown and Saint “István’s” really juxtaposes the Hungarian Crown Jewels with other European ones.
    There was only one detail that I would like to add: according to mythology The Holy Crown was offered to István by the Blessed Virgin hence the strong Marian sentiments even today in the country. Many still refer to Mary as Queen of Hungary.
    Thanks again for your wonderful work. ❤

    • @salvadorromero9712
      @salvadorromero9712 Před 21 dnem

      That's a bit surprising given the huge Protestant minority that's such a distinguishing characteristic of Hungary among countries in the area. I've often heard it said that Calvinism has long played an outsized role in Hungarian nationalism.

    • @popcult
      @popcult Před 21 dnem +2

      @@salvadorromero9712 More than 60 percent of religious Hungarians are Catholic and 20 percent Calvinist.

    • @goddessIv
      @goddessIv Před 21 dnem

      @@salvadorromero9712 Most Hungarians are Catholic.

    • @kingaszeleikis482
      @kingaszeleikis482 Před 21 dnem +4

      The opposite happened. King István offered the crown and his country to the protection of the Virgin Mary. So Hungary has an eternal, heavenly ruler.

    • @salvadorromero9712
      @salvadorromero9712 Před 21 dnem

      @@kingaszeleikis482 I wonder if Horthy ever mentioned this when asked where the king was in his Kingdom!

  • @nemorinoeso7581
    @nemorinoeso7581 Před 26 dny +12

    Thank you Dr Barton for this video, I subscribed to your chanel two years ago for niche medieval english content and now you presented the Holy Crown of my homeland, what a pleasant surprise! Unfortunately the osman wars destroyed much of our medieval and renaissance heritage, so the Basilica of Székesfehérvár, where the medieval coronations took place but the coronation regalia remained intact, it is hard to describe how important are these objects for our cultural heritage. Very well done!

  • @jilltagmorris
    @jilltagmorris Před 26 dny +18

    This was absolutely fascinating. I've not seen or heard of this ever before. I graduated high school in 1977 and you would think the return would have made news here!

    • @kevinchambers1101
      @kevinchambers1101 Před 25 dny

      I agree. I don't remember anything about its return in the news.

    • @accaeffe8032
      @accaeffe8032 Před 22 dny +3

      It's because most Ameticans wouldn't even know where Hungary is. From a geopolitical or economic point of view, it is insignificant.

    • @kevinchambers1101
      @kevinchambers1101 Před 22 dny +2

      @accaeffe8032 maybe many Americans wouldn't know or care, but it is something I would have found interesting and yet I didn't hear a word about it.

  • @s.corona2514
    @s.corona2514 Před 20 dny +7

    If you look closely at the three back images of the Holy Crown, you can see that they are secondary to the Crown. This is particularly evident in the portrait of Mihály Dukász on the rear pediment, which is fixed in front of the socket with rivets. When the image was mounted, the image of St. Thomas behind it was drilled through. The quality of this trio falls far short of the artistry of all other enamelled images of the Holy Crown. In other words, these images are unsuitable for determining the date of the making of the Holy Crown. The fact that the inscriptions of the Holy Crown are bilingual (Latin and Greek) does not prove that they were made in a different time and place. The salvation history program of the images of the Holy Crown also proves that the crown was made as a unified whole.

  • @stepps511
    @stepps511 Před 26 dny +13

    A delightful video and history lesson of this very precious object. Thank you, Allan!

  • @chumleyk
    @chumleyk Před 25 dny +21

    Wonderful to see a real crown from the Eastern Roman/Byzantine empire survive!

    • @CurryMaster-ie3fo
      @CurryMaster-ie3fo Před 20 dny +1

      This holly crown is nothing to do with Eastern Roman/Byzatine empire. This is a holly crown and we do not know its origins. If this was told in this video is false. I stop watching it after he said that Hungary was ruled by Husburgs.

    • @mcRydes
      @mcRydes Před 19 dny +2

      @@CurryMaster-ie3foremarkable. You are the first Hapsburg truther I have ever encountered.

    • @markuslaszlo4069
      @markuslaszlo4069 Před 19 dny

      @@CurryMaster-ie3fo 1884

    • @ironduke3780
      @ironduke3780 Před 19 dny +5

      ​@@CurryMaster-ie3foWe do know it's from the Eastern Roman Empire. You can literally see the portrait of Michael VII Doukas 'Parapinakes'

    • @user-hd1si6uh9k
      @user-hd1si6uh9k Před 18 dny +1

      @@CurryMaster-ie3fo * you don't know. Historians do...

