The Count of Hermannstadt, also Count of Sibiu or Count of Szeben[1] (Hungarian: szebeni ispán), was the head of the Transylvanian Saxons living in the wider region of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu in Romania) in the 13th and early 14th centuries.[2][3] The counts were royal officials, appointed and dismissed by the Kings of Hungary.
Term | Incumbent | Monarch | Notes | Source |
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c. 1210 | Joachim Türje | Andrew II | [4][5] | |
c. 1266 | Dominic Csák | Stephen V | also Palatine of the King junior, Stephen V, and ispán of Bács County | [4] |
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Term | Incumbent | Monarch | Notes | Source |
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c. 1323 | Nicholas Telegdi | Charles I | [3] | |
1323-c. 1324 | Thomas Szécsényi | Charles I | also Voivode of Transylvania | [3] |
c. 1329 | Nicholas Brassói | Charles I | [3] |