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Habsburg–Ottoman wars in Hungary (1526–1568)

Habsburg–Ottoman wars in Hungary
Little War in Hungary
Part of the Ottoman–Habsburg wars

Siege of Eger in 1552
Date1526–1568
Location
Result

Ottoman victory

  • Hungary was divided into larger Ottoman and smaller Habsburg spheres of influence, as well as a semi-independent Hungarian vassal state of Transylvania.
  • 1526-1538: Ottoman victory
  • 1540-1547: Ottoman victory
  • 1551-1562: Ottoman victory
  • 1565-1568: Ottoman victory
Territorial
changes
Treaty of Frankfurt (1562),
Ottomans conquer parts of Transylvania
Belligerents

 Holy Roman Empire

Royal Hungary
Kingdom of Croatia
 Spain
Papal States
Ottoman Empire
John Szapolyai's Hungarian kingdom
Kingdom of France
Commanders and leaders
Archduke Ferdinand I
Ferrante I Gonzaga
Nikola Jurišić
Johann Katzianer
Suleiman the Magnificent
John Szapolyai
Christoph Frankopan 

The Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire waged a series of wars on the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary and several adjacent lands in Southeastern Europe from 1526 to 1568. The Habsburgs and the Ottomans engaged in a series of military campaigns against one another in Hungary between 1526 and 1568. While overall the Ottomans had the upper hand, the war failed to produce any decisive result. The Ottoman army remained very powerful in the open field but it often lost a significant amount of time besieging the many fortresses of the Hungarian frontier and its communication lines were now dangerously overstretched. At the end of the conflict, Hungary had been split into several different zones of control, between the Ottomans, Habsburgs, and Transylvania, an Ottoman vassal state. The simultaneous war of succession between Habsburg-controlled western "Royal Hungary" and the Zápolya-ruled pro-Ottoman "Eastern Hungarian Kingdom" is known as the Little War in Hungary.[1]

1530s edit

Following Suleiman's unsuccessful siege of Vienna in 1529, Ferdinand I launched a counter-attack in 1530 to regain the initiative and avenge the destruction brought by Suleiman's 120,000-strong army.

Suleiman's response came in 1532 when he led a massive army of over 120,000 troops to besiege Vienna again. Ferdinand withdrew his army, leaving only 700 men with no cannons and a few guns to defend Güns (Kőszeg).[2] In the siege of Güns, the Grand Vizier of the Ottomans, Ibrahim Pasha, did not realize how well defended Koszeg was. Nonetheless, under the leadership of Croatian Captain Nikola Jurišić, the city fought off every assault. The exact outcome of the battle is unknown since it has two versions that differ depending on the source. In the first version, Nikola Jurišić rejected the offer to surrender on favorable terms, and in the second version, the city was offered terms for a nominal surrender. In any case, the Ottomans withdrew at the arrival of the August rains.[2] During their retreat, they suffered a defeat at the Battle of Leobersdorf against an imperial army led by Frederick II, Elector Palatine.[3]

The Treaty of Constantinople (1533) was signed between Ferdinand and Suleiman. John Szapolyai was recognized as King of Hungary as an Ottoman vassal. However, the Ottomans recognized the land under the Habsburgs' rule in Hungary.[4]

This treaty did not satisfy John Szapolyai or Ferdinand, whose armies began to skirmish along the borders. Ottoman sanjak-bey of Bosnia, Gazi Husrev-beg used the chance to occupy Požega in early 1537.[5] Ferdinand, under pressure from the local nobility, decided to respond by launching an offensive in Slavonia in 1537, sending one of his ablest generals[4] to take Osijek. The siege failed and led to the Battle of Gorjani, which was a disaster as big as Mohács, with an Ottoman relief army smashing the Austrians.[4]

However, rather than attack Vienna again, Suleiman sent an army of 8,000 light cavalries to attack Otranto in southern Italy the same year. The troops were withdrawn from Italy after an expected French invasion designed to coordinate with Ottoman efforts failed to materialize. Nonetheless, an Ottoman victory at the naval Battle of Preveza in 1538 gave the Habsburg-led coalition another defeat.

