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Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor

Sigismund of Luxembourg[a] (15 February 1368 – 9 December 1437) was a monarch as King of Hungary and Croatia (jure uxoris) from 1387, King of Germany from 1410, King of Bohemia from 1419, and Holy Roman Emperor from 1433 until his death in 1437, as well as prince-elector of Brandenburg (1378–1388 and 1411–1415). He was the last male member of the House of Luxembourg.[1]

Sigismund
King of Hungary and Croatia
with Mary (1387–1395, jure uxoris)
Reign1387–1437
Coronation31 March 1387, Székesfehérvár
PredecessorMary I
SuccessorAlbert
King of Germany
contested by Jobst (1410–1411)
Reign1410–1437
Coronation8 November 1414, Aachen
PredecessorRupert
SuccessorAlbert II
King of Bohemia
Reign1419–1437
Coronation27 July 1420, Prague
PredecessorWenceslaus IV
SuccessorAlbert
Holy Roman Emperor
Reign1433–1437
Coronation31 May 1433, Rome
PredecessorCharles IV
SuccessorFrederick III
Born15 February 1368
Free Imperial City of Nuremberg, Holy Roman Empire
Died9 December 1437(1437-12-09) (aged 69)
Znojmo, Kingdom of Bohemia
Burial
Nagyvárad, Kingdom of Hungary (today Oradea, Romania)
Spouses
(m. 1385; died 1395)
(m. 1405)
IssueElizabeth of Luxembourg
HouseLuxembourg
FatherCharles IV, Holy Roman Emperor
MotherElizabeth of Pomerania

Sigismund was the son of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and his fourth wife Elizabeth of Pomerania. He married Mary, Queen of Hungary in 1385 and was crowned King of Hungary soon after. He fought to restore and maintain authority to the throne. Mary died in 1395, leaving Sigismund the sole ruler of Hungary.

In 1396, Sigismund led the Crusade of Nicopolis, but was decisively defeated by the Ottoman Empire. Afterwards, he founded the Order of the Dragon to fight the Turks and secured the thrones of Croatia, Germany and Bohemia. Sigismund was one of the driving forces behind the Council of Constance (1414–1418) that ended the Papal Schism, but which also led to the Hussite Wars that dominated the later period of his life. In 1433, Sigismund was crowned Holy Roman Emperor and ruled until his death in 1437.

Historian Thomas Brady Jr. remarks that Sigismund "possessed a breadth of vision and a sense of grandeur unseen in a German monarch since the thirteenth century". He realized the need to carry out reforms of the empire and the Church at the same time. But external difficulties, self-inflicted mistakes and the extinction of the Luxembourg male line made this vision unfulfilled.[2] Later, the Habsburgs would inherit this mission and imperial reform was carried out successfully under the reigns of Frederick III and especially his son Maximilian I, although perhaps at the expense of the reform of the Church, partly because Maximilian was not particularly focused on the matter.[3]

In recent years, scholarly interest (especially from East-Central Europe) has grown greatly in the person and reign of Sigismund—the ruler who had gained and led an imperial association almost reaching the size of the later Habsburg Empire—as well as cultural developments associated with his era. The setbacks which have been seen as his major failures (like dealing with the Hussite movement) are now generally considered by most scholars to be the results of the lack of financial resources and other heavy constraints, rather than personal failings.[4][5]

Biography edit

Early life edit

Born in Nuremberg[6][7] or Prague,[8] Sigismund was the son of Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and his fourth and final wife, Elizabeth of Pomerania, who was the granddaughter of King Casimir III of Poland and the great-granddaughter of Gediminas, a Grand Duke of Lithuania. He was named after Saint Sigismund of Burgundy, the favourite saint of Sigismund's father. From Sigismund's childhood, he was nicknamed the "ginger fox" (liška ryšavá) in the Bohemian Crown lands on account of his hair colour.

 
Sigismund's first wife, Queen Mary of Hungary (Chronica Hungarorum, 1488)

King Louis the Great of Hungary and Poland always had a good and close relationship with Emperor Charles IV, and Sigismund was betrothed to Louis' eldest daughter, Mary, in 1374, when he was six years old and Mary but an infant. The marital project aimed to augment the lands held by the House of Luxembourg.[9] Upon his father's death in 1378, young Sigismund became Margrave of Brandenburg and was sent to the Hungarian court, where he soon learned the Hungarian language and way of life, and became entirely devoted to his adopted country.[10] King Louis named him as his heir and appointed him his successor as King of Hungary.

In 1381, the then 13-year-old Sigismund was sent to Kraków by his eldest half-brother and guardian Wenceslaus, King of Germany and Bohemia, to learn Polish and to become acquainted with the land and its people. King Wenceslaus also gave him Neumark to facilitate communication between Brandenburg and Poland.

While Mary was accepted as monarch of Hungary, Sigismund vied for the crown of Poland as well. However, the Poles were unwilling to submit to a German sovereign, nor did they want to be tied to Hungary.[11] The disagreement between Polish landlords of Lesser Poland on one side and landlords of Greater Poland on the other, regarding the choice of the future monarch of Poland, finally ended in choosing the Lithuanian side. The support of the lords of Greater Poland was however not enough to give Prince Sigismund the Polish crown. Instead, the landlords of Lesser Poland gave it to Mary's younger sister Jadwiga, who married Jogaila of Lithuania.

King of Hungary edit

 
King Sigismund of Hungary (Chronica Hungarorum, 1488)

On the death of her father in 1382, his betrothed, Mary, became queen of Hungary and Sigismund married her in 1385 in Zólyom (today Zvolen). The next year, he was accepted as Mary's future co-ruler by the Treaty of Győr. However, Mary was captured, together with her mother, Elizabeth of Bosnia, who had acted as regent, in 1387 by the rebellious House of Horvat, Bishop Paul Horvat of Mačva, his brother John Horvat and younger brother Ladislav. Sigismund's mother-in-law was strangled, while Mary was liberated.

 
Campaign of King Sigismund of Hungary against the rebellious House of Horvat in 1387 (Chronica Hungarorum, 1488)

Having secured the support of the nobility, Sigismund was crowned King of Hungary at Székesfehérvár on 31 March 1387.[12] Having raised money by pledging Brandenburg to his cousin Jobst, Margrave of Moravia (1388), he was engaged for the next nine years in a ceaseless struggle for the possession of this unstable throne.[10] The central power was finally weakened to such an extent that only Sigismund's alliance with the powerful Czillei-Garai League could ensure his position on the throne.[13] It was not for entirely selfless reasons that one of the leagues of barons helped him to power: Sigismund had to pay for the support of the lords by transferring a sizeable part of the royal properties. (For some years, the baron's council governed the country in the name of the Holy Crown). The restoration of the authority of the central administration took decades of work. The bulk of the nation headed by the House of Garai was with him; but in the southern provinces between the Sava and the Drava, the Horvathys with the support of King Tvrtko I of Bosnia, Mary's maternal uncle, proclaimed as their king Ladislaus of Naples, son of the murdered Charles II of Hungary. Not until 1395 did Nicholas II Garai succeed in suppressing them.[10] Mary died heavily pregnant in 1395.

To ease the pressure from Hungarian nobles, Sigismund tried to employ foreign advisors, which was not popular, and he had to promise not to give land and nominations to anyone other than Hungarian nobles. However, this was not applied to Stibor of Stiboricz, who was Sigismund's closest friend and advisor. On a number of occasions, Sigismund was imprisoned by nobles, but with the help of the armies of Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz, he was able to regain power.

Crusade of Nicopolis edit

 
King Sigismund of Hungary during the battle of Nicopolis in 1396. Painting by Ferenc Lohr (1896), main hall of the Castle of Vaja.
 
Royal Standard of Hungary under the rule of Sigismund (1387–1437).

In 1396, Sigismund led the combined armies of Christendom against the Turks, who had taken advantage of the temporary helplessness of Hungary to extend their dominion to the banks of the Danube. This crusade, preached by Pope Boniface IX, was very popular in Hungary. The nobles flocked in their thousands to the royal standard, and were reinforced by volunteers from nearly every part of Europe. The most important contingent being that of the French led by John the Fearless, son of Philip II, Duke of Burgundy. Sigismund set out with 90,000 men and a flotilla of 70 galleys. After capturing Vidin, he camped with his Hungarian armies before the fortress of Nicopolis. Sultan Bayezid I raised the siege of Constantinople and, at the head of 140,000 men, completely defeated the Christian forces in the Battle of Nicopolis fought between the 25 and 28 September 1396.[10] Sigismund returned by sea and through the realm of Zeta, where he ordained the local Montenegrin lord Đurađ II with the islands of Hvar and Korčula for resistance against the Turks; the islands were returned to Sigismund after Đurađ's death in April 1403.

 
Gold coin of Sigismund of Hungary with his coat of arms (right), and the image of the King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary (left).

The disaster at Nicopolis angered several Hungarian lords, leading to instability in the kingdom. Deprived of his authority in Hungary, Sigismund then turned his attention to securing the succession in Germany and Bohemia, and was recognized by his childless half-brother Wenceslaus IV as Vicar-General of the whole empire. However, he was unable to support Wenceslaus when he was deposed in 1400, and Rupert of Germany, Elector Palatine, was elected German king in his stead.[10]

Return to Hungary edit

 
Sigismund of Luxembourg, official imprint.
 