  • @boomerix
    @boomerix Před 20 dny +5

    The Holy Crown as a mystical relic and mandatory requirement for legitimate rule is much closer to what you read in fairy tales / fantasy novels then what was historically practised in most other European Kingdoms.

  • @rhiannonpoole6019
    @rhiannonpoole6019 Před 26 dny +8

    Thankyou for another fascinating video, I knew nothing about the early history of Hungary so yet another gap in my knowledge filled! Or if not filled, then at least a space made for it. I only have to hear the names of those precious stones to make my mouth water!

  • @ragnes18
    @ragnes18 Před 26 dny +9

    Thank you so much, i'm from Hungary, it is a nice suprise...

  • @beno280
    @beno280 Před 16 dny +2

    Thank you for this video!
    As I happen to be a Hungarian, I have a bit more, I think somewhat interesting information regarding our crown. We have a so-called Holy Crown discipline, which used to be the very basis of Hungarian statehood and of our unwritten historical constitution.
    According to this, the Holy Crown isn’t only the main object that signifies the power of the king, but it is to be regarded as the actual sovereign. The king or queen is only a member of the body of the crown, along with the ruling class and the entire territory of the Kingdom of Hungary. The crown has its own personality and will, the person who wears it is only a messenger of this will. This was quite important, because this way, the state could be separated from the monarch, also from the monarchy. Nothing makes this special position more visible, than the official name of the country within the old empire: the Lands of the Holy Crown.
    Another quite interesting thing is, that within our current constitution, there is a provision which orders the constitution to be interpreted according to the old historical constitution, which contains this discipline. This way, one can argue, that the Holy Crown hasn’t lost its position as the embodiment and ruler of Hungary, only there is no monarch nowadays, instead we have a Parliament.

  • @BennyM_
    @BennyM_ Před 26 dny +22

    ‘Confection’ is an excellent word for this crown!

    • @albertsmyth9616
      @albertsmyth9616 Před 26 dny +2

      Yes indeed, I agree, a perfect word. In the Catholic Church among other formal descriptions the moment of transubstantiation of the Host being turned into the living embodiment of Christ by the priest at Mass, this moment used to be called the ‘confection’ of the Host by the priest which is a dictionary definition of the word which now means something quite different in our modern colloquial english and sounds almost frivolous to our modern ear. It’s nice to hear this word being used in its original meaning.

  • @msjannd4
    @msjannd4 Před 26 dny +12

    Beautiful crowns.

  • @robb2biago
    @robb2biago Před 26 dny +5

    This is a fascinating story. I studied the Monuments Men, what a fantastic program. Of course President Carter helped in its return. Well and that area was somewhat stable for its return

  • @TonyThomas10000
    @TonyThomas10000 Před 26 dny +13

    "For much of the Cold War the crown was held at the United States Bullion Depository (Fort Knox, Kentucky) alongside the bulk of the United States' gold reserves and other priceless historical items." -- Wikipedia

  • @blackeyedlily
    @blackeyedlily Před 24 dny +8

    Fascinating and beautiful!

  • @mavisemberson8737
    @mavisemberson8737 Před 25 dny +3

    The Austro Hungarian Empire was a great feature of our European History lessons at school! Very complicated it was too. Thanks for this.. It is an interesting crown in itself.

  • @diannehardwick950
    @diannehardwick950 Před 25 dny +4

    Heavens it has had such complex and even turbulent history, it’s a wonder it is still with us.

  • @NinaHansen2008
    @NinaHansen2008 Před 26 dny +6

    Beautiful video. Thank you, Dr. Barton.

  • @spaceenthusiast7160
    @spaceenthusiast7160 Před 22 dny +6

    I find it funny that this video is 18:48 in length (year of the hungarian revolution)

  • @susanspacey7537
    @susanspacey7537 Před 26 dny +6

    Legend says that the crown was squashed when it was hidden inside a cushion and was sat on to keep it safe

  • @neddoucet7779
    @neddoucet7779 Před 26 dny +7

    Thank you Dr. Barton for another brilliant presentation. I look forward to your videos. Greetings from the beautiful Hudson Valley.

  • @Hongaars1969
    @Hongaars1969 Před 21 dnem +3

    We get it. Fort Knox is in Kentucky. As a Hungarian, I admit to knowing very little re its provenance or its history. Thank you. Subscribed. Liked. All
    Notifications.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 21 dnem +1

      Ha, ha - I am going to be dreaming about this in my sleep. Thanks for subscribing.

  • @annettewillis2797
    @annettewillis2797 Před 18 dny +1

    This crown is an extraordinary piece. Its survival is also extraordinary! Many thanks Allan for all your insights.