1540s edit

In 1541, the Ottomans failed to take the fortress of Szigetvár.[6] However, a humiliating defeat was inflicted on the Habsburgs in the siege of Buda (1541). John Szapolyai died in 1540 and his son was only a few weeks old.[4] An Austrian attack on Buda followed the news of the death of John, but the appeals of John's widow to Suleiman were not unanswered, and in 1541 the elderly General Wilhelm von Roggendorf was defeated outside of Buda before he could even cross the Danube to take it. The next year Ferdinand besieged Pest but was repulsed.

 
Ottoman cannon battery at the siege of Esztergom, 1543 (detail).

In April 1543 Suleiman launched another campaign in Hungary, bringing back Bran and other forts so that much of Hungary was under Ottoman control. As part of a Franco-Ottoman alliance (see also: Franco-Hungarian alliance and Petar Keglević), French troops were supplied to the Ottomans in Hungary; a French artillery unit was dispatched in 1543–1544 and attached to the Ottoman Army.[7][8][9] In August 1543, the Ottoman succeeded in the siege of Esztergom[10] The siege was followed by the capture of the Hungarian coronation city of Székesfehérvár in September 1543.[11] Other cities that were captured during this campaign were Siklós and Szeged, in order to better protect Buda.[10][12] However, continuous delay of the push toward the west, because of the siege of these fortresses, meant that the Ottomans could not launch any new offensive against Austria.

From 1548 to the end of the war, a Habsburg Spanish infantry tercio that had fought in the Schmalkaldic War, led by Maestre de campo Bernardo de Aldana, was detached in Hungary to fight against John Zápolya's supporters on behalf of Ferdinand.[13] In fact, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V sent Spanish troops to help his brother regularly from 1527 to 1553, support that proved instrumental in Hungary remaining inside Christianity.[14]

1550s edit

Ottoman campaign in Hungary in 1552 edit

 
Siege of Eger Castle, 1552
 
After the capture of Temesvár, 1552
 
Drégely Castle was defended to the last man in 1552

In the spring of 1551, the Ottomans held the Hungarian border forts of Pécs, Fehérvár, Esztergom, Vác, Nógrád, Hatvan and Szeged. During the conquest campaign in 1551, the Turks were defeated by George the Frater at Timișoara (Temesvár) and Lippa, and the Sultan was outraged. This marked the end of the peace of Drinapolis (Erdine) in 1547. György Fráter deceived the sultan - in fact, he only wanted to gain time and finally hand over Transylvania, which had been under the rule of the Kingdom of Hungary since 1003, to the Hungarian king, Ferdinand of Habsburg.

Due to the Turkish threat, on the instructions of Ferdinand I, in 1550–51, on the site of the old Szolnok earthen castle, Szolnok was surrounded by a new city wall (partly according to the plan of István Dobó), and its weak castle was fortified. Lőrinc Nyáry was appointed to the forefront. This new strength did not fit into the Turkish plans to keep central Hungary. Suleyman's main goal was to make a bigger gap between the western part of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania. For all this, Sultan Suleiman sent another conquering army against the politically divided Kingdom of Hungary. The commander-in-chief of his army, Kara Ahmed, who left Constantinople, was the serdar[general] and other commanders were Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey of Rumelia and Hadim Ali pasha r(governor) of Buda.[15] The poorly paid mercenaries of King Ferdinand and the Hungarian population fled the Turkish armies. Several Hungarian castles were left to their fate without protection. Ahmed's army's aim was to acquire the Timisoara region, while Hadim Ali had to occupy the castles of Hont and Nógrád, thus securing the way to the rich mining towns of the highlands.

 
The Fiľakovo castle was a component of the defence line against the Ottoman expansion in the 16th century

In 1552 two Ottoman armies crossed the border into the Hungarian Kingdom. One of them – led by Hadim Ali Pasha – started a campaign against the western and central part of the country whilst the second army – led by Kara Ahmed Pasha – attacked the fortresses in the Banat region. Hadim Ali Pasha laid siege to the castle at Veszprém and captured it on 2 June. The army of Ali Pasha – about 10,000 to 12,000 strong – got below Drégely Castle on the morning of 6 July. The fall of Drégely started a chain of defeats of castles of Hont and Nógrád counties. Ottoman troops conquered nine-tenths of the castles in the two counties in short order. During the campaign they occupied Timișoara, Veszprém, Szécsény, Hollókő, Buják, Lippa, Lugos, Karánsebes, Drégely and several smaller fortresses. Pasha Hadim Ali marched from Buda and Vizier Kara Ahmed marched from the West side of Transylvania (Partium). The Habsburg army under Erasmus von Teufel [de] made a belated attempt to stop the Ottoman troops at Plášťovce (then Palást), but was completely defeated in a two-day battle of Palást [sk], and 4,000 German and Italian prisoners were deported to Istanbul. The two armies united under Szolnok, then besieged and conquered the Szolnok Castle, and turned against the gate of Upper Hungary, Eger. At the end of the July there was an enormous gap in the Hungarian border castle system.