Reverse of the first double seal (1387–1405) of King Sigismund of Hungary

On his return to Hungary in 1401, Sigismund was imprisoned once and deposed twice. That year, he aided an uprising against Wenceslaus IV, during the course of which the Bohemian king was taken prisoner, and Sigismund ruled Bohemia for nineteen months. He released Wenceslaus in 1403. In the meantime, a group of Hungarian noblemen swore loyalty to the last Anjou monarch, Ladislaus of Naples, putting their hands on the relic of Saint Ladislas of Hungary in Nagyvárad (today Oradea). Ladislaus was the son of the murdered Charles II of Hungary, and thus a distant relative of the long dead King Louis I of Hungary. Ladislaus captured Zara (today Zadar) in 1403, but soon stopped any military advance. This struggle in turn led to a war with the Republic of Venice, as Ladislaus had sold the Dalmatian cities to the Venetians for 100,000 ducats[10] before leaving for his own land. In the following years Sigismund acted indirectly to thwart Ladislaus' attempts to conquer central Italy, by allying with the Italian cities resisting him and by applying diplomatic pressure on him.[citation needed]

Due to his frequent absences attending to business in the other countries over which he ruled, he was obliged to consult Diets in Hungary with more frequency than his predecessors and institute the office of Palatine as chief administrator while he was away.[citation needed] In 1404, Sigismund introduced the Placetum Regium. According to this decree, Papal bulls could not be pronounced in Hungary without the consent of the king. During his long reign, the royal Buda Castle became probably the largest Gothic palace of the Late Middle Ages.[citation needed]

Crusade against Bosnia edit

 
The campaign of Hungarians against Bosnia during the reign of King Sigismund of Hungary (Chronica Hungarorum, 1488)
 
Drinking horn of Sigismund of Luxembourg, before 1408.

In about 1406, Sigismund married Mary's cousin Barbara of Celje, daughter of Count Hermann II of Celje. Hermann's mother Catherine (of the House of Kotromanic) and Mary's mother Queen Elisabeth of Bosnia were sisters, or at least cousins who were adoptive sisters.

Sigismund managed to establish control in Slavonia. He did not hesitate to use violent methods (see Bloody Sabor of Križevci), but from the River Sava to the south his control was weak. Sigismund personally led an army of almost 50,000 "crusaders" against the Bosnians, culminating with the Battle of Dobor in 1408, a massacre of about 200 members of various Bosnian noble families. However, although campaign militarily looked like a success, it ultimately failed politically and Hungarians retreated, while the Bosnian crown slowly but surely slipped away out of the reach for Sigismund and Hungarians.[14]

Possessions in Serbia edit

Threatened by Ottoman expansion, King Sigismund managed to strengthen the security of southern Hungarian borders by entering into a defensive alliance with Despot Stefan Lazarević of Serbia. In 1403, Hungarian possessions in northwestern regions of Serbia (city of Belgrade and the Banate of Macsó), were given to Despot Stefan, who pledged his allegiance to King Sigismund, remaining the king's loyal vassal until death in 1427. Stefan's successor George Branković of Serbia also pledged his allegiance to Sigismund, returning Belgrade to the king. By maintaining close relations with Serbian rulers, Sigismund succeeded in securing southern borders of his realm.[15][16]

Order of the Dragon edit

Sigismund founded his personal order of knights, the Order of the Dragon, after the victory at Dobor. The main goal of the order was fighting the Ottoman Empire. Members of the order were mostly his political allies and supporters. The main members of the order were Sigismund's close allies Nicholas II Garay, Hermann II of Celje, Stibor of Stiboricz, and Pippo Spano. The most important European monarchs became members of the order. He encouraged international trade by abolishing internal duties, regulating tariffs on foreign goods and standardizing weights and measures throughout the country.

King of the Romans edit

After the death of King Rupert of Germany in 1410, Sigismund—ignoring the claims of his half-brother Wenceslaus—was elected as successor by three of the electors on 20 September 1410, but he was opposed by his cousin Jobst of Moravia, who had been elected by four electors in a different election on 1 October. Jobst's death 18 January 1411 removed this conflict and Sigismund was again elected king on 21 July 1411. His coronation was deferred until 8 November 1414, when it took place at Aachen.[10]

Anti-Polish alliances edit

On a number of occasions, and in 1410 in particular, Sigismund allied himself with the Teutonic Knights against Władysław II of Poland. In return for 300,000 ducats he would attack Poland from the south after the truce on St. John's Day, 24 June expired. Sigismund ordered his most loyal friend Stibor of Stiboricz to set up the attack on Poland. Stibor of Stiboricz was of Polish origin and from the main line of the powerful Clan of Ostoja that had also been against choosing Jagiello as King of Poland. With the support of Sigismund, Stibor become one of the most influential men in late medieval Europe, holding titles as Duke of Transylvania and owning about 25% of modern-day Slovakia, including 31 castles of which 15 were situated around the 406 km long Váh river with surrounding land that was given to him by Sigismund. In the diplomatic struggle to prevent war between Poland-Lithuania, which was supported by the Muscovites, and the Teutonic Knights, Sigismund used Stibor's fine diplomacy to gain financially. The Polish side appointed several negotiators and most of them were also from the Clan of Ostoja, distant relations of the Stibors. However, those "family meetings" could not prevent the war and an alliance of twenty-two western states formed an army against Poland in the Battle of Grunwald in July 1410. Stibor attacked then Nowy Sącz and burned it to the ground, but after that he returned with his army back to the Beckov Castle. After the Polish-Lithuanian victory in the Battle of Grunwald, the Teutonic Knights had to pay a huge sum of silver to Poland as reparation and again, through diplomacy of his friend Stibor, Sigismund was able to borrow all this silver from King Władysław II of Poland on good conditions. In the light of facts about the diplomatic work of Stibor and the Clan of Ostoja that was following the politics of King Sigismund, one can question whether Sigismund actually joined the anti-Polish alliance.[17]

Conference in Buda edit

 
King Sigismund of Hungary (Nádasdy Mausoleum, 1664)

In 1412, a Knights Tournament was held in Buda, Hungary, this was also a conference between Hungarian King Sigismund, Polish King Wladyslaw II and Bosnian King Tvrtko II. 2000 knights were present from all over Europe, even England. There were very many princes, lords, knights and servants at the court of Buda in Hungary. Three kings and three other monarchs, a Serbian despot, 13 herzogs and/or dukes, 21 counts, 2000 knights, 1 cardinal, 1 legate, 3 archbishops, 11 other bishops, 86 players and trumpeters, 17 messengers, and 40,000 horses. There were people from 17 countries and languages. A presumably contemporary list of the participants of the meeting has also survived. Besides the host, Sigismund, and his main guest, Władysław II, this text mentions Władysław's cousin Witold, Grand Duke of Lithuania, and the king of Bosnia, usually identified as Tvrtko II. Some argue convincingly that it was not Tvrtko II but Stjepan Ostoja who visited Buda at that time. Besides the king, Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić, Sandal Hranić Kosača and Pavle Radinović also came from Bosnia, and from Serbia, the Despot Stefan Lazarević, bringing two thousand horses. From Austria, dukes Ernest (the Iron) and Albert II, later successor of Sigismund, also took part in the Buda meeting. Also Heinrich von Plauen. the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, Stibor of Stiboricz, Nikola II Gorjanski, Hermann II, Count of Celje and his son Frederick II, count of Krbava—Karlo Kurjaković, Ivan Morović-ban of Machva. Długosz reports the arrival in Buda of the envoys of the Jalal al-Din, khan of the Golden Horde and son of Tokhtamysh, who wanted to meet Władysław II of Poland. Jalal al-Din was an ally of the Polish and Lithuanian rulers in their fight against the Teutonic Order, and according to some reconstructions of the events, Sigismund also wanted to rely on the Tatars against the Ottoman threat. A narrative source from Lübeck also mentions the proceedings in Buda in 1412. Detmar’s Lübeckische Chronik continued for the period of 1400 to 1413. The continuation also gives a detailed description of the participants at the Buda meeting. The royal meeting was accompanied by festivities and various entertainments. At the tournament, a knight from Silesia named Nemsche and a page from Austria won the joust. A Polish priest and chronicler Jan Długosz says in his Annales seu cronici incliti regni Poloniae that in the tournament there were also knights from Bulgaria, probably from the court of prince Fruzhin, Sigismund's vasal who also was at the conference.

Council of Constance edit

 
Sigismund and Barbara of Celje at the Council of Constance.

From 1412 to 1423, Sigismund campaigned against the Republic of Venice in Italy. The king took advantage of the difficulties of Antipope John XXIII to obtain a promise that a council should be called in Constance in 1414 to settle the Western Schism. He took a leading part in the deliberations of this assembly, and during the sittings travelled to France, England, and Burgundy in a vain attempt to secure the abdication of the three rival popes. The council ended in 1418, having resolved the Schism and—of great consequence to Sigismund's future career—having the Czech religious reformer, Jan Hus, burned at the stake for heresy in July 1415. The complicity of Sigismund in the death of Hus is a matter of controversy. He had granted Hus a safe conduct and protested against his imprisonment;[10] and Hus was burned during Sigismund's absence.

When at one point during the council a cardinal corrected Sigismund's Latin, Sigismund replied Ego sum rex Romanus et super grammaticam ("I am king of the Romans and above grammar").[18]Thomas Carlyle nicknamed Sigismund "Super Grammaticam".[19][20]

His main acts during these years were an alliance with England against France, and a failed attempt, owing to the hostility of the princes, to secure peace in Germany by a league of the towns.[10] Also, Sigismund awarded Brandenburg (which he had recovered after Jobst's death) to Frederick of Hohenzollern, burgrave of Nuremberg, in 1415. This step made the House of Hohenzollern one of the most important in Germany.

