Eye-witness account of the theft of the crown of St Stephen in 15c
Hungary.
Helene Kottanner was servant and confidante of the widowed Queen
Elizabeth of Hungary (1409-1442). This is her first-person account of
the part she played in the theft of the holy crown of St Stephen from
the treasury of the royalstronghold Visegrad on 20 February, 1440, when
the crown was smuggled out of the stronghold hidden in a pillow. It was
immediately rushed on a sled to the queen, who within hours of its
arrival at her castle in Komorn was delivered of a baby boy, Ladislaus
Posthumous (1440-1457), who was crowned king of Hungary three months
later. Helene Kottanner's account is unconsciously revealing about
herself and her ambitions, allowing a rare glimpse into the innerworld
of a late-medieval woman.