In 1552, Suleiman's united forces (Kara Ahmed pasha, Hadim Ali pasha, and Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey) laid siege of Eger, located in the northern part of the Kingdom of Hungary, but the defenders led by István Dobó repelled the attacks and defended the Eger Castle.

In 1554, the town of Fiľakovo in south-central Slovakia with the castle of the same name was conquered by the Turks and was the seat of a sanjak until 1593, when it was reconquered by the Imperial troops. On 27 March 1562, Hasszán, the sanjak-bey of Fülek (Fiľakovo) castle, defeated the Hungarian army of the Upper Lands at the battle of Szécsény [sk].

Siege of Szigetvar 1556 edit

The Ottoman armies advancing in Transdanubia managed to occupy all the surrounding fortresses in the years 1540-1550, so Szigetvár was completely left alone. After the Turkish attack, led by Toygun Paşa, governor of Buda, was repulsed by László Kerecsényi in 1555,[16] the first full-scale siege of the fortress took place in the summer of 1556. Despite the extraordinary efforts of the Ottomans the castellan in charge of the defense, Marko Horvat Stančić [hr],[17] kept the fortress against the multiple attacks led by Ali Pasha, governor of Buda.

While Szigetvár was besieged, on July 18, a Habsburg army besieged the Ottoman fort at Babócsa, on the west side of the Rinya River, 45 km west of Szigetvár. The commanders were Hungarian Palatine Tamás Nádasdy and Croatian Ban Nikola IV Zrinski. Ali Paşa knew that for Süleymân, losing a fort under Ottoman control is a bigger sin than failing to take one. Ali Paşa temporarily lifted the siege and took his men to Babócsa, to rescue the garrison but, on July 23-24, at a battle at the Rinya River, Nikola Zrinski defeated Ali Paşa, who then returned to Szigetvár, which, during his absence, had damaged walls repaired and the garrison reinvigorated. The Ottomans lifted the siege and left Szigetvár - chased and attacked while they fled.[18]

Aftermath edit

The castle, damaged during the siege, was rebuilt under the leadership of the captain and with the involvement of the Italian military engineer Pietro Ferrabosco, using the most modern military techniques, as a result of which it became the most modern and strongest border fortress in Hungary by the end of the 1550s, protected by a rampart wall, corner bastions, and moats.

1560s edit

 
The siege of Szigetvár ended with every remaining member of the garrison in a suicidal charge from the fortress led by Nikola IV Zrinski on 7 September 1566

After the death of Márk Horváth, in 1561 Nikola IV Zrinski became the castle captain. He was tasked with maintaining the last important southern border fortress, still in imperial hands, endangering the security of the military and commercial road between Buda and Nándorfehérvár. After a few years of silence, the battle of Szigetvár took place in the late summer of 1566, which ended in the abandonment of Southern Transdanubia, surpassing all its significance and leaving a deep imprint in Hungarian historical memory, and ending in defeat despite the heroic endurance of the defenders. Sultan Suleiman I started his last campaign and he set Szigetvár as his first goal. He besieged the castle of Szigetvár with an army of fifty thousand regular forces, which Zrinski defended with about 2,500 soldiers, resisting the Turkish superiority for 34 days. On September 7, 1566, when the inner castle was already on fire, Zrinski and his 300 combat soldiers tried to erupt ("Zrinski's charge"), but all of them died a heroic death at the castle gate. During the siege, the medieval round tower was also destroyed. Immediately after the occupation of the castle, the Ottomans began to rebuild the fortress and the settlement.

After Suleiman died, Mehmed Sokollu hid it from the army for a month and sent a secret letter to prince Selim to take over the throne. The soldiers didn't know that Suleiman died until Selim joined the army in Belgrade. The army supported him to be the successor of Suleiman.

