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Admonitions (Libellus de institutione morum)

Libellus de institutione morum ad Emericum ducem

Anonymous foreign cleric at the court of King Stephen I of Hungary; traditionally attributed to Stephen I but modern scholarship attributes it to a court cleric, with candidates including Archbishop Astrik, Thangmar the Saxon monk, or Bishop Gerard of Csanád·Latin·c. 1010–1027·Mirror for Princes
Mirror for PrincesSpeculum
In the original — Latin
Decimus locus et decima admonitio est de oratione, ieiunio et misericordia.

Our renderingThe tenth place and tenth admonition concerns prayer, fasting, and mercy.

What it is

The Libellus de institutione morum, Hungary's foundational Mirror for Princes, was composed by a foreign cleric at King Stephen I's court as a formation letter addressed to his son and heir, Prince Emeric. Its ten short chapters cover Catholic faith, protection of the church, honour due to bishops, justice, hospitality to foreigners, wise counsel, prayer, fasting, and the cultivation of virtue and mercy. The text served for centuries as the opening document of the Corpus Juris Hungarici and defined the spiritual obligations of the Christian king for all subsequent Arpad and Anjou heirs. As the first major Latin prose work produced in the Kingdom of Hungary, it survives only in 15th–16th-century codex copies; its original title is unknown.

Why it still matters

The ten chapters can be read and meditated as a compact formation manual; the chapters on prayer, mercy, and hospitality to strangers translate directly into contemporary Christian reflection on integrating faith with public responsibility.

Kept alongside

Horæ

Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary (Officium Parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis)

Officium Parvum Beatae Mariae Virginis

The Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a short daily cycle of eight canonical hours in honor of the Virgin, was the most common private prayer book of lay noble households across medieval Europe. For the Arpad and Anjou dynasties in Hungary, Marian devotion was a defining feature of royal piety: approximately 30 percent of all known monastic dedications by Arpad kings were to Mary, and the Anjou royal house bore the Marian lily (fleur-de-lis) as its heraldic emblem. No specific royal Hungarian Marian prayer book survives with a named owner, and the attribution rests on the universality of the text at European royal courts combined with the documented primacy of Marian devotion in Hungarian dynastic identity. The Office remains liturgically intact and is still prayed by Secular Franciscans and lay Catholics worldwide.

developed c. 900–1100; standard by 13th centuryLatin·Arpad · Anjou +7Confirmed
Oratio

Pray Codex — Sacramentary and Halotti Beszéd (Funeral Sermon and Prayer)

Codex Pray — Sacramentarium et Sermo super sepulchrum

The Pray Codex, compiled c. 1192–1195 during the reign of King Béla III of Hungary, is the earliest surviving liturgical codex with distinctly Hungarian elements and the oldest known coherent prose text in any Uralic language. Its core is a sacramentary supplemented by the Libellus in Romano ordine, an Easter play, royal laws, and the Halotti Beszéd és Könyörgés (Funeral Sermon and Prayer), which constitutes the first recorded vernacular Hungarian prayer. The manuscript is a composite work by several copyists, widely attributed to the Benedictine abbey of Boldva in northern Hungary, and is now held at the National Széchényi Library, Budapest. As a burial liturgy, it blends Latin sacramental form with the pastoral immediacy of the vernacular, bridging clerical and lay piety at a formative moment in Hungarian Christian identity.

c. 1192–1195Latin; Hungarian·ArpadConfirmed
Speculum

Libellus de dictis quatuor ancillarum S. Elisabethae confectus (Testimony of the Four Handmaids of Saint Elizabeth)

Libellus de dictis quatuor ancillarum s. Elizabeth confectus

Elizabeth of Hungary (1207–1231), daughter of King Andrew II of the Arpad dynasty, was sent to the Thuringian court at age four and spent her entire adult life in Germany; she never returned to Hungary. The Libellus records the sworn testimonies of her four handmaids before the papal canonization commission in January 1235 and served as the primary evidentiary document for her canonization by Pope Gregory IX on 27 May 1235. It provides first-person witness to her prayer life, acts of mercy to the poor and sick, and spiritual direction under the rigorist Conrad of Marburg. Though its composition is entirely a product of Thuringian-German and Franciscan circles, the text was claimed with pride by the Arpad dynasty as evidence of royal sanctity and shaped the emerging Franciscan Third Order tradition across Europe.

c. 1232–1235Latin·ArpadConfirmed