  • @vinceplatini
    @vinceplatini Před 26 dny +4

    Another very interesting lesson, never heard of this 👑. Thank you so much! 👍🏻

  • @juz3r1
    @juz3r1 Před 20 dny +4

    The Hungarian Holy Crown is a separate legal entity!!!

  • @yougottabekiddiing
    @yougottabekiddiing Před 26 dny +8

    Nice video, with very interesting information. In the photo of the king wearing the Hungarian crown, there is also a very interesting scepter. Any information on where that object went?

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +8

      That’s another video.

    • @nemorinoeso7581
      @nemorinoeso7581 Před 26 dny +4

      The coronation mantle is even more interesting part of the regalia hence it is the single object which has connection to St. Stephen.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +7

      @nemorinoeso7581 that will be in the same video.

    • @yougottabekiddiing
      @yougottabekiddiing Před 25 dny +1

      @@allanbartonExcellent!

  • @MTCason
    @MTCason Před 26 dny +5

    It's an interesting footnote that regardless of the original provenance of the crown, if Emperor Charles I is ever fully canonized as a saint (currently classified as Blessed with multiple miracles to his credit) it will become, in the eyes of the Catholic faithful, a legitimate holy relic. It would have touched a saint!

    • @abelzatyko1513
      @abelzatyko1513 Před 22 dny +2

      Already did, with Saint Ladislaus, far as I know

    • @MTCason
      @MTCason Před 22 dny

      @@abelzatyko1513 Ah, that's definitely possible though I do find it interesting that none of the Medieval depictions of Saint Ladislaus' coronation (or his reliquary) show the Holy Crown.

    • @birocsabal
      @birocsabal Před 19 dny

      No depiction of any king or coronation made before the 16th century shows the Holy Crown. It seems as it was a taboo before.

  • @diuskad
    @diuskad Před 16 dny

    Thank you for the detailed and informative video. I have one thing to add, that the only 2 Habsburg kings were crowned in Budapest, Franz Josef I. and Karl IV., since the city was only established in 1853 unifying Buda, Pest and Óbuda under the name Budapest. All other kings were crowned in one of these cities: Esztergom, Székesfehérvár, Pozsony, Sopron and Buda, where - as previous comments mentioned - the main city for coronations was Székesfehérvár. The name also indicates that this city was the main seat of the king and his court during the middle ages. So the sentence that the Habsburgs rushed to Budapest to get crowned is not quite true regarding the city, however, legally no king could hold office without a coronation where St. Stephans Crown was placed on his head (for Maria Theresia the crown touched her shoulder).

  • @Csabai4u
    @Csabai4u Před 17 dny

    Thank you for a thorough and comprehensive review of the Holy Crown of Hungary. Two observations. First, atop the crown where the cross rests, Christ is flanked by the sun & moon which resembles the Szekely motifs. Interesting too, that Hunyadi Matyas was born in 'Szekely land'. Second, I find it interesting that the two archangels, Gabriel and Michael, are represented on the crown. However, Michael is not registered in the Hungarian book of names, whereas Gabriel is.

  • @trumpetmom8924
    @trumpetmom8924 Před 26 dny +2

    15:47 I find it interesting how the illustrator here has the cross leaning toward the left of the illustration, despite one panel being of the front and the other of the back.

  • @forthrightgambitia1032
    @forthrightgambitia1032 Před 26 dny +6

    Is there any chance you can do a video on the Iron Crown of Lombardy? Strangely this crown sticks in my mind as I first saw a reference to it years ago in the rather unlikely location of the novel Moby Dick...

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny +1

      It’s on my list, it has a quite remarkable provenance.

  • @S.T.G.
    @S.T.G. Před 26 dny +5

    Allan, thank you very much for this video, which gives a summary of so many aspects of the Hungarian Holy Crown. I think it was not mentioned that, after Jimmy Carter’s decision in 1977, the Holy Crown was brought back to Hungary on 5 January 1977 and was returned to the Hungarian people on 6 January. The American delegation was led by Cyrus Vance, U.S. Secretary of State, while it was handed over to Antal Apró, the President of the Hungarian Parliament. It was a strong request from the American side that János Kádár, the leader of the Hungarian communist party and, therefore, the de facto leader of the country, should not be present at the ceremony. As far as I know, it was only in 2000 that a law was passed emphasising the importance of the Holy Crown as a relic embodying the continuity and independence of the Hungarian state and establishing the Corporation of the Crown which you mentioned at the end of the video. At the same time, it was transferred from the National Museum to the Parliament of the Hungarian Republic. Later, in 2011, it was mentioned again as embodying the constitutional continuity of Hungary’s statehood and the unity of the nation in Orban’s “Fundamental Law of Hungary” which replaced the Constitution of the Republic.