Aftermath edit

Peace was finally concluded in Edirne in 1568 and renewed in 1576, 1584, and 1591. War would not again break out between the Habsburgs and Ottomans until 1593, in the Long Turkish War. However, throughout this period of peace small-scale warfare continued, a conflict known as the "Little War" (German: Kleinkrieg). No large armies or sustained campaigns were launched, but authorities on both sides continually struggled with hostile raiders and forays across the poorly-demarcated border. Both sides, however, desired that peace continue.[19]

In 1571 the Turks destroyed the Hodejov castle and in 1575 they conquered the Modrý Kameň castle. In 1588 there was a battle near the town of Szikszó, where the Hungarian army defeated the Turks.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Maps: https://ujkor.hu/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/letezett_e_magyar_kiralysag_2015_2.jpg https://ujkor.hu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/letezett_e_magyar_kiralysag_2015_7.jpg
  2. ^ a b Turnbull, Stephen. The Ottoman Empire 1326–1699. New York: Osprey, 2003. pg 51
  3. ^ Alfred Kohler (2010). Das Reich im Kampf um die Hegemonie in Europa 1521–1648. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftverlag GmbH. ISBN 9783486704242.
  4. ^ a b c d Turnbull, Stephen. The Ottoman Empire 1326–1699. New York: Osprey, 2003. pg 52
  5. ^ Tracy, James (2016). Balkan Wars: Habsburg Croatia, Ottoman Bosnia, and Venetian Dalmatia, 1499–1617. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 120. ISBN 9781442213609.
  6. ^ map: https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-IeSxQBaaJ7s/TdJE_SXgNfI/AAAAAAAAAjA/5cXqXNWuoYA/s1600/1541oszmanhoditas.jpg
  7. ^ Goffman, Daniel (2002-04-25). The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45908-2.
  8. ^ Elgood, Robert (1995-11-15). Firearms of the Islamic World: In the Tareq Rajab Museum, Kuwait. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-85043-963-9.
  9. ^ Lambton, Ann Katherine Swynford; Lewis, Bernard (1984). The Cambridge History of Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-521-29135-4.
  10. ^ a b Sandler, Stanley (2002). Ground Warfare: An International Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-344-5.
  11. ^ Bartl, Július; Škvarna, Dušan (2002). Slovak History: Chronology & Lexicon. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-86516-444-4.
  12. ^ Map: https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eYwjL_nII2o/UAgu3nZvK7I/AAAAAAAABpI/7fKMIGYYy4A/s1600/torok+hadjarat+terkepe+1526-1547.jpg
  13. ^ Korpás, Zoltán: La correspondencia de un soldado español de las guerras de Hungría a mediados del siglo XVI. Comentarios al diario de Bernardo de Aldana (1548–1552). In: Hispania, Vol. 60, no 206, 2000, pp. 881–910
  14. ^ Dixon, C. Scott; Fuchs, Martina: The histories of Emperor Charles V: nationale Perspektiven von Persönlichkeit und Herrschaft. Münster: Aschendorff, 2005. ISBN 3402065746, p. 235
  15. ^ Map of the champaig: http://tortenelemcikkek.hu/sites/default/files/9.41terkep_torok.jpg
  16. ^ Tracy, James (2016). Balkan Wars: Habsburg Croatia, Ottoman Bosnia, and Venetian Dalmatia, 1499–1617. Maryland & London: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 177. ISBN 9781442213586.
  17. ^ "Stančić, Marko Horvat". Hrvatska enciklopedija, mrežno izdanje. Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža. 2021. Retrieved Oct 3, 2023.
  18. ^ Mesić, Matija (1866). Život Nikole Zrinjskoga Sigetskoga junaka (in Croatian). Zagreb: Matica ilirska. pp. 145–151.
  19. ^ Finkel, Caroline (1988). The Administration of Warfare: The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary, 1593–1606. Vienna: VWGÖ. p. 8. ISBN 3-85369-708-9.

Sources edit

  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915.
  • Fodor, Pál; Dávid, Géza, eds. (2000). Ottomans, Hungarians, and Habsburgs in Central Europe: The Military Confines in the Era of Ottoman Conquest. BRILL. ISBN 9004119078.
  • Tracy, James (2016). Balkan Wars: Habsburg Croatia, Ottoman Bosnia, and Venetian Dalmatia, 1499–1617. Malden: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442213609.
  • Tracy, James. "The Road to Szigetvár: Ferdinand I's Defense of His Hungarian Border, 1548–1566." Austrian History Yearbook 44 (2013): 17–36.
  • Turnbull, Stephen R. (2003). The Ottoman Empire 1326–1699. New York: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-569-4.

