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Hungarians and the Prague Nunciature

  • Tamás Kruppa
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Spaces for Diplomacy
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Abstract

Emperor Rudolf II’s move to Prague fundamentally changed the relationship between the Hungarians and the papal nuncios at the imperial court. The administration of the affairs of the Kingdom of Hungary was spatially divided and conducted through several channels. The Hungarian issues raised at the Prague and later at the Vienna nunciature were of a personal, ecclesiastical or political nature, in which the nuncio played a basically mediating role vis-à-vis the court. At the same time, all these forms of contact remained ad hoc in nature. Since neither the Hungarian nobility nor the clergy set up a residence, contacts were neither informal nor spatially/representationally institutionalized.

Abstract

Emperor Rudolf II’s move to Prague fundamentally changed the relationship between the Hungarians and the papal nuncios at the imperial court. The administration of the affairs of the Kingdom of Hungary was spatially divided and conducted through several channels. The Hungarian issues raised at the Prague and later at the Vienna nunciature were of a personal, ecclesiastical or political nature, in which the nuncio played a basically mediating role vis-à-vis the court. At the same time, all these forms of contact remained ad hoc in nature. Since neither the Hungarian nobility nor the clergy set up a residence, contacts were neither informal nor spatially/representationally institutionalized.

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