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Giorgio Basta

Giorgio Basta, Count of Huszt, Gjergj Basta or Gheorghe Basta (1550 – 1607) was an Italian general, diplomat, and writer of Arbëreshë origin, employed by the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II to command Habsburg forces in the Long War of 1591–1606. He was later sent to administer Transylvania as an Imperial vassal[1] and to restore Catholicism as the dominant religion in the region.[2]

Giorgio Basta, Gjergj Basta
Born1550
La Rocca, Kingdom of Naples
Died1607 (aged 56–57)
Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia
Allegiance Holy Roman Empire
Service/branchImperial Army
RankGeneral
Battles/warsLong War

On his orders, his ally Michael the Brave, who ruled Transylvania, Wallachia, and Moldavia, was assassinated on 9 August 1601, a few days after the common victory at the Battle of Guruslău, for trying to turn against Rudolf II. For this, he is often depicted as disloyal and violent by Romanian and Hungarian historians. Basta was also the author of books on the art of military leadership.

Biography

Basta was born to an Arbëreshë family.[3][4][5][6][7][8] He is claimed to be born in La Rocca, modern day Roccaforzata, a village in Salento, Italy, however historical sources claim he was born in Rocca sul Tanaro, Monferrato.[citation needed]

He was the son of Demetrius Basta, an Albanian Epirote who had fled the Ottoman conquest of the region to Italy, where he served the Spanish Empire. His father fought in the Piedmont countryside in the middle 1500s, and then in Flanders as commander of a cavalry regiment under the Duke of Alba. Very young, Basta became a soldier, and eventually got promoted to the rank of officer in a detachment commanded by Demetrio. Then after his father died, Basta served in a cavalry company run by his oldest brother Niccolò.[9][10] In 1589, he married Anne de Liedekerke de Gavre, with whom he had 3 children: Ferdinand, Nicolas and Alexandrine.[11]

He began his military career in Flanders, where the young officer impressed Don John of Austria, and gained the governorship of Nivelles.[12] In the service of Philip II of Spain, he led his army mainly on the French front during the War of the Three Henrys and the Catholic League. In 1584, Basta gained his first major victory when his troops were blocking communications between Malines and Antwerp. Even in the Spanish defeat in Brussels in March 1585, the blockade of the city was achieved by Basta's troops. During the end of the year, the commander led the cavalry of the expeditionary body which at Charles de Mansfeld's orders.... When the Catholics, in 1589, marched to retake Paris, it was the cavalry led by Basta who rescued the back of the Spanish army from the sudden attack of Henry of Navarre.

In 1590 he joined the forces of Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma in Flanders. He returned to France in 1591, and partook in the siege of Rouen with the rank of Commander General of the cavalry. He however was almost killed by Sir Roger Williams, who sliced his neck in personal combat.[13] In February 1592 he separated Navarre from his greater army and the prince fled capture by his forces. He was tasked with ensuring communications between Rouen and the Netherlands, which was massively threatened by the French army, and then protecting the retreat of the Spaniards after the injury of Alexander Farnese to Caudebec. In 1596, after the death of the Duke of Parma, Balta followed the fate of many Italian princes, and had to abandon the Spanish. He then went to the service of Emperor Rudolf II, on the recommendation of Philip II, and served as general master in the army of Archbishop Mattia, later deputy governor of Upper Hungary, and finally the commander of the armies of Hungary and Transylvania. Ambrogio Merodio in his Istoria Tarantina, calls him the "terror of Ottoman armies".

For more than a decade, Basta fought against Hungarians, Transylvanians, Vlachs, and Tatars, gaining much fame as one as the best generals of the Empire. In 1597 he was released, together with General Schwarzenberg, from Pápa, which was conquered three years earlier by the Turks. In 1597, while he was deputy governor of Hungary, he recaptured the city of Huszt, which had rebelled against the Empire.

At the Battle of Mirăslău, Michael the Brave was defeated by Basta, forcing Michael to appeal to the Emperor Rudolf II to mediate the dispute with Basta.