  • @carolescutt2257
    @carolescutt2257 Před 26 dny +2

    ❤❤ Sunday special upload 😊😊 I wait for your uploads and settle with a hot chocolate to indulge mind and body. Bless your wonderful academia xx

  • @knutanderswik7562
    @knutanderswik7562 Před 26 dny +2

    Great video! That odd lumpy amethyst above the front-side Pantokrator is neat, suggests a crown's purple cap to my modern eyes but can that have been the original idea? The old illustration at 15:20 interprets it as a heart shape. I suppose, with neighborhood rockhound-club garage-tumbled amethysts now going away to children in grab-bags for a fiver, someone might have had the bright idea to switch it out.

    • @s.corona2514
      @s.corona2514 Před 18 dny +1

      It was a heart-shaped stone. The lower part, the tip of the heart, is missing, the two existing pieces are glued together. It represents and operates the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ through the Holy Crown.

  • @sladestumbo4117
    @sladestumbo4117 Před 26 dny +17

    A few mistakes: Fort Knox is a military base in Kentucky, not Arizona. It houses the U.S. Gold Reserve. It is not a bank. Federal Reserve Banks are a different system altogether. I assume the word “reserve” may be the source of confusion. Perhaps the crown was in multiple locations? Otherwise, a very informative video.

    • @Colourmad314
      @Colourmad314 Před 26 dny +1

      For the depth of ecclesiastical & royal knowledge imparted on this channel a small faux pas is not something to snark at, most people think Fort Knox is a film set for James Bond……….

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +6

      I try to be thorough with my research, but sometimes my humanity gets in the way. I spotted the error as soon as I’d uploaded the video.

    • @michaelhealy1590
      @michaelhealy1590 Před 17 dny +1

      Give Allen some space. He is a very good ecclesiastical and historical scholar and not an expert in American geography. Just look at all his other really great works.

  • @AmynAL
    @AmynAL Před 25 dny +1

    Thank you for this video. I had no idea of its existence or of the U.S.’s storing of it. Very interesting and so much history.

  • @uriahheep8470
    @uriahheep8470 Před 26 dny +3

    Excellent video.

  • @pauleromeyerdherbey2177
    @pauleromeyerdherbey2177 Před 21 dnem +1

    Great job, Sir Barton !

  • @goddessIv
    @goddessIv Před 21 dnem

    Great video about the crown. Thank you!

  • @sisimoto
    @sisimoto Před 16 dny +2

    The name is Sacra Corona, Saint Crown, because it is more then an artifact. Its the Saint Crown of Hungary. The Crown.

  • @accaeffe8032
    @accaeffe8032 Před 22 dny +2

    Reading through the comment section, now I will always remember that Fort Knox is in Kentucky.😊

  • @realshaho3180
    @realshaho3180 Před 25 dny +2

    Wonderful video. Correction: Ft. Knox is in Kentucky not Arizona

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny +1

      I did pin a comment about this to the video.

  • @BrianJosephMorgan
    @BrianJosephMorgan Před 26 dny +2

    Fascinating.

  • @educanassa100
    @educanassa100 Před 23 dny +2

    Great video, Allan

  • @Kapa362
    @Kapa362 Před 23 dny +3

    Fun fact: This crown wasn't made by the Hungarians, but it was a gift for accepting Christianity. When Szent István (Saint Stephen) the first king of Hungary was crowned with this crown in 1001, after they defeated Koppány (idk how he is called in english) who was a pagan. After that Stephen converted the nation into Christianity. Forgive me for my grammar issues!

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 23 dny

      Though fun, it is not a fact I’m afraid. As described in this video, no part of this crown dates from the reign of Stephen. The earliest elements are from the 1070s, and were given by a Byzantine emperor.

    • @WalintHUN
      @WalintHUN Před 15 dny

      ​@@allanbarton this shows how controversial it's story, thats a written fact too Vaticaan gave to I. Stephen the Holy Crown... as a Hungarian it was really nice to see a video in 19mins long about it, now you made me want to watch Gábor Pap's, Hungarian art historian, talked about it for 30 hours in 3 parts here on CZcams.
      @Kapa362 our history teachs are wrong... none of the Hungarians who came to the Carpathian basin were pagans, the argue was about which church we should "join" or let in to country... Vaticaan (west) or Byzanth (east) Are we going to ally to which way... (christianity is way before Christ actually... and Hungarians were old christians just like before Christ Parthians from Scythian Empire too (Jesus became Christ after baptized by John isn't it, so it wasn't his "invetion" ;) ))

  • @user-np5ke3wr2w
    @user-np5ke3wr2w Před 26 dny +1

    It's OK Allen I look forward to your stories everyday take care dear!

