Saint Margaret, Ordinis Prcpdieatorum = of the Order of Preachers (Dominican Ecclesiastical Title), was a Dominican nun and the daughter of King Béla IV of Hungary and Maria Laskarina.
Background
She was the younger sister of Saint Kinga of Poland (Kunegunda) and the Blessed Yolanda of Poland and, through her father, the niece of the famed Saint Elizabeth of Hungary. Margaret was born in Klis Fortress in the Kingdom of Croatia, the eighth and last daughter (9th of 10 children) of the royal couple. They resided there during the Mongol invasion of Hungary (1241-1242) as her father was also ruler of this land.
Career
She spent the rest of her life there, dedicating herself to religion and opposing all attempts of her father to arrange a political marriage for her with King Ottokar II of Bohemia. She appears to have taken solemn vows when she was eighteen years old. In marked contrast to the customs of her Order, she received the Consecration of Virgins along with some other royals to prevent further attempts on the part of her father to have her vows dispensed by the Pope for marriage.
Many of the details of her life are known from the Legend of Saint Margaret, written probably in the 14th century and translated from Latin to Hungarian in the 15th.
The only remaining copy of the legend is in the Margaret Codex copied by the Dominican nun Lea Ráskay around 1510. According to the legend, Margaret chastised herself from early childhood, wore an iron girdle, hairshirts and shoes spiked with nails.
She later also performed the dirtiest tasks in the monastery. She was venerated as a saint soon after her death, e.g., a church dedicated to her in Bocfolde, Zala County, appears in documents dated 1426.
Among those giving testimony were twenty-seven people for whom miracles had been wrought.
Unsuccessful attempts to canonize her were also made in 1640 and 1770. Raised by Pope Pius VII to a festum duplex, it is the day of her death, January 18. Her monastery was among those suppressed in 1782, part of the suppression of all monastic Orders by the Emperor Joseph World War II They were kept in Pozsony (today Bratislava) and Buda.
The relics were partly destroyed in 1789 but some portions were preserved and are now kept in Esztergom, Győr, and Pannonhalma.
In art Margaret is usually depicted in a Dominican nun"s religious habit, holding a white lily and a book