Under his command, his ally Michael the Brave, the former ruler of Transylvania, Wallachia and Moldavia, was assassinated at Keresztesmező camp,[14][15][16] near Câmpia Turzii, because Basta considered him a liability. The event happened on 9 August 1601,[17] only days after a joint victory in Battle of Guruslău. Following the murder of Michael and his victory over Báthory, Basta became military commander of Transylvania, but his cruelty led to public discontent. Under his leadership, iniquities and murders multiplied throughout Transylvania. During this brief period, Basta tried to uproot Protestantism. Following Papal and Imperial policy, Calvinist Hungarians and Székelys, Orthodox Wallachians and Serbs, and Lutheran Saxons were subject to any kind of abuse. Following years of warfare and his ruthless regime, famine and plague appeared in Transylvania. At that time Rudolf II decided to recall him from command, leading to Basta's departure from Transylvania and put him in charge to fight against the Ottomans of West Hungary(1604).[18] He successfully defended Esztergom with his 10,000 mercenaries against 80,000 Ottomans.

After Bocskai's uprisen army chased away Belgiojoso, Rudolph sent Basta from West-Hungary to the Partium to suppress the uprising. In November 1604 Basta twice defeated forces led by Stephen Bocskai (see also: Bocskai Uprising). Bocskai at the end cut his supplies and he had to withdraw in winter to Eperjes where he got trapped. After some months Rudolph called him back to defend at first the mine towns (e.g. Besztercebánya) in Upper-Hungary,[19] Moravia and Austria against Bocskai's looting armies.[20]

In July 1605 he did not get enough money to keep up enough mercenaries to defend Visegrád, Esztergom and Érsekújvár against the Ottomans and was defeated by Lalla Mehmed. The Military Committee didn't supply him enough money but Rudolph II made him a Czech baron to compensate. The court became tired of the war and they started pushing aside Basta after the Treaty of Vienna and Treaty of Zsitvatorok, and even didn't want to pay him their debt. He claimed 380,000 Thaler debt from the court (80 000 wages of mercenaries came from his own pocket). His last 4 years he did not get his payment and was not even invited to the Military Committee.[21]

After his experiences of warfare in Eastern Europe he went to Prague to live a quiet life; he died in the same city.

Basta wrote several military manuals, the best known of which are his Il maestro di campo generale...(Venice 1606), and his posthumous work Il governo della cavalleria leggiera (Venice 1612).[22] Both were translated into German and into French.

Contributions and military Style

 
Giorgio Basta, Il Governo Della Cavalleria Leggiera: Trattato Che Concerne Anche quanto basta alla Grave per intelligenza de Capitani. Oppenheim: H. Galler, J.T. de Bry, 1616.

Basta was born into a period of transition from the tradition sword and shield to the gun. And cavalry switched from the Gendarme to lighter and armed cavalrymen, which valued quick cavalry charges. Due to influence from his father, he was a very strict observer of the rules, and the laws of a militia. When he worked for Alexander, Duke of Parma he was responsible for the renewal and restructuring of the cavalry weapon. However, during his early years, Basta experimented with his personal method of "mobile sculptures", which were small and numerous groups of cavalrymen who pushed in the forefront of the army, so as to create a complete "crown" in continuous movement; The method assured the army of sudden destructive capability and gave fruit in the French countryside.

The government of light cavalry is doubtless the most important work of Basta, as it represents the first organic regulation of light cavalry in Europe. Basta's theories led to the cavalry being released from its close ties with infantry, according to previous military tactics. To a degree, Basta's work is also largely anticipatory of further developments, especially in the concept of light cavalry being "the pupil of the armies" and in the reiterated need for a constant coordination of cavalry movements with those of other weapons : Theories, which influenced Raimondo Montecuccoli. Interesting remarks are made by Basta regarding the choice of cavalry officers to be performed not according to the nobility titles, but on a more meritocratic internship through the various degrees of the militia. He wants the captain to have absolute authority over all officers, "but always with the advice of the commissioner"; For the lieutenant requires a mature age, which can guarantee "credit and authority on the soldiers"; Young people must be standard bearers, for the pursuit and adventurous spirit. Those carrying the banner must "have in their heads the guidance of all the others." Particular care is given by Basta to the question of the armament of soldiers. The Blunderbuss should be equipped with an arbutus to carry with shoulder strap and a short sword, which allows to hit the tip, more timely and more effectively, according to the dictation of the Italian school, rather than cutting. Among the Blunderbuss, who must be young and robust in shape, Basta values particularly Flemish to be best, not Italians, who prefer military in infantry.