Further reading edit

habsburg, ottoman, wars, hungary, 1526, 1568, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, habsburg, ottoman, war. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Habsburg Ottoman wars in Hungary 1526 1568 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Habsburg Ottoman wars in HungaryLittle War in HungaryPart of the Ottoman Habsburg warsSiege of Eger in 1552Date1526 1568LocationBalkans Kingdom of HungaryResultOttoman victory Hungary was divided into larger Ottoman and smaller Habsburg spheres of influence as well as a semi independent Hungarian vassal state of Transylvania 1526 1538 Ottoman victory 1540 1547 Ottoman victory 1551 1562 Ottoman victory 1565 1568 Ottoman victoryTerritorialchangesTreaty of Frankfurt 1562 Ottomans conquer parts of TransylvaniaBelligerents Holy Roman Empire Archduchy of Austria Kingdom of Bohemia Duchy of Styria Duchy of Carniola Royal Hungary Kingdom of Croatia Spain Papal StatesOttoman Empire John Szapolyai s Hungarian kingdom Kingdom of FranceCommanders and leadersArchduke Ferdinand I Ferrante I Gonzaga Nikola Jurisic Johann KatzianerSuleiman the Magnificent John Szapolyai Christoph Frankopan The Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire waged a series of wars on the territory of the Kingdom of Hungary and several adjacent lands in Southeastern Europe from 1526 to 1568 The Habsburgs and the Ottomans engaged in a series of military campaigns against one another in Hungary between 1526 and 1568 While overall the Ottomans had the upper hand the war failed to produce any decisive result The Ottoman army remained very powerful in the open field but it often lost a significant amount of time besieging the many fortresses of the Hungarian frontier and its communication lines were now dangerously overstretched At the end of the conflict Hungary had been split into several different zones of control between the Ottomans Habsburgs and Transylvania an Ottoman vassal state The simultaneous war of succession between Habsburg controlled western Royal Hungary and the Zapolya ruled pro Ottoman Eastern Hungarian Kingdom is known as the Little War in Hungary 1 Contents 1 1530s 2 1540s 3 1550s 3 1 Ottoman campaign in Hungary in 1552 3 2 Siege of Szigetvar 1556 3 2 1 Aftermath 4 1560s 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading1530s editFollowing Suleiman s unsuccessful siege of Vienna in 1529 Ferdinand I launched a counter attack in 1530 to regain the initiative and avenge the destruction brought by Suleiman s 120 000 strong army Suleiman s response came in 1532 when he led a massive army of over 120 000 troops to besiege Vienna again Ferdinand withdrew his army leaving only 700 men with no cannons and a few guns to defend Guns Koszeg 2 In the siege of Guns the Grand Vizier of the Ottomans Ibrahim Pasha did not realize how well defended Koszeg was Nonetheless under the leadership of Croatian Captain Nikola Jurisic the city fought off every assault The exact outcome of the battle is unknown since it has two versions that differ depending on the source In the first version Nikola Jurisic rejected the offer to surrender on favorable terms and in the second version the city was offered terms for a nominal surrender In any case the Ottomans withdrew at the arrival of the August rains 2 During their retreat they suffered a defeat at the Battle of Leobersdorf against an imperial army led by Frederick II Elector Palatine 3 The Treaty of Constantinople 1533 was signed between Ferdinand and Suleiman John Szapolyai was recognized as King of Hungary as an Ottoman vassal However the Ottomans recognized the land under the Habsburgs rule in Hungary 4 This treaty did not satisfy John Szapolyai or Ferdinand whose armies began to skirmish along the borders Ottoman sanjak bey of Bosnia Gazi Husrev beg used the chance to occupy Pozega in early 1537 5 Ferdinand under pressure from the local nobility decided to respond by launching an offensive in Slavonia in 1537 sending one of his ablest generals 4 to take Osijek The siege failed and led to the Battle of Gorjani which was a disaster as big as Mohacs with an Ottoman relief army smashing the Austrians 4 However rather than attack Vienna again Suleiman sent an army of 8 000 light cavalries to attack Otranto in southern Italy the same year The troops were withdrawn from Italy after an expected French invasion designed to coordinate with Ottoman efforts failed to materialize Nonetheless an Ottoman victory at the naval Battle of Preveza in 1538 gave the Habsburg led coalition