[2] Albert had at least three children from his unidentified wife; Mojs I was considered a partisan of Andrew III of Hungary in the 1290s, while the younger sons – John and Ákos – were both mentioned only once in 1278.
Albert's grandson, Mojs II was a rebellious lord in the early 14th century, who made an alliance with oligarch James Borsa and the sons of the late Ladislaus Kán in 1315 and caused a rebellion against Charles I of Hungary.
[1] The careers of both Albert and Erdő II were overshadowed by their elder brother Ernye's illustrious military and political activity during the reign of Béla IV of Hungary.
[3] After the death of king Béla IV and Stephen V's accession to the Hungarian throne in 1270, Ernye did not lose his political influence despite the earlier conflicts with the new monarch.
[3] When Joachim Gutkeled kidnapped Stephen's heir, the 10-year-old Ladislaus in the summer of 1272, the monarch, who seriously fell ill after his failed attempts to liberate his son, decided to reorganize the government structure.
[8] Refusing this, Sándorhegyi (plausibly a pseudonym of historian János Karácsonyi) argued Albert was the subject of Duchess Anna, and not her husband ("asszony" means a mistress here, instead of wife), consequently he belonged to her court after the death of Stephen V. He also claimed "Chychety" is identical with the dignity of Ban of Kucsó or Severin (Cheurin).