The main quality of the lancers' wards must be, according to Basta, "velocity and collision velocity, i.e. velocity joint mass"; The gun armor is, besides the spear, a short sword for tip and picks that "can greatly benefit in retreat." On the "rules of residence", Basta illustrates the rules already dictated by Alessandro Farnese: the commissioner. It has to carry out topographic surveys and deal with all the logistical problems with the help of a "forier major", also providing the surveillance system for the equinox. Another important chapter is the one devoted to remote viewing, which Basta underlines as one of the main tasks of the cavalry. In this part, he sets out with great precision the various procedures to be followed to surprise a large army of enemies. Especially of personal experiences in the Netherlands and France, although he attributes the merit of introducing this use of cavalry to the Duke of Alba. Finally, Basta deals with the tactical organization of light cavalry in combat, recommending the crescent moon, rather than the manipulative ones, in lines, in chessboard, in columns.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Jeremy Black (2002). European Warfare, 1494-1660. Psychology Press. pp. 199–. ISBN 978-0-415-27532-3.
  2. ^ Setton, K.M. (1991). Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century. American Philosophical Society. ISBN 9780871691927.
  3. ^ Hanlon, G. (2014). The Hero of Italy: Odoardo Farnese, Duke of Parma, His Soldiers, and His Subjects in the Thirty Years' War. OUP Oxford. ISBN 9780199687244.
  4. ^ Coetzee, D.; Eysturlid, L.W. (2013). Philosophers of War: The Evolution of History's Greatest Military Thinkers [2 Volumes]: The Evolution of History's Greatest Military Thinkers. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780313070334.
  5. ^ Murray, J.; BLEWITT, O.; PENTLAND, J.B. (1868). A Handbook for Travellers in Southern Italy ... Sixth edition [of the work originally written by Octavian Blewitt], revised and corrected on the spot. [The editor's preface signed: J. B. P., i.e. Joseph B. Pentland.].
  6. ^ Hanlon, G.; Hanlon, U.R.P.G. (2008). The Twilight of a Military Tradition: Italian Aristocrats and European Conflicts, 1560-1800. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781135361433.
  7. ^ Lawrence, D.R. (2009). The Complete Soldier: Military Books and Military Culture in Early Stuart England, 1603-1645. Brill. ISBN 9789004170797.
  8. ^ Metamorphosis Transylvaniae. Taylor & Francis. 2014. ISBN 9781317856641.
  9. ^ "BASTA, Giorgio in "Dizionario Biografico"". webcache.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  10. ^ De Bartolomeis, Mario. "SAGGI LETTERARI E STORICI". xoomer.virgilio.it. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  11. ^ "Family tree of Georges BASTA".
  12. ^ "BASTA, Giorgio in "Dizionario Biografico"". webcache.googleusercontent.com. Retrieved 15 May 2017.
  13. ^ Lawrence, David, The Complete Soldier: Military Books and Military Culture in Early Stuart England, 1603-1645, Brill, 2009, p.66.
  14. ^ István Kakas (1556–1603): Persiai utazás (Trip to Persia)
  15. ^ [2] Erdélyi Múzeum 1894/11
  16. ^ [3] adatbank.transindex.ro
  17. ^ Giurescu, p. 201–05.
  18. ^ 23. July 1604. Basta's letter to Prince Matthias about to leave Transylvania to fight against Ottomans in West Hungary. In: Basta György hadvezér levelezése és iratai.[Giorgio Basta military leader's letters and documents]. II. Volume. 1602-1607Editor and translator: Dr. Veress, Endre. Budapest, 1913. Akadémiai Kiadó (Document no. 1601.)466. p, https://archive.org/stream/bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft#page/466/mode/1up
  19. ^ 17th April 1605. Basta's letters to Prince Matthias about his bad condition(no wages for the mercenaries and he got sickness etc. In: Basta György hadvezér levelezése és iratai.[Giorgio Basta military leader's letters and documents]. II. Volume. 1602-1607 Editor and translator: Dr. Veress, Endre. Budapest, 1913. Akadémiai Kiadó 647. phttps://archive.org/stream/bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft#page/466/mode/1up
  20. ^ Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the seventeenth century Volume 192 of Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society Author Kenneth Meyer Setton Publisher American Philosophical Society, 1991 ISBN 0-87169-192-2, ISBN 978-0-87169-192-7 Length 502 pages link [4]
  21. ^ In: Basta György hadvezér levelezése és iratai.[Giorgio Basta military leader's letters and documents]. II. Volume. 1602-1607 Editor and translator: Dr. Veress, Endre. Budapest, 1913. Akadémiai Kiadó [about Basta's last years] XXV-XXXII. phttps://archive.org/stream/bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft#page/466/mode/1up
  22. ^ "Giorgio Basta - Enciclopedia României - prima enciclopedie online despre România". enciclopediaromaniei.ro. Retrieved 22 September 2014.

