Throughout from 1249 to 1258, the brothers were granted several villages from their maternal grandparents – the aforementioned Peter and his wife Agnes – and their aunt Petronilla as the only living male descendants of their family.
[7] According to a royal charter of Ladislaus IV with the date February 1278, Andrew physically assaulted and beat the young monarch with a hooked stick (Latin: cambuca) during a harsh dispute.
"Jakó's Castle") and its accessories near Meggyes in Szatmár County (present-day Medieșu Aurit, Romania) from Andrew because of his lese-majesty.
Early historians – e.g. Károly Szabó – saw another episode of the drastic weakening of royal power during the era of feudal anarchy In Andrew's serious audacity.
[8] Historian Péter Németh considered that "Jakó's Castle" never existed, and the fort was merely a fabrication compiled by members of the Meggyesi family (Nicholas Pok's descendants) during a late 14th-century lawsuit, as an identification with their fortified manor in Meggyes.
[11] The brothers were involved in a lawsuit over the estate Gelyénes in Szatmár County (near present-day Satu Mare, Romania), which they eventually obtained.
His eldest son Lawrence is mentioned as the owner of the Kaplon possessions in his own right in 1307, implying that Andrew died by that time.
[15] His daughter, Catherine was the second wife of the much older powerful lord Nicholas Pok, who dominated Szatmár County in the early 14th century.
According to a late 14th-century forgery, Andrew donated several villages in Szatmár County (accessories to the alleged "Jakó's Castle") to his daughter and son-in-kaw as her dowry.