  • @Marjorie-yt7pb
    @Marjorie-yt7pb Před 26 dny +4

    Fascinating . Thank you !!

  • @57WillysCJ
    @57WillysCJ Před 24 dny +2

    Interesting. I can see why they want to protect it from Stalin considering he was known to sell such items. Lastly Fort Knox is in Kentucky not Arizona.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 24 dny

      Yes, thanks, I made a mistake there! 😅

  • @andrehernadi5930
    @andrehernadi5930 Před 22 dny +2

    Pretty good video, you have the best pronunciation of Hungarian names by an English speaking history youtubers I've ever heard.

  • @josephvarno5623
    @josephvarno5623 Před 26 dny +9

    Fort Knox is in Kentucky, not Arizona. It was also the home of the 1st Armored basic training.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +10

      I live in the UK, so I’m sure you’ll be kind to my lack of US geography.

    • @genericpersonx333
      @genericpersonx333 Před 26 dny +2

      @@allanbarton Personally, I am more amused that you mistook it for Arizona of all places. I can barely think of a reason why anyone outside of the USA would even KNOW about Arizona to be confusing it with anywhere else in the USA. Indeed, many Americans barely know Arizona exists!

    • @josephvarno5623
      @josephvarno5623 Před 26 dny +1

      @@allanbarton absolutely.
      I don't expect people from the US to know odd minor parts of US geography.

  • @EdMcF1
    @EdMcF1 Před 26 dny +2

    If ever an object encapsulated a nation's history, surely this is it?

  • @Akitlosz
    @Akitlosz Před 15 dny

    The cross on the crown became crooked in the 1620s. The crown was needed for the coronation of a queen, but the crown guard forgot the key to the chest containing the crown at home. Locksmiths were called to open the chest. They opened the chest, but the crown was damaged in the process. The damage cannot be repaired without replacing the parts. The cross remains slanted because the originality is more important.

    • @s.corona2514
      @s.corona2514 Před 14 dny

      This enormous stupidity was spread by a Hungarian professional historian while building his career. The only problem with this and other nonsense is that "well-informed" people keep spreading it like some nasty infectious disease. The theory would only be plausible if the crown chest was a suitcase on which the Holy Crown was placed, and then the crown guards sat on it, because otherwise it would not be possible to close it. At least let's not burn ourselves in front of foreigners with this nonsense!

  • @marianroberts6521
    @marianroberts6521 Před 23 dny +1

    You are correct. Ft. Knox is in Kentucky not Arizona.

  • @jongoldman9279
    @jongoldman9279 Před 12 dny

    Very interesting. I had no idea the crown had been in our country for so many years. What a history....the places that crown has been. Thank you, Allan.

  • @CrowSkeleton
    @CrowSkeleton Před 26 dny +7

    I didn't even know crowns that pretty existed outside fantasy novels...I hope whoever sat on it and made it wonky like that was embarrasssed, even if they took the secret to their grave.

    • @lulubellecataloni5605
      @lulubellecataloni5605 Před 18 dny

      At one point in history the cross on the top of the crown was damaged. Tales hold that during a strife for the Hungarian throne one of the candidates for the throne stole the Crown and wanted to smuggle it out of the country. However, on his way Otto I, Duke of Swabia and Bavaria dropped the Crown damaging its top. Legends aside, a more likely cause of the damage is that the iron chest in which the Crown was stored in much of his life was closed rather uncarefully, hitting, and hence damaging the cross. The cross is in a position slanted to the left, and the golden plate underneath is crooked. This damage was never repaired; the position of the cross became part of how the cross is traditionally depicted.

    • @lulubellecataloni5605
      @lulubellecataloni5605 Před 18 dny

      At one point in history the cross on the top of the crown was damaged. Tales hold that during a strife for the Hungarian throne one of the candidates for the throne stole the Crown and wanted to smuggle it out of the country. However, on his way Otto I, Duke of Swabia and Bavaria dropped the Crown damaging its top. Legends aside, a more likely cause of the damage is that the iron chest in which the Crown was stored in much of his life was closed rather uncarefully, hitting, and hence damaging the cross. The cross is in a position slanted to the left, and the golden plate underneath is crooked. This damage was never repaired; the position of the cross became part of how the cross is traditionally depicted.

    • @tovarishcheleonora8542
      @tovarishcheleonora8542 Před 18 dny

      @@lulubellecataloni5605 It's more like to be from someone accidentally dropping it to the ground tho. Because with an important object like this, it's very unlikely that the storage chest was not big enough for the crown, especially if you consider how big degree it where bent in.