Sigismund began to shift his alliance from France to England after the French defeat at the Battle of Agincourt, which he was also controversially absent from due to hosting a pseudo-council in Perpignan with Antipope Benedict XIII and King Ferdinand I of Aragon. The signing of the Treaty of Canterbury on 15 August 1416 culminated diplomatic efforts between Henry V of England and Sigismund and resulted in a defensive and offensive alliance against France. This, in turn, led the way to the resolution of the papal schism.[21] The close relationship that developed between Henry V and Sigismund resulted in him being inducted into the Order of the Garter.[22]

Hussite Wars edit

 
The wars of King Sigismund against the Hussites (Chronica Hungarorum, 1488)
 
Portrait of Emperor Sigismund, painted by Albrecht Dürer after the emperor's death

In 1419, the death of Wenceslaus IV left Sigismund titular King of Bohemia, but he had to wait for seventeen years before the Czech Estates would acknowledge him. Although the two dignities of king of the Romans and king of Bohemia added considerably to his importance, and indeed made him the nominal temporal head of Christendom, they conferred no increase of power and financially embarrassed him. It was only as King of Hungary that he had succeeded in establishing his authority and in doing anything for the order and good government of the land. Entrusting the government of Bohemia to Sofia of Bavaria, the widow of Wenceslaus, he hastened into Hungary.[10]

The Bohemians, who distrusted him as the betrayer of Hus, were soon in arms; and the flame was fanned when Sigismund declared his intention of prosecuting the war against heretics. Three campaigns against the Hussites ended in disaster although the army of his most loyal ally Stibor of Stiboricz and later his son Stibor of Beckov could hold the Hussite side away from the borders of the kingdom. The Turks were again attacking Hungary.

At the 1422 Diet of Nuremberg, Sigismund and German territorial princes collaborated to organize two armies against the Hussite rebels. The first army was sent to relieve Karlštejn, which was under a Hussite siege; the second army was ordered to destroy the Hussite field army. But Jan Žižka defeated the Imperial force at the Battle of Kutná Hora and then at the Battle of Německý Brod. These two unexpected defeats at the hands of the Hussites "ended the first Imperial and Catholic attempt to crush the Bohemian 'heretic rebellion'."[23]

The alliance against the Hussites continued to develop though, joined by Upper German princes and cities, even from "the regions furthest from Bohemia". In January 1424, associative activity of the German electors led to the Union ('einunge') of Bingen, "within which the Rhenish princes were joined by the elector of Saxony and Sigismund’s loyal partner Margrave Frederick of Brandenburg, and mutual assistance, adjudication, and cooperation in the face of the Hussite threat were stipulated."[24]

Germany edit

Sigismund's rule in Germany and in the empire in general was hampered by his complete lack of Hausmacht (domestic power) within the Kingdom of Germany.[5][25]

His rule relied on key allies and the culture of associative political mechanisms in Germany. Duncan Hardy remarks that, "both the local and the trans-regional dimensions of the political activity displayed by the sources from throughout Sigismund’s reign demonstrate that power at every level in the empire was exercised and mediated through the customary institutions and mechanisms of associative political culture. If Sigismund enjoyed considerable successes at certain junctures, it was not in spite of or independently from these institutions and mechanisms, but precisely because he devoted considerable energy to harnessing associative interactions and building strategic relationships with leading actors within elite networks. Even during his prolonged absences from the empire’s core lands, Sigismund was able to make use of these partnerships, and could reasonably expect that the associative activity of princes, nobles, and towns would yield results—as indeed they did, in the form of large-scale collective activity against Duke Frederick IV of Austria—Tyrol in the 1410 and the Hussites in the 1420. Not all of Sigismund’s projects came to fruition, and he could not always control the longer-term outcomes of his policies, but the notion that there were phases of an 'empire without a king' during his reign clearly does not stand up to the abundant evidence of his interactions with regional clients and associations. At the same time, the somewhat adulatory view that has developed in recent years of Sigismund as a masterly politician can be tempered by the evidence that it was often felicitous alliances as much as personal skill which made his successes possible." [26]

The alliance between Sigismund and his two key allies in Germany, namely Frederick I, Elector of Brandenburg and Albert of Habsburg (who became his son-in-law and heir through the marriage with Sigismund's only daughter Elizabeth of Luxembourg, started the rise of the Hohenzollerns and reboosted the Habsburgs (who returned to the German throne and also inherited the connection with Hungary, Croatia and Bohemia from Sigismund).[27][28]

Final years edit

In 1428, Sigismund led another campaign against the Turks, but again with few results. In 1431, he went to Milan where on 25 November he received the Iron Crown as King of Italy; after which he remained for some time at Siena, negotiating for his coronation as emperor and for the recognition of the Council of Basel by Pope Eugenius IV. He was crowned emperor in Rome on 31 May 1433, and after obtaining his demands from the pope returned to Bohemia, where he was recognized as king in 1436, though his power was little more than nominal.[10] Shortly after he was crowned, Pope Eugenius began attempts to create a new anti-Ottoman alliance.[29] This was sparked[citation needed] by an Albanian revolt against the Ottomans, which had begun in 1432. In 1435, Sigismund sent Fruzhin, a Bulgarian nobleman, to negotiate an alliance with the Albanians. He also sent Daud, a pretender to the Ottoman throne, in early 1436.[30] However, following the defeat of the rebels in 1436, plans for an anti-Ottoman alliance ended.[30] Sigismund died on 9 December 1437 at Znojmo (German: Znaim), Moravia (now Czech Republic), and as ordered in life, he was buried at Nagyvárad, Hungary (today Oradea, Romania), next to the tomb of the King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary, who was the ideal of the perfect monarch, warrior and Christian for that time and was deeply venerated by Sigismund.[31] By his second wife, Barbara of Celje, he left an only daughter, Elisabeth of Luxembourg, who was married to Albert V, duke of Austria (later German king as Albert II) whom Sigismund named as his successor. As he left no sons, his line of the House of Luxembourg became extinct on his death.[10]

Family and issue edit

Sigismund married twice but had little luck in securing the succession to his crowns. Each of his two marriages resulted in the birth of one child. His first-born child, probably a son, was born prematurely as a result of a horse riding accident suffered by Queen Mary of Hungary when she was well advanced in pregnancy. Mother and child both died shortly after the birth in the hills of Buda on 17 May 1395. This caused a deep succession crisis because Sigismund ruled over Hungary by right of his wife, and although he managed to keep his power, the crisis lasted until his second marriage to Barbara of Celje. Barbara's only child, born in the purple on 7 October 1409, probably in the castle of Visegrád, was Elisabeth of Luxembourg, the future queen consort of Hungary, Germany, and Bohemia. Queen Barbara was unable to give birth to any further issue. Elisabeth of Bohemia was thus the only surviving legitimate offspring of Sigismund.

Hungarian affiliations edit

 
Coat of arms of John Hunyadi.

Sigismund was known to speak fluent Hungarian, wore Hungarian-style royal clothes, and even grew his beard in the Hungarian fashion.[32]

Emperor Sigismund, in terms of the quality of his face and the greatness of his stature, was a fairly great man, the world’s chief creator blessed him with a beautiful face, curly, bluish hair, and a gentle look. He wore a long beard out of his attraction to the Hungarians because they also wore long beards once upon a time.

He also spent huge amounts of money during his reign to rebuild the Gothic castles of Buda and Visegrád in the Kingdom of Hungary, ordering the transportation of materials from Austria and Bohemia.[34]

His many affairs with women led to the birth of several legends, as the one that existed decades later during the reign of the King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary. According to this, John Hunyadi was Sigismund's illegitimate son. Sigismund gave a ring to the boy's mother when he was born, but one day in the forest a raven stole it from her, and the ring was only recovered after the bird was hunted down. It is said that this incident inspired the coat of arms of the Hunyadis, and later also appeared in the coat of arms of Matthias "Corvinus".[35]

Sigismund adopted the Hungarian reverence for Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary, who was considered to be an ideal Christian knight at that time. He went on pilgrimage several times to his tomb in Nagyvárad. Before Sigismund died, in Znaim, Moravia, he ordered to be buried next to the king saint.[36]

The bloodline of Sigismund connects through three princesses to the royal Hungarian Árpád dynasty.

Reformatio Sigismundi edit

The Reformatio Sigismundi appeared in connection with efforts to reform the Holy Roman Empire during the reign of Emperor Sigismund (1410–1437). It was presented in 1439 at the Council of Basel, published by an anonymous author, and referred to the injustice of the German rulers. It included a vision of Sigismund's about the appearance of a priest-king, Frederick, as well as plans for a wide reform of the monarchy and emperorship and the German empire.

