Bertrand Nagymartoni

[4] Both chronicles mention the family's castles in the Iberian Peninsula ("Boiot"), their clashes against the "sultan of Tunis" (plausibly Abu Zakariya Yahya) in Mallorca and Menorca and the coat-of-arms donation of eagle derived therefrom.

In addition, Simon of Kéza does not omit to mention Tota, who was lady-in-waiting of Queen Constance and married a powerful lord Benedict, son of Korlát and was granted the estates Nagymarton (or Mattersdorf, present-day Mattersburg, Austria) and Bajót as her dowry in 1202.

[5] While Tota was in fact belonged to the entourage of Queen Constance, historian Antal Pór ruled out that Simon and Bertrand had also came to Hungary during the reign of King Emeric.

[2] Bertrand mediated the prenuptial agreement between James I of Aragon and Violant of Hungary in February 1233, alongside Pope Gregory IX and Bartholomew le Gros, the Bishop of Pécs.

[2] Following the siege of Esztergom, Simon and Bertrand have completed diplomatic missions several times throughout the year 1242 on behalf of Béla IV in order to seek military assistance and financial aid against the Mongols.

[8] In addition to landholdings, Bertrand was made ispán of Szolgagyőr (Galgóc) royal castle (ispánate) within Nyitra County in 1243 (present-day ruins in Hlohovec, Slovakia).

When File Miskolc and his brothers were granted the estates Heyreh and Luder in the county by Duke Coloman, Béla IV confirmed this donation to them in October 1244, rejecting the claim of Bertrand and Ahalyz.

For his captivity, Béla IV donated three villages called Család – present-day Csapod, Hövej and Pusztacsalád – in Sopron County, which had previously belonged to the accessories of Szolgagyőr Castle.