    • @kisshereful
      @kisshereful Před 14 dny

      @@tovarishcheleonora8542 it was smuggled, stolen and ransomed many times during it history. the Hungarian version of Game of Thrones back in medieval times were literally a fight for this object, since you could only be a legitimate king if you got crowned with this exact one. putting St Stephen's crown on was our way of pulling out Excalibur from the stone. So you expect something like this to get some damage during 900 years :)

  • @Crub837
    @Crub837 Před 25 dny +1

    Thanks!✌️

  • @meganegan5992
    @meganegan5992 Před 19 dny +1

    Jimmy Carter was a decent man in office, and the country never forgave him for that.

  • @josecarloelpescadero9164

    About the Cross on top being Bent or Historians don't know why it is that way ..even on the tour in the Big Parliament Building that it is housed in now, when the Guide told us so... I Replied it's a Tilt not a Bent .. I guess that is how Kings wear a crown ..with a Tilt ...so the Cross would be Upright .. & everyone laughed LOL... nice huh? .. but it could be TRUE .. 💚💚💚🐋

  • @jldisme
    @jldisme Před 25 dny

    👑

  • @orgonaeva7953
    @orgonaeva7953 Před 21 dnem +1

    🙏❤️🙏

  • @davidmajer3652
    @davidmajer3652 Před 25 dny +1

    Great video, but Fort Knox is in Kentucky.

  • @paulhwbooth
    @paulhwbooth Před 25 dny +1

    Habsburgs were crowned at Pressburg, until Charles IV.

    • @birocsabal
      @birocsabal Před 19 dny

      Yes. Becouse during 16-17th centuies the middle of the kingdom was occupied by the ottomans, so the political center of the Kingdom of Hungary was transferred to Pressburg/Pozsony. It stayed that way until the 1848 revolution, after which the center became Pest, later Budapest.

    • @s.corona2514
      @s.corona2514 Před 18 dny +1

      Not quite. Ferenc I in 1792 in Buda, then Ferdinand V in Pozsony (Pressburg) in 1830. Ferenc József was crowned in Pest-Buda in 1867.

    • @poonczey
      @poonczey Před 17 dny

      @@s.corona2514 And Karl IV in Budapest.

    • @s.corona2514
      @s.corona2514 Před 14 dny

      @@poonczey Yes

  • @kathrynjordan8782
    @kathrynjordan8782 Před 22 dny +2

    Ft Knox is in Kentucky and not in Arizona. Otherwise, this is an interesting video.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 22 dny

      I did realise my mistake within seconds of posting -these errors are just to keep listeners on their toes!

    • @thatoneguy8064
      @thatoneguy8064 Před 18 dny

      yes he's a moron

  • @tamasbalogh7535
    @tamasbalogh7535 Před 21 dnem +2

    The Holy Crown - which is not just a simple crown, but a crown for the spiritual initiation of the current king of Hungary - was made in a Caucasian jewellery workshop for Atilla, the great king of the Huns around 450 A.D.
    The Huns are one of the ancestral peoples of the Hungarians, and so they inherited this Holy Crown. Over many centuries, the crown was damaged by many of the enemies of the Hungarians.

    • @juz3r1
      @juz3r1 Před 20 dny

      Can you point me to a source? Because none of my historian friends (who are researching the Hun-Hungarian continuity, for example) know about it...

  • @orsino88
    @orsino88 Před 26 dny +4

    Thank you for saying “ten hundred” for AD 1000. It is beyond me why we are perfectly capable of saying “seventeen fifty-one” but suddenly say, “two thousand-one,” or, for that matter, “one thousand.”

    • @tovarishcheleonora8542
      @tovarishcheleonora8542 Před 18 dny

      Honestl,y it just sounds stupid to say "10-100" or "70-51" instead of "one thousand", "seven thousand fifty one".

  • @wellston2826
    @wellston2826 Před 25 dny

    Well, Holy Crown of Hungary, Batman!

  • @ludovica8221
    @ludovica8221 Před 26 dny +2

    fascinating🤴

  • @EdMcF1
    @EdMcF1 Před 26 dny

    1:09 Weren't the Hapsburgs 'Arch-Dukes of Austria', 'Kings of Hungary' and Emperors of the whole Shebang?

    • @braeden5875
      @braeden5875 Před 26 dny +3

      Under the Holy Roman Empire, the Hapsburg ruler was Archduke of Austria and “Emperor of Rome”. A few years before the dissolution of the HRE, Francis I elevated Austria from an Archduchy to an Empire, and from then on Hapsburg rulers were simultaneously King of Hungary and Emperor of Austria.