Historiography and cultural depictions of Sigismund edit

Titles edit

  • Title of Sigismund in the Hungarian first decree of 1405: "Sigismund, by the Grace of God, King of Hungary, Dalmatia, Croatia, Rama, Serbia, Galicia, Lodomeria, Cumania and Bulgaria, Margrave of Brandenburg, Chief Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Empire, Heir of Bohemia and Luxemburg."[37]

Heraldry edit

Heraldry of Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor
   
Coat of arms as King of the Romans
(1433–1437)
Coat of arms as Holy Roman Emperor
(1433–1437), king of Hungary and Bohemia
   
Arms of the House of Luxembourg-Hungary-Bohemia
 
Coat of arms as Knight of the Garter

In popular culture edit

Films edit

King Sigismund is portrayed by British actor Matthew Goode in the 2022 film Jan Žižka by director Petr Jákl.[38]

Video games edit

King Sigismund is a briefly seen antagonist in the 2018 Warhorse Studios hit action role-playing game Kingdom Come: Deliverance.[39]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^

References edit

  1. ^ "Sigismund - Holy Roman Emperor".
  2. ^ Brady, Thomas A. (2009). German Histories in the Age of Reformations, 1400–1650. Cambridge University Press. pp. 75–81. ISBN 978-1-139-48115-1. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  3. ^ Brady 2009, pp. 128–129, 144.
  4. ^ Irgang, Winfried. "Sehepunkte – Rezension von: Kaiser Sigismund (1368–1437) – Ausgabe 14 (2014), Nr. 11". sehepunkte.de.
  5. ^ a b Frenken, Ansgar (2006). M. Pauly u.a. (Hrsg.): Sigismund von Luxemburg / Buchrezensionen. Philipp von Zabern Verlag. ISBN 978-3805336253. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  6. ^ Wood 2008, p. 149.
  7. ^ Geaman 2022, p. 29.
  8. ^ Kondyli et al. 2014, p. 223 n142.
  9. ^ Main, Archibald (1903). The Emperor Sigismund. University of Michigan: B.H. Blackwell. p. 12. ISBN 0530512955. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Sigismund". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  11. ^ Main, Archibald (1903). The Emperor Sigismund. University of Michigan: B.H. Blackwell. p. 13. ISBN 0530512955. Retrieved 30 March 2022.
  12. ^ Michaud, "The Kingdoms of Central Europe in the Fourteenth Century", p. 743.
  13. ^ "ungarische geschichte".
  14. ^ Amer Maslo (2018). "Slavni i velmožni gospodin knez Pavle Radinović" (PDF). Cobiss+ (in Bosnian). Maribor: IZUM-Institut informacijskih znanosti: 57. Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  15. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 501–502, 526–527.
  16. ^ Ćirković 2004, pp. 89, 103.
  17. ^ Dvořáková, Daniela : Rytier a jeho kráľ. Stibor zo Stiboríc a Žigmund Lucemburský. Budmerice, Vydavatel'stvo Rak 2003, ISBN 978-80-85501-25-4
  18. ^ Carlyle, Thomas (1858). History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great (Volume II). Gutenberg.org.
  19. ^ Grundy, T. R. (28 December 1872). "Sigismund "Super Grammatican"". Notes and Queries. s4-X (261): 524. doi:10.1093/nq/s4-X.261.524-c (inactive 31 January 2024). ISSN 0029-3970.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  20. ^ Wackernagel, Jacob; Langslow, David (2009). Jacob Wackernagel, Lectures on Syntax: With Special Reference to Greek, Latin, and Germanic. Oxford University Press. p. 456. ISBN 978-0198153023.
  21. ^ Guenee, Bernard (1991). Between Church and State: The Lives of Four French Prelates in the Late Middle Ages. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226310329.
  22. ^ Collins, Hugh E. L. (2000). The Order of the Garter, 1348–1461: Chivalry and Politics in Late Medieval England. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0198208174.
  23. ^ Nolan, Cathal J. (2006). The Age of Wars of Religion, 1000–1650: An Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 429. ISBN 978-0-313-33733-8. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  24. ^ Hardy, Duncan (2018). Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empire: Upper Germany, 1346–1521. Oxford University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-19-256216-6. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  25. ^ Irgang, Winfried. "Sehepunkte – Rezension von: Kaiser Sigismund (1368–1437) – Ausgabe 14 (2014), Nr. 11". sehepunkte.de.
  26. ^ Hardy 2018, p. 213.
  27. ^ Middleton, John (2015). World Monarchies and Dynasties. Routledge. p. 404. ISBN 978-1-317-45158-7. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  28. ^ Detwiler, Donald S. (1999). Germany: A Short History. SIU Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-8093-2231-2. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
  29. ^ Buda, Aleks (2002). Shkrime historike (in Albanian). Toena. p. 247. ISBN 978-99927-1-651-9.
  30. ^ a b Islami, Selim; Anamali, Skënder; Korkuti, Muzafer; Prendi, Frano; Shukriu, Edi (2002). Kristaq Prifti, Muzafer Korkuti (ed.). Historia e popullit shqiptar (in Albanian). Botimet Toena. p. 338. ISBN 978-9992716229.
  31. ^ Bertényi Iván. (2000). A Tizennegyedik Század története. Budapest: Pannonica kiadó.
  32. ^ Hóman Bálint: Magyar középkor II. Attraktor, Gödöllő, Hungary, 2003.
  33. ^ Johannes Thuróczy: Chronica Hungarorum http://thuroczykronika.atw.hu/pdf/Thuroczy.pdf
  34. ^ Mályusz Elemér: Zsigmond király uralma Magyarországon 1387–1437, Gondolat, Budapest, 1984.
  35. ^ Dümmerth Dezső: A két Hunyadi. Panoráma, Budapest, 1985.
  36. ^ C. Tóth Norbert: Luxemburgi Zsigmond uralkodása 1387–1437. Magyarország története 6. Főszerk.: Romsics Ignác. Bp.: Kossuth Kiadó, 2009.
  37. ^ Dr. Pomogyi, László. "Ezer év törvényei – 1405. évi (I. decrétum) törvénycikkek (Corpus Juris Hungarici Magyar Törvénytár)" [Laws of a Thousand Years – Law articles of 1405 (Decree I) (Corpus Juris Hungarici, Hungarian Law Library)]. net.jogtar.hu (Online Hungarian Legal Register). Wolters Kluwer. Retrieved 28 May 2023. Zsigmond, Isten kegyelméből Magyarország, Dalmácia, Horvátország, Ráma, Szerbia, Galícia, Lodoméria, Kunország és Bulgária királya, brandenburgi őrgróf, a Szent Római Birodalomnak főkamarása Csehország és Luxemburg örököse.
  38. ^ "Medieval movie review & film summary (2022) | Roger Ebert".
  39. ^ "Kingdom Come Deliverance slashes its way into comics". 25 January 2022.

Sources edit

  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1405142915.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (1994) [1987]. The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472082604.
  • Geaman, Kristen L. (2022). Anne of Bohemia. Routledge.
  • Kondyli, Fotini; Andriopoulou, Vera; Panou, Eirini; Cunningham, Mary B., eds. (2014). Sylvester Syropoulos on Politics and Culture in the Fifteenth-Century Mediterranean: Themes and Problems in the Memoirs, Section IV: 16 (Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Studies). Routledge.
  • Wood, Christopher S. (2008). Forgery, Replica, Fiction: Temporalities of German Renaissance Art. University of Chicago Press.

Further reading edit

  • Bak, János (1998). "Hungary: Crown and Estates". In Christopher Almand (ed.). New Cambridge Medieval History vol. VII. c. 1415–c. 1500. Cambridge: CUP. pp. 707–27.
  • Baum, W. (1996). Císař Zikmund [Emperor Sigismund].
  • Hoensch, J. (1996). Kaiser Sigismund: Herrscher an der Schwelle zur Neuzeit, 1368–1437.
  • Horváth, H. (1937). Zsigmond király és kora [King Sigismund and his age].
  • Kéry, B. (1972). Kaiser Sigismund Ikonographie.
  • Mályusz, E. (1990). Kaiser Sigismond in Ungarn 1387–1437.
  • Mályusz, E. (1984). Zsigmond király uralma Magyarországon, 1387–1437 [King Sigismund’s reign in Hungary, 1387–1437].
  • E. Marosi, ed. (1987). Művészet Zsigmond király korában, 1387–1437 [Art in the age of King Sigismund, 1387–1437]. Vol. 2 vols. Budapest: Hist. Mus.
  • Michaud, Claude (2000). "The Kingdoms of Central Europe in the Fourteenth Century". In Michael Jones (ed.). New Cambridge Medieval History vol. VI. c. 1300–c. 1415. Cambridge: CUP. pp. 735–763.
  • Mitsiou, E.; et al. (2010). Sigismund of Luxemburg and the Orthodox World (Veröffentlichungen zur Byzanzforschung, 24).
  • Mureşan, Dan Ioan (2010). "Une histoire de trois empereurs. Aspects des relations de Sigismond de Luxembourg avec Manuel II et Jean VIII Paléologue". In Ekaterini Mitsiou; et al. (eds.). Sigismund of Luxemburg and the Orthodox World (Veröffentlichungen zur Byzanzforschung, 24). Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. pp. 41–101.
  • Pauly, M.; F. Reinert, eds. (2006). "Sigismund von Luxemburg: ein Kaiser in Europa". Tagungsband des internationalen historischen und kunsthistorischen Kongresses in Luxemburg, 8 to 10 June 2005.
  • Takacs, I. (2006). Sigismundus rex et imperator: Kunst und Kultur zur Zeit Sigismunds von Luxemburg 1387–1437 [Sigismund, king and emperor: Art and culture in the age of Sigisumd of Luxembourg 1387–1437].