another defeat 1540s editIn 1541 the Ottomans failed to take the fortress of Szigetvar 6 However a humiliating defeat was inflicted on the Habsburgs in the siege of Buda 1541 John Szapolyai died in 1540 and his son was only a few weeks old 4 An Austrian attack on Buda followed the news of the death of John but the appeals of John s widow to Suleiman were not unanswered and in 1541 the elderly General Wilhelm von Roggendorf was defeated outside of Buda before he could even cross the Danube to take it The next year Ferdinand besieged Pest but was repulsed nbsp Ottoman cannon battery at the siege of Esztergom 1543 detail In April 1543 Suleiman launched another campaign in Hungary bringing back Bran and other forts so that much of Hungary was under Ottoman control As part of a Franco Ottoman alliance see also Franco Hungarian alliance and Petar Keglevic French troops were supplied to the Ottomans in Hungary a French artillery unit was dispatched in 1543 1544 and attached to the Ottoman Army 7 8 9 In August 1543 the Ottoman succeeded in the siege of Esztergom 10 The siege was followed by the capture of the Hungarian coronation city of Szekesfehervar in September 1543 11 Other cities that were captured during this campaign were Siklos and Szeged in order to better protect Buda 10 12 However continuous delay of the push toward the west because of the siege of these fortresses meant that the Ottomans could not launch any new offensive against Austria From 1548 to the end of the war a Habsburg Spanish infantry tercio that had fought in the Schmalkaldic War led by Maestre de campo Bernardo de Aldana was detached in Hungary to fight against John Zapolya s supporters on behalf of Ferdinand 13 In fact the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V sent Spanish troops to help his brother regularly from 1527 to 1553 support that proved instrumental in Hungary remaining inside Christianity 14 1550s editOttoman campaign in Hungary in 1552 edit nbsp Siege of Eger Castle 1552 nbsp After the capture of Temesvar 1552 nbsp Dregely Castle was defended to the last man in 1552In the spring of 1551 the Ottomans held the Hungarian border forts of Pecs Fehervar Esztergom Vac Nograd Hatvan and Szeged During the conquest campaign in 1551 the Turks were defeated by George the Frater at Timișoara Temesvar and Lippa and the Sultan was outraged This marked the end of the peace of Drinapolis Erdine in 1547 Gyorgy Frater deceived the sultan in fact he only wanted to gain time and finally hand over Transylvania which had been under the rule of the Kingdom of Hungary since 1003 to the Hungarian king Ferdinand of Habsburg Due to the Turkish threat on the instructions of Ferdinand I in 1550 51 on the site of the old Szolnok earthen castle Szolnok was surrounded by a new city wall partly according to the plan of Istvan Dobo and its weak castle was fortified Lorinc Nyary was appointed to the forefront This new strength did not fit into the Turkish plans to keep central Hungary Suleyman s main goal was to make a bigger gap between the western part of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania For all this Sultan Suleiman sent another conquering army against the politically divided Kingdom of Hungary The commander in chief of his army Kara Ahmed who left Constantinople was the serdar general and other commanders were Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey of Rumelia and Hadim Ali pasha r governor of Buda 15 The poorly paid mercenaries of King Ferdinand and the Hungarian population fled the Turkish armies Several Hungarian castles were left to their fate without protection Ahmed s army s aim was to acquire the Timisoara region while Hadim Ali had to occupy the castles of Hont and Nograd thus securing the way to the rich mining towns of the highlands nbsp The Fiľakovo castle was a component of the defence line against the Ottoman expansion in the 16th centuryIn 1552 two Ottoman armies crossed the border into the Hungarian Kingdom One of them led by Hadim Ali Pasha started a campaign against the western and central part of the country whilst the second army led by Kara Ahmed Pasha attacked the fortresses in the Banat region Hadim Ali Pasha laid siege to the castle at Veszprem and captured it on 2 June The army of Ali Pasha about 10 000 to 12 000 strong got below Dregely Castle on the morning of 6 July The fall of Dregely started a chain of defeats of castles of Hont and Nograd counties Ottoman troops conquered nine tenths of the castles in the two counties in short order During the campaign