    • @chrisgrom
      @chrisgrom Před 20 dny +2

      HaBsburg not HaPsburg

    • @poonczey
      @poonczey Před 17 dny

      @@chrisgrom The Hapsburgs were the emperors of Australia and the kings of Hungry!🤣🤣🤣

  • @kathrynaston6841
    @kathrynaston6841 Před 20 dny +1

    Kentucky

  • @buchanfoulsham6314
    @buchanfoulsham6314 Před 21 dnem

    1:36 is thst McCartney?

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 21 dnem

      Paul McCartney? You must remember I’m English.

  • @AhemLd
    @AhemLd Před 21 dnem +3

    It was divine Providence that our leader Szálasi Ferenc sent our Holy Crown to Austria, and it fell into the hands of the Americans who at that time were an honourable people, instead of the Soviets, who were a horde of savages.

  • @morthim
    @morthim Před 16 dny

    was it drawn by the royal while a child?

  • @sodapop83
    @sodapop83 Před 18 dny +1

    géza was a good geezer 😆

  • @jamesallison4875
    @jamesallison4875 Před 20 dny

    Ft Knox is located in Kentucky, not Arizona.

  • @deborahdushane
    @deborahdushane Před 22 dny

    Ft Knox is in Kentucky

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 22 dny

      I know, I did pin a comment to the video about this at the time I posted it.

  • @Akitlosz
    @Akitlosz Před 15 dny

    St Stephen received a crown from Pope Sylvester II from Rome for his coronation on Christmas 1000. Hungary did not want to be dependent on either the Byzantine Empire or the Holy Roman Empire. That is why he chose Rome and the Pope to accept Christianity. The Pope gave the king of Hungary an apostolic title, which gives the king the right to appoint bishops, archbishops and abbots. The Pope just approves.

    • @s.corona2514
      @s.corona2514 Před 14 dny

      No. Stephen did not receive a crown from the Pope. A crown was made for him.

  • @ladyagnes9430
    @ladyagnes9430 Před 25 dny +1

    Ft Knox is not in Arazona

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny

      I did pin a comment about this to the video.

  • @moone924
    @moone924 Před 22 dny

    Fort Knox is in Kentucky

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 22 dny +1

      It is indeed, I realised my mistake within seconds of releasing the video and pinned a comment accordingly.

    • @moone924
      @moone924 Před 22 dny

      @@allanbarton missed it - sorry. Thanks for the awesome videos

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 22 dny +1

      @@moone924 no worries at all, thanks for taking the time to comment.

  • @ande100
    @ande100 Před 25 dny

    All nice and dandy, but Fort Knox is still Kentucky.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny

      Thanks for the correction, glad you liked the video! 🙂

  • @cherylmarcuri5506
    @cherylmarcuri5506 Před 24 dny

    Fort Knox is in Kentucky, not Arizona. You're thinking of London Bridge.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 24 dny

      I realise I made a mistake there! 😅

  • @jstantongood5474
    @jstantongood5474 Před 26 dny

    Ummm. Since when is fort knox in Arizona???

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny

      You are one of many to have corrected that particular slip-up! Thanks 😆

  • @mariabencze-ei6eg
    @mariabencze-ei6eg Před 19 dny

    Is this the real history of the story?

  • @Carburetors_and_calamaties

    Fort Knox is in Kentucky, not Arizona

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +5

      I’m going to start a swear box for everyone who mentions this!

  • @UnderPresser
    @UnderPresser Před 16 dny

    Um, Fort Knox is in Kentucky.

  • @Blade_Daddy
    @Blade_Daddy Před 26 dny +2

    Ft. Knox is in Kentucky.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny +1

      My American geography is not the best!

  • @christopheraliaga-kelly6254

    I heard that after defeating the Hungarians at the Battle of Mohacs, the Mongol commander Hulegu demanded access to the Royal Palace at Uj-Pest and that this crown be bought to him! But, as the terrified Hungarian officials brought it, on a 'cloth-of-gold' cushion, the sneering victor picked it up and attempted to put it on his own head!
    But, he had a seizure and dropped the crown, causing the crucifix on top to be bent! The awestruck Mongols helped the pale and embarrassed chief to leave the room alive!
    The Mongols did not go ahead with their plan to advance down the Danube but retreated back to Mongolia, allegedly terrified by the incident! And so, it could have been that this crown saved Europe from becoming part of the Mongol Empire

    •  Před 21 dnem +5

      The battle of Mohács was almost 300 years after the mongolian invasion.

    • @gabork5055
      @gabork5055 Před 21 dnem +2

      There's also another myth about people dressing in busó-costumes and chasing the mongols away.
      But both are just that, myths.