External links edit

Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor
Born: 15 February 1368  Died: 9 December 1437
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Mary
as sole monarch
King of Hungary and Croatia
1387–1437
with Mary
Succeeded by
Preceded by German King
(formally King of the Romans)

1410–1437
contested by Jobst (1410–11)
Preceded by King of Bohemia
1419–1437
Elector of Brandenburg
1378–1388
Succeeded by
Preceded by Elector of Brandenburg
1411–1415
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Charles IV
Holy Roman Emperor
1433–1437
Succeeded by

sigismund, holy, roman, emperor, sigismund, luxembourg, february, 1368, december, 1437, monarch, king, hungary, croatia, jure, uxoris, from, 1387, king, germany, from, 1410, king, bohemia, from, 1419, holy, roman, emperor, from, 1433, until, death, 1437, well,. Sigismund of Luxembourg a 15 February 1368 9 December 1437 was a monarch as King of Hungary and Croatia jure uxoris from 1387 King of Germany from 1410 King of Bohemia from 1419 and Holy Roman Emperor from 1433 until his death in 1437 as well as prince elector of Brandenburg 1378 1388 and 1411 1415 He was the last male member of the House of Luxembourg 1 SigismundPortrait of Sigismund of Luxemburg attributed to Pisanello c 1433King of Hungary and Croatiawith Mary 1387 1395 jure uxoris Reign1387 1437Coronation31 March 1387 SzekesfehervarPredecessorMary ISuccessorAlbertKing of Germanycontested by Jobst 1410 1411 Reign1410 1437Coronation8 November 1414 AachenPredecessorRupertSuccessorAlbert IIKing of BohemiaReign1419 1437Coronation27 July 1420 PraguePredecessorWenceslaus IVSuccessorAlbertHoly Roman EmperorReign1433 1437Coronation31 May 1433 RomePredecessorCharles IVSuccessorFrederick IIIBorn15 February 1368Free Imperial City of Nuremberg Holy Roman EmpireDied9 December 1437 1437 12 09 aged 69 Znojmo Kingdom of BohemiaBurialNagyvarad Kingdom of Hungary today Oradea Romania SpousesMary Queen of Hungary m 1385 died 1395 wbr Barbara of Celje m 1405 wbr IssueElizabeth of LuxembourgHouseLuxembourgFatherCharles IV Holy Roman EmperorMotherElizabeth of PomeraniaSigismund was the son of Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor and his fourth wife Elizabeth of Pomerania He married Mary Queen of Hungary in 1385 and was crowned King of Hungary soon after He fought to restore and maintain authority to the throne Mary died in 1395 leaving Sigismund the sole ruler of Hungary In 1396 Sigismund led the Crusade of Nicopolis but was decisively defeated by the Ottoman Empire Afterwards he founded the Order of the Dragon to fight the Turks and secured the thrones of Croatia Germany and Bohemia Sigismund was one of the driving forces behind the Council of Constance 1414 1418 that ended the Papal Schism but which also led to the Hussite Wars that dominated the later period of his life In 1433 Sigismund was crowned Holy Roman Emperor and ruled until his death in 1437 Historian Thomas Brady Jr remarks that Sigismund possessed a breadth of vision and a sense of grandeur unseen in a German monarch since the thirteenth century He realized the need to carry out reforms of the empire and the Church at the same time But external difficulties self inflicted mistakes and the extinction of the Luxembourg male line made this vision unfulfilled 2 Later the Habsburgs would inherit this mission and imperial reform was carried out successfully under the reigns of Frederick III and especially his son Maximilian I although perhaps at the expense of the reform of the Church partly because Maximilian was not particularly focused on the matter 3 In recent years scholarly interest especially from East Central Europe has grown greatly in the person and reign of Sigismund the ruler who had gained and led an imperial association almost reaching the size of the later Habsburg Empire as well as cultural developments associated with his era The setbacks which have been seen as his major failures like dealing with the Hussite movement are now generally considered by most scholars to be the results of the lack of financial resources and other heavy constraints rather than personal failings 4 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 King of Hungary 1 2 1 Crusade of Nicopolis 1 2 2 Return to Hungary 1 2 3 Crusade against Bosnia 1 2 4 Possessions in Serbia 1 2 5 Order of the Dragon 1 3 King of the Romans 1 4 Anti Polish alliances 1 5 Conference in Buda 1 6 Council of Constance 1 7 Hussite Wars 1 8 Germany 1 9 Final years 2 Family and issue 2 1 Hungarian affiliations 3 Reformatio Sigismundi 4 Historiography and cultural depictions of Sigismund 5 Titles 6 Heraldry 7 In popular culture 7 1 Films 7 2 Video games 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksBiography editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Early life edit Born in Nuremberg 6 7 or Prague 8 Sigismund was the son of Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor and his fourth and final wife Elizabeth of Pomerania who was the granddaughter of King Casimir III of Poland and the great granddaughter of Gediminas a Grand Duke of Lithuania He was named after Saint Sigismund of Burgundy the favourite saint of Sigismund s father From Sigismund s childhood he was nicknamed the ginger fox liska rysava in the Bohemian Crown lands on account of his hair colour nbsp Sigismund s first wife Queen Mary of Hungary Chronica Hungarorum 1488 King Louis the Great of Hungary and Poland always had a good and close relationship with Emperor Charles IV and Sigismund was betrothed to Louis eldest daughter Mary in 1374 when he was six years old and Mary but an infant The marital project aimed to augment the lands held by the House of Luxembourg 9 Upon his father s death in 1378 young Sigismund became Margrave of Brandenburg and was sent to the Hungarian court where he soon learned the Hungarian language and way of life and became entirely devoted to his adopted country 10 King Louis named him as his heir and appointed him his successor as King of Hungary In 1381 the then 13 year old Sigismund was sent to Krakow by his eldest half brother and guardian Wenceslaus King of Germany and Bohemia to learn Polish and to become acquainted with the land and its people King Wenceslaus also gave him Neumark to facilitate communication between Brandenburg and Poland While Mary was accepted as monarch of Hungary Sigismund vied for the crown of Poland as well However the Poles were unwilling to submit to a German sovereign nor did they want to be tied to Hungary 11 The disagreement between Polish landlords of Lesser Poland on one side and landlords of Greater Poland on the other regarding the choice of the future monarch of Poland finally ended in choosing the Lithuanian side The support of the lords of Greater Poland was however not enough to give Prince Sigismund the Polish crown Instead the landlords of Lesser Poland gave it to Mary s younger sister Jadwiga who married Jogaila of Lithuania King of Hungary edit nbsp King Sigismund of Hungary Chronica Hungarorum 1488 On the death of her father in 1382 his betrothed Mary became queen of Hungary and Sigismund married her in 1385 in Zolyom today Zvolen The next year he was accepted as Mary s future co ruler by the Treaty of Gyor However Mary was captured together with her mother Elizabeth of Bosnia who had acted as regent in 1387 by the rebellious House of Horvat Bishop Paul Horvat of Macva his brother John Horvat and younger brother Ladislav Sigismund s mother in law was strangled while Mary was liberated nbsp Campaign of King Sigismund of Hungary against the rebellious House of Horvat in 1387 Chronica Hungarorum 1488 Having secured the support of the nobility Sigismund was crowned King of Hungary at Szekesfehervar on 31 March 1387 12 Having raised money by pledging Brandenburg to his cousin Jobst Margrave of Moravia 1388 he was engaged for the next nine years in a ceaseless struggle for the possession of this unstable throne 10 The central power was finally weakened to such an extent that only Sigismund s alliance with the powerful Czillei Garai League could ensure his position on the throne 13 It was not for entirely selfless reasons that one of the leagues of barons helped him to power Sigismund had to pay for the support of the lords by transferring a sizeable part of the royal properties For some years the baron s council governed the country in the name of the Holy Crown The restoration of the authority of the central administration took decades of work The bulk of the nation headed by the House of Garai was with him but in the southern provinces between the Sava and the Drava the Horvathys with the support of King Tvrtko I of Bosnia Mary s maternal uncle proclaimed as their king Ladislaus of Naples son of the murdered Charles II of Hungary Not until 1395 did Nicholas II Garai succeed in suppressing them 10 Mary died heavily pregnant in 1395 To ease the pressure from Hungarian nobles Sigismund tried to employ foreign advisors which was not popular and he had to promise not to give land and nominations to anyone other than Hungarian nobles However this was not applied to Stibor of Stiboricz who was Sigismund s closest friend and advisor On a number of occasions Sigismund was imprisoned by nobles but with the help of the armies of Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz he was able to regain power Crusade of Nicopolis edit nbsp King Sigismund of Hungary during the battle of Nicopolis in 1396 Painting by Ferenc Lohr 1896 main hall of the Castle of Vaja nbsp Royal Standard of Hungary under the rule of Sigismund 1387 1437 In 1396 Sigismund led the combined armies of Christendom against the Turks who had taken advantage of the temporary helplessness of Hungary to extend their dominion to the banks of the Danube This crusade preached by Pope Boniface IX was very popular in Hungary The nobles flocked in their thousands to the royal standard and were reinforced by volunteers from nearly every part of Europe The most important contingent being that of the French led by John the Fearless son of Philip II Duke of Burgundy Sigismund set out with 90 000 men and a flotilla of 70 galleys After capturing Vidin he camped with his Hungarian armies before the fortress of Nicopolis Sultan Bayezid I raised the siege of Constantinople and at the head of 140 000 men completely defeated the Christian forces in the Battle of Nicopolis fought between