External links

  • Il mastro di campo generale (Venice, 1606) available on Internet Archive from Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma
    • German translation: Il maestro di campo generale, das ist: außfürliche Anzeig, Bericht und Erklärung von dem Ampt eines General-Feldt-Obersten (Frankfurt, 1617) available on Google Books from Austrian National Library
  • Il governo della cavalleria leggiera (Venice, 1612) available on Internet Archive from Complutense University of Madrid (scans in reverse order)
    • German translation: Governo della cavalleria, Das ist, Bericht Von Anführung der leichten Pferde (Frankfurt, 1614) available on Google Books from Austrian National Library
  • Basta György hadvezér levelezése és iratai.[Giorgio Basta military leader's letters and documents]. II. Volume. 1602-1607 Editor and translator[most of the letter are in Italian, German and Latin, some of them in 16th century Hungarian]: Dr. Veress, Endre. Budapest, 1913. Akadémiai Kiadó 974. p

giorgio, basta, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, october, 2018, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, c. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Giorgio Basta Count of Huszt Gjergj Basta or Gheorghe Basta 1550 1607 was an Italian general diplomat and writer of Arbereshe origin employed by the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II to command Habsburg forces in the Long War of 1591 1606 He was later sent to administer Transylvania as an Imperial vassal 1 and to restore Catholicism as the dominant religion in the region 2 Giorgio Basta Gjergj BastaBorn1550La Rocca Kingdom of NaplesDied1607 aged 56 57 Prague Kingdom of BohemiaAllegiance Holy Roman EmpireService wbr branchImperial ArmyRankGeneralBattles warsLong War Battle of Mirăslău Battle of GuruslăuOn his orders his ally Michael the Brave who ruled Transylvania Wallachia and Moldavia was assassinated on 9 August 1601 a few days after the common victory at the Battle of Guruslău for trying to turn against Rudolf II For this he is often depicted as disloyal and violent by Romanian and Hungarian historians Basta was also the author of books on the art of military leadership Contents 1 Biography 2 Contributions and military Style 3 Gallery 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditBasta was born to an Arbereshe family 3 4 5 6 7 8 He is claimed to be born in La Rocca modern day Roccaforzata a village in Salento Italy however historical sources claim he was born in Rocca sul Tanaro Monferrato citation needed He was the son of Demetrius Basta an Albanian Epirote who had fled the Ottoman conquest of the region to Italy where he served the Spanish Empire His father fought in the Piedmont countryside in the middle 1500s and then in Flanders as commander of a cavalry regiment under the Duke of Alba Very young Basta became a soldier and eventually got promoted to the rank of officer in a detachment commanded by Demetrio Then after his father died Basta served in a cavalry company run by his oldest brother Niccolo 9 10 In 1589 he married Anne de Liedekerke de Gavre with whom he had 3 children Ferdinand Nicolas and Alexandrine 11 He began his military career in Flanders where the young officer impressed Don John of Austria and gained the governorship of Nivelles 12 In the service of Philip II of Spain he led his army mainly on the French front during the War of the Three Henrys and the Catholic League In 1584 Basta gained his first major victory when his troops were blocking communications between Malines and Antwerp Even in the Spanish defeat in Brussels in March 1585 the blockade of the city was achieved by Basta s troops During the end of the year the commander led the cavalry of the expeditionary body which at Charles de Mansfeld s orders When the Catholics in 1589 marched to retake Paris it was the cavalry led by Basta who rescued the back of the Spanish army from the sudden attack of Henry of Navarre In 1590 he joined the forces of Alexander Farnese Duke of Parma in Flanders He returned to France in 1591 and partook in the siege of Rouen with