    • @birocsabal
      @birocsabal Před 19 dny +2

      ​@@gabork5055 It was during ottoman times, against the turks

    • @tovarishcheleonora8542
      @tovarishcheleonora8542 Před 18 dny

      As Hungarian, i never heard that story before. I wonder where you possible heard it from.

  • @accademiaoscura7870
    @accademiaoscura7870 Před 24 dny

    Fort Knox is in Kentucky… but early on in the video you say it’s Arizona… maybe you misspoke?

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 24 dny +1

      Thanks, no, I made a mistake, as plenty of people are pointing out for me! American history and geography are not my forte!

  • @matthesdittmann6165
    @matthesdittmann6165 Před 20 dny

    Might be a minor difference, but the Emperors of Austria were Kings of Hungary, Not the other way around

    • @fehervari98
      @fehervari98 Před 18 dny

      No, neither was either. There was the Austrian Emperor and there was the King of Hungary. Both titles merely happened to be possessed by the same person(s). The two titles had no legal connection whatsoever.

    • @matthesdittmann6165
      @matthesdittmann6165 Před 17 dny

      @@fehervari98 that is true, but, AS you said, at the Beginning of the 20th century Franz Josef was Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary

    • @fehervari98
      @fehervari98 Před 17 dny

      @@matthesdittmann6165 What's your point?
      "Franz Josef was King of Hungary and Austrian Emperor"
      "Franz Josef was Austrian Emperor and King of Hungary"
      It makes no difference to say it in either order. It is true though, that usually the more prestigious title is listed first, but that's merely a common practice.

  • @luchadorito
    @luchadorito Před 22 dny +2

    A fun tidbit: when the communist regime was being replaced by the Third Republic, there was a lively debate over wether the Kingdom of Hungary's lesser coat of arms, adorned with the Holy Crown, or it's crownless and slightly differently shaped variant from the 1848 revolution (the so called Kossuth coat of arms) should replace the former communist coat of arms. The conservative side supporting the crowned coat of arms won and it has been ever since (sadly, I personally much prefer both symbolically and aestheticly the revolutionary coat of arms)

    • @juz3r1
      @juz3r1 Před 20 dny

      What a right decision they made and we didn't end up in some Masonic, Jacobin dictatorship... Have you seen the tomb of those executed for the Martinovich conspiracy? There is a sentence from Petőfi on it...

  • @stephaniecowans3646
    @stephaniecowans3646 Před 26 dny

    Whoa. . . . hold on -- Ft. Knox is in Kentucky, not Arizona as pointed out by @sladestumbo4117 . I don't see anyone else pointing this out, maybe because many of the folks commenting are not in the U.S.? Other than that, this was a most informative video about the crown's history.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny

      I did pin a comment to the post addressing my error, that’s probably why there are few comments about it.

    • @stephaniecowans3646
      @stephaniecowans3646 Před 26 dny

      @allanbarton 👍 I want to say that I do enjoy all your videos. It's like I get a personally guided tour to the various places you go to.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 26 dny

      Thank you, that’s lovely of you.

  • @alejandrocantu4652
    @alejandrocantu4652 Před 21 dnem

    SINCE WHEN IS FORT KNOX IN ARIZONA? REALY. Forty Knox is in Kentucky.

  • @user-xx1tm5fe9u
    @user-xx1tm5fe9u Před 26 dny

    Fort Knox is not in Arizona. It's in Kentucky. Nixon separated the value of US dollar from the value of gold in 1971. Fort Knox changed from a gold-storage facility to a military installation. In case you thought the Americans were being virtuous, be sure that they needed to send the crown back because they were no longer using the military to guard valuables at Fort Knox.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny

      How interesting, thank you! Yes, I’m being made painfully aware of my weakness in American history and geography, thanks for the heads-up!

  • @RaceSmokie
    @RaceSmokie Před 21 dnem

    Imagine the crown, but not some ordinary one! It is The Holly Crown! Woaaah! Does it cure hemorrhoids?

  • @baneofbanes
    @baneofbanes Před 26 dny

    I will say mixing up Kentucky with Arizona is an odd choice. But no worries, I know you’re not an American.

    • @allanbarton
      @allanbarton  Před 25 dny +1

      I wonder how many more people will point that particular mistake out! 😆 Thanks for watching!

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 25 dny

      @@allanbarton yah I noticed you getting dragged for that a lot in the comments, my main thing is that Kentucky and Arizona are nowhere near each other. It’s comparable to saying Lisbon is in say Finland instead of Portugal for a roughly equal distance comparison. I’m really not trying to make fun of you here though.