-
Seneslau, also
Seneslav or Stănislau, was a
Vlach voivode mentioned in the
Diploma of the
Joannites issued by king Béla IV of
Hungary (1235–1270) on 2...
- or ones
based on
mentions in
various chronicles.
Bezerenbam and Mișelav
Seneslau John (knez) Farcaș
Litovoi Bărbat
Thocomerius From the
early 15th-century...
- ****ania to
refer to the land
between the
eastern border of the
lands of
Seneslau and the land of the
Brodnici (Buzău,
southern Vrancea and
southern Galați):...
-
Wallachia west of the
river Olt
dates to a
charter given to the
voivode Seneslau in 1246 by Béla IV of Hungary. In 1417,
Wallachia was
forced to accept...
- as they held it. The land of
Hateg is excepted,
while the
voivodate of
Seneslaus the king
keeps for himself. In 1247, a
Hungarian royal do****ent allowed...
-
kenazates of Farcaș and John and to a
certain voivode Seneslau.
Although the
names of
Litovoi and
Seneslau are of
Slavic origin, they are
expressly said to...
-
diploma also
refers to
knezes Farcaș and John, and also a
voivode called Seneslau. It
seems that
Litovoi was the most
powerful of all the
above rulers, as...
-
Vlach (Romanian)
polities in Wallachia, led by the
Voivodes Litovoi and
Seneslau and the
Cneazes Ioan and Farcaș, as well as
about the
economic development...
- be determined. A
scholarly hypothesis states that he was
descended from
Seneslau, a mid-13th-century
Vlach (Romanian) lord.
Historian Vlad
Georgescu writes...
-
southern Oltenia in the
middle of the 13th century. The
kenezatus of
Voivode Seneslau,
which was
located to the east of the Olt, was
fully excluded from the...