Negol

Negol (Nygol) was the name of a minor gens (Latin for "clan"; nemzetség in Hungarian) in the Kingdom of Hungary, which possessed lands in the southern parts of Transdanubia, mainly Baranya County.

They possessed lands north of Kisasszonyfa, where they erected a Premonstratensian abbey called Kőrös Monastery (Hungarian: Kőrösmonostora) and later "Insula Lazari".

[2] The most prestigious member of the kindred was Batiz, who married Ahalyz, a French noblewoman and lady-in-waiting of Queen Yolanda de Courtenay, the second wife of King Andrew II of Hungary.

[2] Aside from Batiz and his son, the earliest members of the clan were Lawrence (I) and Bereve, who acted as arbiters during a lawsuit over an estate between Ócsárd and Baksa, commissioned by Palatine Stephen Gutkeled in 1247.

In 1267, he acted as a royal commissioner when some castle warriors of the fort Kovászd were willing to subjugate themselves to the Dominican nunnery of Rabbits' Island.