the rank of Commander General of the cavalry He however was almost killed by Sir Roger Williams who sliced his neck in personal combat 13 In February 1592 he separated Navarre from his greater army and the prince fled capture by his forces He was tasked with ensuring communications between Rouen and the Netherlands which was massively threatened by the French army and then protecting the retreat of the Spaniards after the injury of Alexander Farnese to Caudebec In 1596 after the death of the Duke of Parma Balta followed the fate of many Italian princes and had to abandon the Spanish He then went to the service of Emperor Rudolf II on the recommendation of Philip II and served as general master in the army of Archbishop Mattia later deputy governor of Upper Hungary and finally the commander of the armies of Hungary and Transylvania Ambrogio Merodio in his Istoria Tarantina calls him the terror of Ottoman armies For more than a decade Basta fought against Hungarians Transylvanians Vlachs and Tatars gaining much fame as one as the best generals of the Empire In 1597 he was released together with General Schwarzenberg from Papa which was conquered three years earlier by the Turks In 1597 while he was deputy governor of Hungary he recaptured the city of Huszt which had rebelled against the Empire At the Battle of Mirăslău Michael the Brave was defeated by Basta forcing Michael to appeal to the Emperor Rudolf II to mediate the dispute with Basta Under his command his ally Michael the Brave the former ruler of Transylvania Wallachia and Moldavia was assassinated at Keresztesmezo camp 14 15 16 near Campia Turzii because Basta considered him a liability The event happened on 9 August 1601 17 only days after a joint victory in Battle of Guruslău Following the murder of Michael and his victory over Bathory Basta became military commander of Transylvania but his cruelty led to public discontent Under his leadership iniquities and murders multiplied throughout Transylvania During this brief period Basta tried to uproot Protestantism Following Papal and Imperial policy Calvinist Hungarians and Szekelys Orthodox Wallachians and Serbs and Lutheran Saxons were subject to any kind of abuse Following years of warfare and his ruthless regime famine and plague appeared in Transylvania At that time Rudolf II decided to recall him from command leading to Basta s departure from Transylvania and put him in charge to fight against the Ottomans of West Hungary 1604 18 He successfully defended Esztergom with his 10 000 mercenaries against 80 000 Ottomans After Bocskai s uprisen army chased away Belgiojoso Rudolph sent Basta from West Hungary to the Partium to suppress the uprising In November 1604 Basta twice defeated forces led by Stephen Bocskai see also Bocskai Uprising Bocskai at the end cut his supplies and he had to withdraw in winter to Eperjes where he got trapped After some months Rudolph called him back to defend at first the mine towns e g Besztercebanya in Upper Hungary 19 Moravia and Austria against Bocskai s looting armies 20 In July 1605 he did not get enough money to keep up enough mercenaries to defend Visegrad Esztergom and Ersekujvar against the Ottomans and was defeated by Lalla Mehmed The Military Committee didn t supply him enough money but Rudolph II made him a Czech baron to compensate The court became tired of the war and they started pushing aside Basta after the Treaty of Vienna and Treaty of Zsitvatorok and even didn t want to pay him their debt He claimed 380 000 Thaler debt from the court 80 000 wages of mercenaries came from his own pocket His last 4 years he did not get his payment and was not even invited to the Military Committee 21 After his experiences of warfare in Eastern Europe he went to Prague to live a quiet life he died in the same city Basta wrote several military manuals the best known of which are his Il maestro di campo generale Venice 1606 and his posthumous work Il governo della cavalleria leggiera Venice 1612 22 Both were translated into German and into French Contributions and military Style Edit Giorgio Basta Il Governo