the 25 and 28 September 1396 10 Sigismund returned by sea and through the realm of Zeta where he ordained the local Montenegrin lord Đurađ II with the islands of Hvar and Korcula for resistance against the Turks the islands were returned to Sigismund after Đurađ s death in April 1403 nbsp Gold coin of Sigismund of Hungary with his coat of arms right and the image of the King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary left The disaster at Nicopolis angered several Hungarian lords leading to instability in the kingdom Deprived of his authority in Hungary Sigismund then turned his attention to securing the succession in Germany and Bohemia and was recognized by his childless half brother Wenceslaus IV as Vicar General of the whole empire However he was unable to support Wenceslaus when he was deposed in 1400 and Rupert of Germany Elector Palatine was elected German king in his stead 10 Return to Hungary edit nbsp Sigismund of Luxembourg official imprint nbsp Reverse of the first double seal 1387 1405 of King Sigismund of HungaryOn his return to Hungary in 1401 Sigismund was imprisoned once and deposed twice That year he aided an uprising against Wenceslaus IV during the course of which the Bohemian king was taken prisoner and Sigismund ruled Bohemia for nineteen months He released Wenceslaus in 1403 In the meantime a group of Hungarian noblemen swore loyalty to the last Anjou monarch Ladislaus of Naples putting their hands on the relic of Saint Ladislas of Hungary in Nagyvarad today Oradea Ladislaus was the son of the murdered Charles II of Hungary and thus a distant relative of the long dead King Louis I of Hungary Ladislaus captured Zara today Zadar in 1403 but soon stopped any military advance This struggle in turn led to a war with the Republic of Venice as Ladislaus had sold the Dalmatian cities to the Venetians for 100 000 ducats 10 before leaving for his own land In the following years Sigismund acted indirectly to thwart Ladislaus attempts to conquer central Italy by allying with the Italian cities resisting him and by applying diplomatic pressure on him citation needed Due to his frequent absences attending to business in the other countries over which he ruled he was obliged to consult Diets in Hungary with more frequency than his predecessors and institute the office of Palatine as chief administrator while he was away citation needed In 1404 Sigismund introduced the Placetum Regium According to this decree Papal bulls could not be pronounced in Hungary without the consent of the king During his long reign the royal Buda Castle became probably the largest Gothic palace of the Late Middle Ages citation needed Crusade against Bosnia edit nbsp The campaign of Hungarians against Bosnia during the reign of King Sigismund of Hungary Chronica Hungarorum 1488 nbsp Drinking horn of Sigismund of Luxembourg before 1408 In about 1406 Sigismund married Mary s cousin Barbara of Celje daughter of Count Hermann II of Celje Hermann s mother Catherine of the House of Kotromanic and Mary s mother Queen Elisabeth of Bosnia were sisters or at least cousins who were adoptive sisters Sigismund managed to establish control in Slavonia He did not hesitate to use violent methods see Bloody Sabor of Krizevci but from the River Sava to the south his control was weak Sigismund personally led an army of almost 50 000 crusaders against the Bosnians culminating with the Battle of Dobor in 1408 a massacre of about 200 members of various Bosnian noble families However although campaign militarily looked like a success it ultimately failed politically and Hungarians retreated while the Bosnian crown slowly but surely slipped away out of the reach for Sigismund and Hungarians 14 Possessions in Serbia edit Threatened by Ottoman expansion King Sigismund managed to strengthen the security of southern Hungarian borders by entering into a defensive alliance with Despot Stefan Lazarevic of Serbia In 1403 Hungarian possessions in northwestern regions of Serbia city of Belgrade and the Banate of Macso were given to Despot Stefan who pledged his allegiance to King Sigismund remaining the king s loyal vassal until death in 1427 Stefan s successor George Brankovic of Serbia also pledged his allegiance to Sigismund returning Belgrade to the king By maintaining close relations with Serbian rulers Sigismund succeeded in securing southern borders of his realm 15 16 Order of the Dragon edit Sigismund founded his personal order of knights the Order of the Dragon after the victory at Dobor The main goal of the order was fighting the Ottoman Empire Members of the order were mostly his political allies and supporters The main members of the order were Sigismund s close allies Nicholas II Garay Hermann II of Celje Stibor of Stiboricz and Pippo Spano The most important European monarchs became members of the order He encouraged international trade by abolishing internal duties regulating tariffs on foreign goods and standardizing weights and measures throughout the country King of the Romans edit After the death of King Rupert of Germany in 1410 Sigismund ignoring the claims of his half brother Wenceslaus was elected as successor by three of the electors on 20 September 1410 but he was opposed by his cousin Jobst of Moravia who had been elected by four electors in a different election on 1 October Jobst s death 18 January 1411 removed this conflict and Sigismund was again elected king on 21 July 1411 His coronation was deferred until 8 November 1414 when it took place at Aachen 10 Anti Polish alliances edit On a number of occasions and in 1410 in particular Sigismund allied himself with the Teutonic Knights against Wladyslaw II of Poland In return for 300 000 ducats he would attack Poland from the south after the truce on St John s Day 24 June expired Sigismund ordered his most loyal friend Stibor of Stiboricz to set up the attack on Poland Stibor of Stiboricz was of Polish origin and from the main line of the powerful Clan of Ostoja that had also been against choosing Jagiello as King of Poland With the support of Sigismund Stibor become one of the most influential men in late medieval Europe holding titles as Duke of Transylvania and owning about 25 of modern day Slovakia including 31 castles of which 15 were situated around the 406 km long Vah river with surrounding land that was given to him by Sigismund In the diplomatic struggle to prevent war between Poland Lithuania which was supported by the Muscovites and the Teutonic Knights Sigismund used Stibor s fine diplomacy to gain financially The Polish side appointed several negotiators and most of them were also from the Clan of Ostoja distant relations of the Stibors However those family meetings could not prevent the war and an alliance of twenty two western states formed an army against Poland in the Battle of Grunwald in July 1410 Stibor attacked then Nowy Sacz and burned it to the ground but after that he returned with his army back to the Beckov Castle After the Polish Lithuanian victory in the Battle of Grunwald the Teutonic Knights had to pay a huge sum of silver to Poland as reparation and again through diplomacy of his friend Stibor Sigismund was able to borrow all this silver from King Wladyslaw II of Poland on good conditions In the light of facts about the diplomatic work of Stibor and the Clan of Ostoja that was following the politics of King Sigismund one can question whether Sigismund actually joined the anti Polish alliance 17 Conference in Buda edit nbsp King Sigismund of Hungary Nadasdy Mausoleum 1664 In 1412 a Knights Tournament was held in Buda Hungary this was also a conference between Hungarian King Sigismund Polish King Wladyslaw II and Bosnian King Tvrtko II 2000 knights were present from all over Europe even England There were very many princes lords knights and servants at the court of Buda in Hungary Three kings and three other monarchs a Serbian despot 13 herzogs and or dukes 21 counts 2000 knights 1 cardinal 1 legate 3 archbishops 11 other bishops 86 players and trumpeters 17 messengers and 40 000 horses There were people from 17 countries and languages A presumably contemporary list of the participants of the meeting has also survived Besides the host Sigismund and his main guest Wladyslaw II this text mentions Wladyslaw s cousin Witold Grand Duke of Lithuania and the king of Bosnia usually identified as Tvrtko II Some argue convincingly that it was not Tvrtko II but Stjepan Ostoja who visited Buda at that time Besides the king Hrvoje Vukcic Hrvatinic Sandal Hranic Kosaca and Pavle Radinovic also came from Bosnia and from Serbia the Despot Stefan Lazarevic bringing two thousand horses From Austria dukes Ernest the Iron and Albert II later successor of Sigismund also took part in the Buda meeting Also Heinrich von Plauen the Grand Master of the Teutonic Order Stibor of Stiboricz Nikola II Gorjanski Hermann II Count of Celje and his son Frederick II count of Krbava Karlo Kurjakovic Ivan Morovic ban of Machva Dlugosz reports the arrival in Buda of the envoys of the Jalal al Din khan of the Golden Horde and son of Tokhtamysh who wanted to meet Wladyslaw II of Poland Jalal al Din was an ally of the Polish and Lithuanian rulers in their fight against the Teutonic Order and according to some reconstructions of the events Sigismund also wanted to rely on the Tatars against the Ottoman threat A narrative source from Lubeck also mentions the proceedings in Buda in 1412 Detmar s Lubeckische Chronik continued for the period of 1400 to 1413 The continuation also gives a detailed description of the participants at the Buda meeting The royal meeting was accompanied by festivities and various entertainments At the tournament a knight from Silesia named Nemsche and a page from Austria won the joust A Polish priest and chronicler Jan Dlugosz says in his Annales seu cronici incliti regni Poloniae that in the tournament there were also knights from Bulgaria probably from the court of prince Fruzhin Sigismund s vasal who also was at the conference Council of Constance edit nbsp Sigismund and Barbara of Celje at the Council of Constance From 1412 to 1423 Sigismund campaigned against the Republic of Venice in Italy The king took advantage of the difficulties of Antipope John XXIII to obtain a promise that a council should be called in Constance in 1414 to settle the Western Schism He took a leading part in the deliberations