they occupied Timișoara Veszprem Szecseny Holloko Bujak Lippa Lugos Karansebes Dregely and several smaller fortresses Pasha Hadim Ali marched from Buda and Vizier Kara Ahmed marched from the West side of Transylvania Partium The Habsburg army under Erasmus von Teufel de made a belated attempt to stop the Ottoman troops at Plastovce then Palast but was completely defeated in a two day battle of Palast sk and 4 000 German and Italian prisoners were deported to Istanbul The two armies united under Szolnok then besieged and conquered the Szolnok Castle and turned against the gate of Upper Hungary Eger At the end of the July there was an enormous gap in the Hungarian border castle system In 1552 Suleiman s united forces Kara Ahmed pasha Hadim Ali pasha and Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey laid siege of Eger located in the northern part of the Kingdom of Hungary but the defenders led by Istvan Dobo repelled the attacks and defended the Eger Castle In 1554 the town of Fiľakovo in south central Slovakia with the castle of the same name was conquered by the Turks and was the seat of a sanjak until 1593 when it was reconquered by the Imperial troops On 27 March 1562 Hasszan the sanjak bey of Fulek Fiľakovo castle defeated the Hungarian army of the Upper Lands at the battle of Szecseny sk Siege of Szigetvar 1556 edit The Ottoman armies advancing in Transdanubia managed to occupy all the surrounding fortresses in the years 1540 1550 so Szigetvar was completely left alone After the Turkish attack led by Toygun Pasa governor of Buda was repulsed by Laszlo Kerecsenyi in 1555 16 the first full scale siege of the fortress took place in the summer of 1556 Despite the extraordinary efforts of the Ottomans the castellan in charge of the defense Marko Horvat Stancic hr 17 kept the fortress against the multiple attacks led by Ali Pasha governor of Buda While Szigetvar was besieged on July 18 a Habsburg army besieged the Ottoman fort at Babocsa on the west side of the Rinya River 45 km west of Szigetvar The commanders were Hungarian Palatine Tamas Nadasdy and Croatian Ban Nikola IV Zrinski Ali Pasa knew that for Suleyman losing a fort under Ottoman control is a bigger sin than failing to take one Ali Pasa temporarily lifted the siege and took his men to Babocsa to rescue the garrison but on July 23 24 at a battle at the Rinya River Nikola Zrinski defeated Ali Pasa who then returned to Szigetvar which during his absence had damaged walls repaired and the garrison reinvigorated The Ottomans lifted the siege and left Szigetvar chased and attacked while they fled 18 Aftermath edit The castle damaged during the siege was rebuilt under the leadership of the captain and with the involvement of the Italian military engineer Pietro Ferrabosco using the most modern military techniques as a result of which it became the most modern and strongest border fortress in Hungary by the end of the 1550s protected by a rampart wall corner bastions and moats 1560s edit nbsp The siege of Szigetvar ended with every remaining member of the garrison in a suicidal charge from the fortress led by Nikola IV Zrinski on 7 September 1566After the death of Mark Horvath in 1561 Nikola IV Zrinski became the castle captain He was tasked with maintaining the last important southern border fortress still in imperial hands endangering the security of the military and commercial road between Buda and Nandorfehervar After a few years of silence the battle of Szigetvar took place in the late summer of 1566 which ended in the abandonment of Southern Transdanubia surpassing all its significance and leaving a deep imprint in Hungarian historical memory and ending in defeat despite the heroic endurance of the defenders Sultan Suleiman I started his last campaign and he set Szigetvar as his first goal He besieged the castle of Szigetvar with an army of fifty thousand regular forces which Zrinski defended with about 2 500 soldiers resisting the Turkish superiority for 34 days On September 7 1566 when the inner castle was already on fire Zrinski and his 300 combat soldiers tried to erupt Zrinski s charge but all of them died a heroic death at the castle gate During the siege the medieval round tower was also destroyed Immediately after the occupation of the castle the Ottomans began to rebuild the fortress and the settlement After Suleiman died Mehmed Sokollu hid it from the army for a month and sent a secret letter to prince Selim to take over the throne The soldiers didn t know that Suleiman died until Selim joined the army in