Della Cavalleria Leggiera Trattato Che Concerne Anche quanto basta alla Grave per intelligenza de Capitani Oppenheim H Galler J T de Bry 1616 Basta was born into a period of transition from the tradition sword and shield to the gun And cavalry switched from the Gendarme to lighter and armed cavalrymen which valued quick cavalry charges Due to influence from his father he was a very strict observer of the rules and the laws of a militia When he worked for Alexander Duke of Parma he was responsible for the renewal and restructuring of the cavalry weapon However during his early years Basta experimented with his personal method of mobile sculptures which were small and numerous groups of cavalrymen who pushed in the forefront of the army so as to create a complete crown in continuous movement The method assured the army of sudden destructive capability and gave fruit in the French countryside The government of light cavalry is doubtless the most important work of Basta as it represents the first organic regulation of light cavalry in Europe Basta s theories led to the cavalry being released from its close ties with infantry according to previous military tactics To a degree Basta s work is also largely anticipatory of further developments especially in the concept of light cavalry being the pupil of the armies and in the reiterated need for a constant coordination of cavalry movements with those of other weapons Theories which influenced Raimondo Montecuccoli Interesting remarks are made by Basta regarding the choice of cavalry officers to be performed not according to the nobility titles but on a more meritocratic internship through the various degrees of the militia He wants the captain to have absolute authority over all officers but always with the advice of the commissioner For the lieutenant requires a mature age which can guarantee credit and authority on the soldiers Young people must be standard bearers for the pursuit and adventurous spirit Those carrying the banner must have in their heads the guidance of all the others Particular care is given by Basta to the question of the armament of soldiers The Blunderbuss should be equipped with an arbutus to carry with shoulder strap and a short sword which allows to hit the tip more timely and more effectively according to the dictation of the Italian school rather than cutting Among the Blunderbuss who must be young and robust in shape Basta values particularly Flemish to be best not Italians who prefer military in infantry The main quality of the lancers wards must be according to Basta velocity and collision velocity i e velocity joint mass The gun armor is besides the spear a short sword for tip and picks that can greatly benefit in retreat On the rules of residence Basta illustrates the rules already dictated by Alessandro Farnese the commissioner It has to carry out topographic surveys and deal with all the logistical problems with the help of a forier major also providing the surveillance system for the equinox Another important chapter is the one devoted to remote viewing which Basta underlines as one of the main tasks of the cavalry In this part he sets out with great precision the various procedures to be followed to surprise a large army of enemies Especially of personal experiences in the Netherlands and France although he attributes the merit of introducing this use of cavalry to the Duke of Alba Finally Basta deals with the tactical organization of light cavalry in combat recommending the crescent moon rather than the manipulative ones in lines in chessboard in columns Gallery Edit Battle of Guruslău 17th century aquarell of Basta Street sign in Brindisi MontagnaSee also EditOttoman wars in Europe French Wars of ReligionReferences Edit Jeremy Black 2002 European Warfare 1494 1660 Psychology Press pp 199 ISBN 978 0 415 27532 3 Setton K M 1991 Venice Austria and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century American Philosophical Society ISBN 9780871691927 Hanlon G 2014 The Hero of Italy Odoardo Farnese Duke of Parma His Soldiers and His Subjects in the Thirty Years War OUP