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  1. Andrew, Duke of Slavonia ( Hungarian: András szlavóniai herceg; 1268–1278) was the youngest son of King Stephen V of Hungary and his wife, Elizabeth the Cuman. Two rebellious lords kidnapped him in 1274 in an attempt to play him off against his brother, Ladislaus IV of Hungary, but the king's supporters liberated him.

  2. His role in Galicia makes him interesting for Ukrainian and Russian historical researchers; his Polish wife has the same importance for Polish scholars, while his years in Scepus are of note for Slovak historians and his role as the duke of Slavonia engages Croatian and Bosnian historians.

  3. Coloman, the second son of Hungarian monarch Andrew II, kept his royal title while governing the provinces entrusted to him, a phenomenon quite uncommon in Hungarian history. The king and duke of whole Slavonia, as he titled himself, was involved in various cases.

    • Gábor Barabás
  4. Andrew (Hungarian: András; died before 1208) was a Hungarian lord at the end of the 12th century, who – as a confidant of the rebellious Duke Andrew – served as Ban of Slavonia. Through his marriage, he was son-in-law of the late King Géza II of Hungary.

  5. The self-declared "Andrew, Duke of Slavonia"—an adventurer who claimed to be identical to Ladislaus IV's dead younger brotheralso challenged King Andrew's right to the crown and stormed into Hungary from Poland. He was shortly thereafter forced to return to Poland, where he was murdered.

  6. The man who would later become King of Galicia and Duke of Slavonia was born in 1208, the fourth child of Andrew II and Queen Gertrud of Andechs, making him a prince of the ruling Árpád dynasty.

  7. Andrew, Duke of Slavonia (Hungarian: András szlavóniai herceg; 1268–1278) was the youngest son of King Stephen V of Hungary and his wife, Elizabeth the Cuman. Two rebellious lords kidnapped him in 1274 in an attempt to play him off against his brother, Ladislaus IV of Hungary, but the king's supporters liberated him.