It included the recovery of grain and wine tithes throughout the diocese, the unlawfully usurped properties of the canons in the town of Eger, in addition to several villages in Northeast Hungary, which belonged to the cathedral chapter prior to that.
[5] For the same reason, Andrew exchanged the village of Szurdokpüspöki for Noha (laid on the border of Heves and Borsod counties) with comes Mihedeus Káta in 1288, and the land of Bátony for Bátor with Pous Baksa in 1295.
Since the rule of Andrew II of Hungary, it, alongside Ugocsa and Bereg, belonged to the Diocese of Eger, later confirmed by both Béla IV and Stephen V. In the early 13th century, Máramaros was mostly part of Sásvár ispánate.
After Peter Monoszló's protest and pressure, the monarch changed his intention, withdrawing the decision, and handed over the matter to the competence of their metropolitan, John Hont-Pázmány, Archbishop of Kalocsa in February 1299.
[7] Andrew's episcopal activity of thee decades coincided with one of the most chaotic periods of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, the so-called era of "feudal anarchy".
After Ladislaus IV was declared to be of legal age in 1277, the monarch intended to eliminate the Geregyes' power, who ruled the territory through from Szepesség (Spiš) to Transylvania via Nyírség.
Three years later, Ladislaus returned four settlements – Bökény, Csépes, Kacsád and Recsk – to the chapter and also confirmed the bishop's right of ownership over the previously pillaged episcopal villages in Eger valley in June and September 1284, respectively.
[6] Around the same time, Amadeus Aba – who had important role in the victory over the Mongols – ruled de facto independently the northern and north-eastern counties of the kingdom, which also covered the overwhelming majority of the bishopric of Eger.
[6] Andrew maintained a good and cooperative relationship with Amadeus Aba during the second half of his episcopal tenure; the lord also supported the church financially in his oligarchic domain.
Upon the request of Archbishop Lodomer and two local bishops, Andrew of Eger and Paschasius of Nyitra (Nitra), the newly crowned monarch confirmed Amadeus Aba in his all revenues in Ung County along with his positions in November 1290.
[10] In the 1290s, Archbishop Lodomer and the entire Church episcopal hierarchy were considered the strongest pillars of King Andrew's reign until his death and the extinction of the Árpád dynasty in 1301.
He was member of that diplomatic mission led by Archbishop John Hont-Pázmány, along with several bishops and barons, who met Wenceslaus II in Hodonín in August 1301, where the king accepted their offer in his eleven-year-old son's name.
The local powerful lord, Amadeus Aba was considered one of the strongest domestic partisans of the Neapolitan pretender too, who also resided in his territory (i.e. also the diocese of Eger) in the period between 1304 and 1306.