Oxford ISBN 9780199687244 Coetzee D Eysturlid L W 2013 Philosophers of War The Evolution of History s Greatest Military Thinkers 2 Volumes The Evolution of History s Greatest Military Thinkers ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313070334 Murray J BLEWITT O PENTLAND J B 1868 A Handbook for Travellers in Southern Italy Sixth edition of the work originally written by Octavian Blewitt revised and corrected on the spot The editor s preface signed J B P i e Joseph B Pentland Hanlon G Hanlon U R P G 2008 The Twilight of a Military Tradition Italian Aristocrats and European Conflicts 1560 1800 Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781135361433 Lawrence D R 2009 The Complete Soldier Military Books and Military Culture in Early Stuart England 1603 1645 Brill ISBN 9789004170797 Metamorphosis Transylvaniae Taylor amp Francis 2014 ISBN 9781317856641 BASTA Giorgio in Dizionario Biografico webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 15 May 2017 De Bartolomeis Mario SAGGI LETTERARI E STORICI xoomer virgilio it Retrieved 15 May 2017 Family tree of Georges BASTA BASTA Giorgio in Dizionario Biografico webcache googleusercontent com Retrieved 15 May 2017 Lawrence David The Complete Soldier Military Books and Military Culture in Early Stuart England 1603 1645 Brill 2009 p 66 1 Istvan Kakas 1556 1603 Persiai utazas Trip to Persia 2 Erdelyi Muzeum 1894 11 3 adatbank transindex ro Giurescu p 201 05 23 July 1604 Basta s letter to Prince Matthias about to leave Transylvania to fight against Ottomans in West Hungary In Basta Gyorgy hadvezer levelezese es iratai Giorgio Basta military leader s letters and documents II Volume 1602 1607Editor and translator Dr Veress Endre Budapest 1913 Akademiai Kiado Document no 1601 466 p https archive org stream bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft page 466 mode 1up 17th April 1605 Basta s letters to Prince Matthias about his bad condition no wages for the mercenaries and he got sickness etc In Basta Gyorgy hadvezer levelezese es iratai Giorgio Basta military leader s letters and documents II Volume 1602 1607 Editor and translator Dr Veress Endre Budapest 1913 Akademiai Kiado 647 phttps archive org stream bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft page 466 mode 1up Venice Austria and the Turks in the seventeenth century Volume 192 of Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society Author Kenneth Meyer Setton Publisher American Philosophical Society 1991 ISBN 0 87169 192 2 ISBN 978 0 87169 192 7 Length 502 pages link 4 In Basta Gyorgy hadvezer levelezese es iratai Giorgio Basta military leader s letters and documents II Volume 1602 1607 Editor and translator Dr Veress Endre Budapest 1913 Akademiai Kiado about Basta s last years XXV XXXII phttps archive org stream bastagyrgyhadv02bastuoft page 466 mode 1up Giorgio Basta Enciclopedia Romaniei prima enciclopedie online despre Romania enciclopediaromaniei ro Retrieved 22 September 2014 External links EditIl mastro di campo generale Venice 1606 available on Internet Archive from Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma German translation Il maestro di campo generale das ist aussfurliche Anzeig Bericht und Erklarung von dem Ampt eines General Feldt Obersten Frankfurt 1617 available on Google Books from Austrian National Library Il governo della cavalleria leggiera Venice 1612 available on Internet Archive from Complutense University of Madrid scans in reverse order German translation Governo della cavalleria Das ist Bericht Von Anfuhrung der leichten Pferde Frankfurt 1614 available on Google Books from Austrian National Library Basta Gyorgy hadvezer levelezese es iratai Giorgio Basta military leader s letters and documents II Volume 1602 1607 Editor and translator most of the letter are in Italian German and Latin some of them in 16th century Hungarian Dr Veress Endre Budapest 1913 Akademiai Kiado 974 p Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giorgio Basta amp oldid 1127034489, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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