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11th-century Hungarian nobility

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Irene of Hungary
Empress consort of the Byzantine Empire (d. 1134)
Gerard of Csanád
Italian Benedictine monk, founder bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of (Szeged-)Csanád, and martyr
Vazul
Vazul, or Vászoly, (before 997–1031 or 1032) was a member of the House of Árpád, a grandson of Taksony, Grand Prince of the Hungarians. The only other certain information about his life is that he was kept in captivity and blinded in the fortress of Nyitra (Nitra, Slovakia) in the last years of the reign of his cousin, King Stephen I of Hungary. Modern historians, including György Györffy, do not exclude that he had earlier been Duke of Nyitra. He is the forefather of nearly all Kings of Hungary who reigned after 1046.
Judith of Schweinfurt
Czech princess
Adelaide of Hungary
Duchess consort of Bohemia (c.1040–1062)
Helen of Hungary
Queen consort of Croatia
Levente
Levente (between 1010 and 1015 – 1047) was a member of the House of Árpád, a great-grandson of Taksony, Grand Prince of the Hungarians. He was expelled from Hungary in 1031 or 1032, and spent many years in Bohemia, Poland and the Kievan Rus'. He returned to Hungary, where a pagan uprising was developing around that time, in 1046. Levente remained a devout pagan, but did not hinder the election of his Christian brother, Andrew I as king.
Ladislas the Bald
950-1030
Lampert of Hungary
Hungarian prince
Grimelda of Hungary
Dogaressa
David of Hungary
Hungarian priest
Vecelin
thumbnail|Vecelin, as depicted in the Illuminated Chronicle Vecelin, also Vecellin and Vencellin, was a prominent military commander of Stephen I of Hungary at the end of the 10th and the beginning of the 11th century. He was of Bavarian origin and came from a city named as either Wasserburg or Weissenburg.
Csanád
thumb|250px|Bust of Csanád in Érsekcsanád Csanád, also Chanadinus, or Cenad, was the first head (comes) of Csanád County in the Kingdom of Hungary in the first decades of the 11th century.
Vata
Hungarian noble, leader of the Vata pagan uprising