The Kingdom of Hungary is in this…
February 1241 CE
The Kingdom of Hungary is in this age much like any other feudal kingdom of Europe: although the throne is still inherited by Árpád's successors, the king's authority and power has been greatly curtailed.
Rich magnates care less about the national security of the whole kingdom than about petty feudal quarrels with their fellow landlords.
The Golden Bull of 1222 issued by King Andrew II had authorized magnates to rebel against the king in some circumstances, and made him only 'primus inter pares'—first among equals.
Béla IV has tried to restore the king's former authority and power, without much success.
The Hungarians had first learned about the Mongol threat in 1229, when King Andrew had granted asylum to some fleeing Russian boyars.
Some Magyars, left behind during the main migration to the Pannonian basin, still lived on the banks of the upper Volga.
(It is believed by some that the descendants of this group are the modern-day Bashkirs, although this people now speaks a Turkic language, not Magyar.)
A Dominican friar, Julianus, had set off on an expedition in 1237 to lead them back, and had been sent back to King Béla with a letter from Batu Khan.
In this letter, Batu had called upon the Hungarian king to surrender his kingdom unconditionally to his forces or face complete destruction.
Béla had made no reply, and two more messages had later been delivered to Hungary.
The first had been sent in 1239 by the defeated Cuman tribes, who had asked for and received asylum in Hungary.
The second is sent in February 1241 by the defeated Polish princes.
King Béla IV heads a fighting force of sixty thousand to seventy thousand Hungarian and other European troops.