Belgrade The army supported him to be the successor of Suleiman Aftermath editPeace was finally concluded in Edirne in 1568 and renewed in 1576 1584 and 1591 War would not again break out between the Habsburgs and Ottomans until 1593 in the Long Turkish War However throughout this period of peace small scale warfare continued a conflict known as the Little War German Kleinkrieg No large armies or sustained campaigns were launched but authorities on both sides continually struggled with hostile raiders and forays across the poorly demarcated border Both sides however desired that peace continue 19 In 1571 the Turks destroyed the Hodejov castle and in 1575 they conquered the Modry Kamen castle In 1588 there was a battle near the town of Szikszo where the Hungarian army defeated the Turks See also editMilitary Frontier Ottoman wars in Europe List of campaigns of Suleiman the MagnificentReferences edit Maps https ujkor hu wp content uploads 2017 08 letezett e magyar kiralysag 2015 2 jpg https ujkor hu wp content uploads 2015 01 letezett e magyar kiralysag 2015 7 jpg a b Turnbull Stephen The Ottoman Empire 1326 1699 New York Osprey 2003 pg 51 Alfred Kohler 2010 Das Reich im Kampf um die Hegemonie in Europa 1521 1648 Oldenbourg Wissenschaftverlag GmbH ISBN 9783486704242 a b c d Turnbull Stephen The Ottoman Empire 1326 1699 New York Osprey 2003 pg 52 Tracy James 2016 Balkan Wars Habsburg Croatia Ottoman Bosnia and Venetian Dalmatia 1499 1617 Rowman amp Littlefield p 120 ISBN 9781442213609 map https 4 bp blogspot com IeSxQBaaJ7s TdJE SXgNfI AAAAAAAAAjA 5cXqXNWuoYA s1600 1541oszmanhoditas jpg Goffman Daniel 2002 04 25 The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45908 2 Elgood Robert 1995 11 15 Firearms of the Islamic World In the Tareq Rajab Museum Kuwait Bloomsbury Academic p 38 ISBN 978 1 85043 963 9 Lambton Ann Katherine Swynford Lewis Bernard 1984 The Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge University Press p 328 ISBN 978 0 521 29135 4 a b Sandler Stanley 2002 Ground Warfare An International Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 344 5 Bartl Julius Skvarna Dusan 2002 Slovak History Chronology amp Lexicon Bolchazy Carducci Publishers p 59 ISBN 978 0 86516 444 4 Map https 4 bp blogspot com eYwjL nII2o UAgu3nZvK7I AAAAAAAABpI 7fKMIGYYy4A s1600 torok hadjarat terkepe 1526 1547 jpg Korpas Zoltan La correspondencia de un soldado espanol de las guerras de Hungria a mediados del siglo XVI Comentarios al diario de Bernardo de Aldana 1548 1552 In Hispania Vol 60 no 206 2000 pp 881 910 Dixon C Scott Fuchs Martina The histories of Emperor Charles V nationale Perspektiven von Personlichkeit und Herrschaft Munster Aschendorff 2005 ISBN 3402065746 p 235 Map of the champaig http tortenelemcikkek hu sites default files 9 41terkep torok jpg Tracy James 2016 Balkan Wars Habsburg Croatia Ottoman Bosnia and Venetian Dalmatia 1499 1617 Maryland amp London Rowman amp Littlefield p 177 ISBN 9781442213586 Stancic Marko Horvat Hrvatska enciklopedija mrezno izdanje Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleza 2021 Retrieved Oct 3 2023 Mesic Matija 1866 Zivot Nikole Zrinjskoga Sigetskoga junaka in Croatian Zagreb Matica ilirska pp 145 151 Finkel Caroline 1988 The Administration of Warfare The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary 1593 1606 Vienna VWGO p 8 ISBN 3 85369 708 9 Sources editCirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 9781405142915 Fodor Pal David Geza eds 2000 Ottomans Hungarians and Habsburgs in Central Europe The Military Confines in the Era of Ottoman Conquest BRILL ISBN 9004119078 Tracy James 2016 Balkan Wars Habsburg Croatia Ottoman Bosnia and Venetian Dalmatia 1499 1617 Malden Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442213609 Tracy James The Road to Szigetvar Ferdinand I s Defense of His Hungarian Border 1548 1566 Austrian History Yearbook 44 2013 17 36 Turnbull Stephen R 2003 The Ottoman Empire 1326 1699 New York Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 569 4 Further reading editDavid Geza Fodor Pal eds Hungarian Ottoman Military and Diplomatic Relations in the Age of Suleyman the Magnificent ELTE Budapest 1994 https tti abtk hu kiadvanyok kiadvanytar david geza fodor pal eds hungarian ottoman military and diplomatic relations in the age of suleyman the magnificent download Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Habsburg Ottoman wars in Hungary 1526 1568 amp oldid 1210284940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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