of this assembly and during the sittings travelled to France England and Burgundy in a vain attempt to secure the abdication of the three rival popes The council ended in 1418 having resolved the Schism and of great consequence to Sigismund s future career having the Czech religious reformer Jan Hus burned at the stake for heresy in July 1415 The complicity of Sigismund in the death of Hus is a matter of controversy He had granted Hus a safe conduct and protested against his imprisonment 10 and Hus was burned during Sigismund s absence When at one point during the council a cardinal corrected Sigismund s Latin Sigismund replied Ego sum rex Romanus et super grammaticam I am king of the Romans and above grammar 18 Thomas Carlyle nicknamed Sigismund Super Grammaticam 19 20 His main acts during these years were an alliance with England against France and a failed attempt owing to the hostility of the princes to secure peace in Germany by a league of the towns 10 Also Sigismund awarded Brandenburg which he had recovered after Jobst s death to Frederick of Hohenzollern burgrave of Nuremberg in 1415 This step made the House of Hohenzollern one of the most important in Germany Sigismund began to shift his alliance from France to England after the French defeat at the Battle of Agincourt which he was also controversially absent from due to hosting a pseudo council in Perpignan with Antipope Benedict XIII and King Ferdinand I of Aragon The signing of the Treaty of Canterbury on 15 August 1416 culminated diplomatic efforts between Henry V of England and Sigismund and resulted in a defensive and offensive alliance against France This in turn led the way to the resolution of the papal schism 21 The close relationship that developed between Henry V and Sigismund resulted in him being inducted into the Order of the Garter 22 Hussite Wars edit Main article Hussite Wars nbsp The wars of King Sigismund against the Hussites Chronica Hungarorum 1488 nbsp Portrait of Emperor Sigismund painted by Albrecht Durer after the emperor s deathIn 1419 the death of Wenceslaus IV left Sigismund titular King of Bohemia but he had to wait for seventeen years before the Czech Estates would acknowledge him Although the two dignities of king of the Romans and king of Bohemia added considerably to his importance and indeed made him the nominal temporal head of Christendom they conferred no increase of power and financially embarrassed him It was only as King of Hungary that he had succeeded in establishing his authority and in doing anything for the order and good government of the land Entrusting the government of Bohemia to Sofia of Bavaria the widow of Wenceslaus he hastened into Hungary 10 The Bohemians who distrusted him as the betrayer of Hus were soon in arms and the flame was fanned when Sigismund declared his intention of prosecuting the war against heretics Three campaigns against the Hussites ended in disaster although the army of his most loyal ally Stibor of Stiboricz and later his son Stibor of Beckov could hold the Hussite side away from the borders of the kingdom The Turks were again attacking Hungary At the 1422 Diet of Nuremberg Sigismund and German territorial princes collaborated to organize two armies against the Hussite rebels The first army was sent to relieve Karlstejn which was under a Hussite siege the second army was ordered to destroy the Hussite field army But Jan Zizka defeated the Imperial force at the Battle of Kutna Hora and then at the Battle of Nemecky Brod These two unexpected defeats at the hands of the Hussites ended the first Imperial and Catholic attempt to crush the Bohemian heretic rebellion 23 The alliance against the Hussites continued to develop though joined by Upper German princes and cities even from the regions furthest from Bohemia In January 1424 associative activity of the German electors led to the Union einunge of Bingen within which the Rhenish princes were joined by the elector of Saxony and Sigismund s loyal partner Margrave Frederick of Brandenburg and mutual assistance adjudication and cooperation in the face of the Hussite threat were stipulated 24 Germany edit Sigismund s rule in Germany and in the empire in general was hampered by his complete lack of Hausmacht domestic power within the Kingdom of Germany 5 25 His rule relied on key allies and the culture of associative political mechanisms in Germany Duncan Hardy remarks that both the local and the trans regional dimensions of the political activity displayed by the sources from throughout Sigismund s reign demonstrate that power at every level in the empire was exercised and mediated through the customary institutions and mechanisms of associative political culture If Sigismund enjoyed considerable successes at certain junctures it was not in spite of or independently from these institutions and mechanisms but precisely because he devoted considerable energy to harnessing associative interactions and building strategic relationships with leading actors within elite networks Even during his prolonged absences from the empire s core lands Sigismund was able to make use of these partnerships and could reasonably expect that the associative activity of princes nobles and towns would yield results as indeed they did in the form of large scale collective activity against Duke Frederick IV of Austria Tyrol in the 1410 and the Hussites in the 1420 Not all of Sigismund s projects came to fruition and he could not always control the longer term outcomes of his policies but the notion that there were phases of an empire without a king during his reign clearly does not stand up to the abundant evidence of his interactions with regional clients and associations At the same time the somewhat adulatory view that has developed in recent years of Sigismund as a masterly politician can be tempered by the evidence that it was often felicitous alliances as much as personal skill which made his successes possible 26 The alliance between Sigismund and his two key allies in Germany namely Frederick I Elector of Brandenburg and Albert of Habsburg who became his son in law and heir through the marriage with Sigismund s only daughter Elizabeth of Luxembourg started the rise of the Hohenzollerns and reboosted the Habsburgs who returned to the German throne and also inherited the connection with Hungary Croatia and Bohemia from Sigismund 27 28 Final years edit In 1428 Sigismund led another campaign against the Turks but again with few results In 1431 he went to Milan where on 25 November he received the Iron Crown as King of Italy after which he remained for some time at Siena negotiating for his coronation as emperor and for the recognition of the Council of Basel by Pope Eugenius IV He was crowned emperor in Rome on 31 May 1433 and after obtaining his demands from the pope returned to Bohemia where he was recognized as king in 1436 though his power was little more than nominal 10 Shortly after he was crowned Pope Eugenius began attempts to create a new anti Ottoman alliance 29 This was sparked citation needed by an Albanian revolt against the Ottomans which had begun in 1432 In 1435 Sigismund sent Fruzhin a Bulgarian nobleman to negotiate an alliance with the Albanians He also sent Daud a pretender to the Ottoman throne in early 1436 30 However following the defeat of the rebels in 1436 plans for an anti Ottoman alliance ended 30 Sigismund died on 9 December 1437 at Znojmo German Znaim Moravia now Czech Republic and as ordered in life he was buried at Nagyvarad Hungary today Oradea Romania next to the tomb of the King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary who was the ideal of the perfect monarch warrior and Christian for that time and was deeply venerated by Sigismund 31 By his second wife Barbara of Celje he left an only daughter Elisabeth of Luxembourg who was married to Albert V duke of Austria later German king as Albert II whom Sigismund named as his successor As he left no sons his line of the House of Luxembourg became extinct on his death 10 Family and issue editSigismund married twice but had little luck in securing the succession to his crowns Each of his two marriages resulted in the birth of one child His first born child probably a son was born prematurely as a result of a horse riding accident suffered by Queen Mary of Hungary when she was well advanced in pregnancy Mother and child both died shortly after the birth in the hills of Buda on 17 May 1395 This caused a deep succession crisis because Sigismund ruled over Hungary by right of his wife and although he managed to keep his power the crisis lasted until his second marriage to Barbara of Celje Barbara s only child born in the purple on 7 October 1409 probably in the castle of Visegrad was Elisabeth of Luxembourg the future queen consort of Hungary Germany and Bohemia Queen Barbara was unable to give birth to any further issue Elisabeth of Bohemia was thus the only surviving legitimate offspring of Sigismund Hungarian affiliations edit nbsp Coat of arms of John Hunyadi Sigismund was known to speak fluent Hungarian wore Hungarian style royal clothes and even grew his beard in the Hungarian fashion 32 Emperor Sigismund in terms of the quality of his face and the greatness of his stature was a fairly great man the world s chief creator blessed him with a beautiful face curly bluish hair and a gentle look He wore a long beard out of his attraction to the Hungarians because they also wore long beards once upon a time John Thuroczy Chronica Hungarorum 33 He also spent huge amounts of money during his reign to rebuild the Gothic castles of Buda and Visegrad in the Kingdom of Hungary ordering the transportation of materials from Austria and Bohemia 34 His many affairs with women led to the birth of several legends as the one that existed decades later during the reign of the King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary According to this John Hunyadi was Sigismund s illegitimate son Sigismund gave a ring to the boy s mother when he was born but one day in the forest a raven stole it from her and the ring was only recovered after the bird was hunted down It is said that this incident inspired the coat of arms of the Hunyadis and later also appeared in the coat of arms of Matthias Corvinus 35 Sigismund adopted the Hungarian reverence for Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary who was