The basic unit of Hungarian private law relations before 1848, especially from the
point of view of the nobiliary private law, was not so much the individual as the
family. Although the person who acquired the right could be the individual, the right
over the property acquired by him usually extended beyond his person to other members
of his family living in a blood relationship with him, to his relatives whom he had
to divide his property, such as his (mainly male) children, brothers and sometimes
sisters, and, where appropriate, to his more distant collateral relatives. This study
attempts to present family law relations in the early modern Hungary through a special
group of documents, the wills and property division deeds. The basis of the investigation
in the present study are the wills and division deeds of some Hungarian noble families
from the 17th-19th centuries, which played a decisive role in national politics, but
due to the scope of the study these are only arbitrarily selected, without aiming
for completeness.