Hunyadi
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Hunyadi (also Hunyady in historical sources) is a notable Hungarian noble family, partly of Vlach (Romanian) origin. The first recorded member of the family was Serbe (also called Serb, Serban or Sorb) who settled in Hunyad county in Transylvania from Wallachia. His son Vojk (alternatively spelled as Voyk or Vajk in English, Voicu in Romanian, Vajk in Hungarian), who had adopted Catholicism and the name László, became ennobled in 1409 and received the estate of Hunyad Castle (now Hunedoara in Romania, Vajdahunyad in Hungarian) which was to become the hereditary seat of the family.
The origins of the Coat of Arms of the Hunyadi family, which depicts a raven holding a golden ring in its beak, are unclear. The Silesian Annals state that when a raven carried off a ring King Matthias had removed from his finger, Matthias chased the bird down and slew him, retrieving the ring, and in commemoration of this event he took the raven as a symbol for his signet sign. Others think that the Coat of Arms was derived from another property of the family, Raven’s Rock (Hollókő in Hungarian). Another legend says that when young Matthias was in prison in Prague his mother was able to send him a letter with a raven (and that's why the Hungarian Postal Service had a raven as its symbol for more than a century).
The Hunyadi family is sometimes referred to as Corvin in Romanian.
Notable members are:
- John Hunyadi (1387-1456), second son of Vojk. A successful soldier, he became Voivod of Transylvania and Captain General and Regent of Hungary.
- László Hunyadi (1433-1457), eldest son of John Hunyadi, Hungarian statesman and warrior. Subject of an opera by Ferenc Erkel.
- King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary (1443-1490), second son of John Hunyadi, ruled Hungary from 1458 to 1490.
- Emese Hunyady, born March 4, 1966, originally Hungarian speed skater, who participated in the Olympic Winter Games each time from 1984 to 2002 and won three medals for Austria.