considered to be an ideal Christian knight at that time He went on pilgrimage several times to his tomb in Nagyvarad Before Sigismund died in Znaim Moravia he ordered to be buried next to the king saint 36 The bloodline of Sigismund connects through three princesses to the royal Hungarian Arpad dynasty Bela III of Hungary nbsp Andrew II of Hungary nbsp Constance of HungaryBela IV of Hungary nbsp Yolanda of HungaryAnna of HungaryWenceslaus I of BohemiaJadwiga of KaliszKunigunda of HalychOttokar II of BohemiaCasimir III of PolandWenceslaus II of BohemiaElizabeth of PolandElizabeth of BohemiaElizabeth of PomeraniaCharles IV Holy Roman EmperorSigismund King of Hungary and Holy Roman Emperor nbsp Reformatio Sigismundi editMain article Reformatio Sigismundi The Reformatio Sigismundi appeared in connection with efforts to reform the Holy Roman Empire during the reign of Emperor Sigismund 1410 1437 It was presented in 1439 at the Council of Basel published by an anonymous author and referred to the injustice of the German rulers It included a vision of Sigismund s about the appearance of a priest king Frederick as well as plans for a wide reform of the monarchy and emperorship and the German empire Historiography and cultural depictions of Sigismund editMain article Cultural depictions of Sigismund Holy Roman EmperorTitles editTitle of Sigismund in the Hungarian first decree of 1405 Sigismund by the Grace of God King of Hungary Dalmatia Croatia Rama Serbia Galicia Lodomeria Cumania and Bulgaria Margrave of Brandenburg Chief Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Empire Heir of Bohemia and Luxemburg 37 Heraldry editHeraldry of Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor nbsp nbsp Coat of arms as King of the Romans 1433 1437 Coat of arms as Holy Roman Emperor 1433 1437 king of Hungary and Bohemia nbsp nbsp Arms of the House of Luxembourg Hungary Bohemia nbsp Coat of arms as Knight of the GarterIn popular culture editFilms edit King Sigismund is portrayed by British actor Matthew Goode in the 2022 film Jan Zizka by director Petr Jakl 38 Video games edit King Sigismund is a briefly seen antagonist in the 2018 Warhorse Studios hit action role playing game Kingdom Come Deliverance 39 See also edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Sigismund Kings of Germany family tree Stibor of Stiboricz Clan of Ostoja Order of the DragonNotes edit Luxembourgish Sigismund vu LetzebuergFrench Sigismond de LuxembourgGerman Sigismund von LuxemburgHungarian Luxemburgi ZsigmondCroatian Zigmund LuksemburskiCzech Zikmund LucemburskyDutch Sigismund van LuxemburgItalian Sigismondo di LussemburgoSlovene Sigismund LuksemburskiRomanian Sigismund de LuxemburgSlovak Zigmund LuxemburskyReferences edit Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor Brady Thomas A 2009 German Histories in the Age of Reformations 1400 1650 Cambridge University Press pp 75 81 ISBN 978 1 139 48115 1 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Brady 2009 pp 128 129 144 Irgang Winfried Sehepunkte Rezension von Kaiser Sigismund 1368 1437 Ausgabe 14 2014 Nr 11 sehepunkte de a b Frenken Ansgar 2006 M Pauly u a Hrsg Sigismund von Luxemburg Buchrezensionen Philipp von Zabern Verlag ISBN 978 3805336253 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Wood 2008 p 149 Geaman 2022 p 29 Kondyli et al 2014 p 223 n142 Main Archibald 1903 The Emperor Sigismund University of Michigan B H Blackwell p 12 ISBN 0530512955 Retrieved 30 March 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Sigismund Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Main Archibald 1903 The Emperor Sigismund University of Michigan B H Blackwell p 13 ISBN 0530512955 Retrieved 30 March 2022 Michaud The Kingdoms of Central Europe in the Fourteenth Century p 743 ungarische geschichte Amer Maslo 2018 Slavni i velmozni gospodin knez Pavle Radinovic PDF Cobiss in Bosnian Maribor IZUM Institut informacijskih znanosti 57 Retrieved 25 January 2024 Fine 1994 pp 501 502 526 527 Cirkovic 2004 pp 89 103 Dvorakova Daniela Rytier a jeho kraľ Stibor zo Stiboric a Zigmund Lucembursky Budmerice Vydavatel stvo Rak 2003 ISBN 978 80 85501 25 4 Carlyle Thomas 1858 History of Friedrich II of Prussia Called Frederick the Great Volume II Gutenberg org Grundy T R 28 December 1872 Sigismund Super Grammatican Notes and Queries s4 X 261 524 doi 10 1093 nq s4 X 261 524 c inactive 31 January 2024 ISSN 0029 3970 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link Wackernagel Jacob Langslow David 2009 Jacob Wackernagel Lectures on Syntax With Special Reference to Greek Latin and Germanic Oxford University Press p 456 ISBN 978 0198153023 Guenee Bernard 1991 Between Church and State The Lives of Four French Prelates in the Late Middle Ages University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226310329 Collins Hugh E L 2000 The Order of the Garter 1348 1461 Chivalry and Politics in Late Medieval England Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0198208174 Nolan Cathal J 2006 The Age of Wars of Religion 1000 1650 An Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization Greenwood Publishing Group p 429 ISBN 978 0 313 33733 8 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Hardy Duncan 2018 Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empire Upper Germany 1346 1521 Oxford University Press p 213 ISBN 978 0 19 256216 6 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Irgang Winfried Sehepunkte Rezension von Kaiser Sigismund 1368 1437 Ausgabe 14 2014 Nr 11 sehepunkte de Hardy 2018 p 213 Middleton John 2015 World Monarchies and Dynasties Routledge p 404 ISBN 978 1 317 45158 7 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Detwiler Donald S 1999 Germany A Short History SIU Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 8093 2231 2 Retrieved 11 September 2022 Buda Aleks 2002 Shkrime historike in Albanian Toena p 247 ISBN 978 99927 1 651 9 a b Islami Selim Anamali Skender Korkuti Muzafer Prendi Frano Shukriu Edi 2002 Kristaq Prifti Muzafer Korkuti ed Historia e popullit shqiptar in Albanian Botimet Toena p 338 ISBN 978 9992716229 Bertenyi Ivan 2000 A Tizennegyedik Szazad tortenete Budapest Pannonica kiado Homan Balint Magyar kozepkor II Attraktor Godollo Hungary 2003 Johannes Thuroczy Chronica Hungarorum http thuroczykronika atw hu pdf Thuroczy pdf Malyusz Elemer Zsigmond kiraly uralma Magyarorszagon 1387 1437 Gondolat Budapest 1984 Dummerth Dezso A ket Hunyadi Panorama Budapest 1985 C Toth Norbert Luxemburgi Zsigmond uralkodasa 1387 1437 Magyarorszag tortenete 6 Foszerk Romsics Ignac Bp Kossuth Kiado 2009 Dr Pomogyi Laszlo Ezer ev torvenyei 1405 evi I decretum torvenycikkek Corpus Juris Hungarici Magyar Torvenytar Laws of a Thousand Years Law articles of 1405 Decree I Corpus Juris Hungarici Hungarian Law Library net jogtar hu Online Hungarian Legal Register Wolters Kluwer Retrieved 28 May 2023 Zsigmond Isten kegyelmebol Magyarorszag Dalmacia Horvatorszag Rama Szerbia Galicia Lodomeria Kunorszag es Bulgaria kiralya brandenburgi orgrof a Szent Romai Birodalomnak fokamarasa Csehorszag es Luxemburg orokose Medieval movie review amp film summary 2022 Roger Ebert Kingdom Come Deliverance slashes its way into comics 25 January 2022 Sources editCirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1405142915 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 1994 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472082604 Geaman Kristen L 2022 Anne of Bohemia Routledge Kondyli Fotini Andriopoulou Vera Panou Eirini Cunningham Mary B eds 2014 Sylvester Syropoulos on Politics and Culture in the Fifteenth Century Mediterranean Themes and Problems in the Memoirs Section IV 16 Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Studies Routledge Wood Christopher S 2008 Forgery Replica Fiction Temporalities of German Renaissance Art University of Chicago Press Further reading editBak Janos 1998 Hungary Crown and Estates In Christopher Almand ed New Cambridge Medieval History vol VII c 1415 c 1500 Cambridge CUP pp 707 27 Baum W 1996 Cisar Zikmund Emperor Sigismund Hoensch J 1996 Kaiser Sigismund Herrscher an der Schwelle zur Neuzeit 1368 1437 Horvath H 1937 Zsigmond kiraly es kora King Sigismund and his age Kery B 1972 Kaiser Sigismund Ikonographie Malyusz E 1990 Kaiser Sigismond in Ungarn 1387 1437 Malyusz E 1984 Zsigmond kiraly uralma Magyarorszagon 1387 1437 King Sigismund s reign in Hungary 1387 1437 E Marosi ed 1987 Muveszet Zsigmond kiraly koraban 1387 1437 Art in the age of King Sigismund 1387 1437 Vol 2 vols Budapest Hist Mus Michaud Claude 2000 The Kingdoms of Central Europe in the Fourteenth Century In Michael Jones ed New Cambridge Medieval History vol VI c 1300 c 1415 Cambridge CUP pp 735 763 Mitsiou E et al 2010 Sigismund of Luxemburg and the Orthodox World Veroffentlichungen zur Byzanzforschung 24 Muresan Dan Ioan 2010 Une histoire de trois empereurs Aspects des relations de Sigismond de Luxembourg avec Manuel II et Jean VIII Paleologue In Ekaterini Mitsiou et al eds Sigismund of Luxemburg and the Orthodox World Veroffentlichungen zur Byzanzforschung 24 Wien Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften pp 41 101 Pauly M F Reinert eds 2006 Sigismund von Luxemburg ein Kaiser in Europa Tagungsband des internationalen historischen und kunsthistorischen Kongresses in Luxemburg 8 to 10 June 2005 Takacs I 2006 Sigismundus rex et imperator Kunst und Kultur zur Zeit Sigismunds von Luxemburg 1387 1437 Sigismund king and emperor Art and culture in the age of Sigisumd of Luxembourg 1387 1437 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor Art images maps connected to Sigismund Sigismund New International Encyclopedia 1905 Sigismund Holy Roman EmperorHouse of LuxembourgBorn 15 February 1368 Died 9 December 1437Regnal titlesPreceded byMaryas sole monarch King of Hungary and Croatia1387 1437with Mary Succeeded byAlbert II Preceded byRupert German King formally King of the Romans 1410 1437contested by Jobst 1410 11 Preceded byWenceslas IV King of Bohemia1419 1437Elector of Brandenburg1378 1388 Succeeded byJobstPreceded byJobst Elector of Brandenburg1411 1415 Succeeded byFrederick IVacantInterregnumTitle last held byCharles IV Holy Roman Emperor1433 1437 Succeeded byFrederick III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor amp oldid 1202008097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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