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{{Short description|15th-century military and political figure in the Kingdom of Hungary}} | |||
{{Cleanup|date=June 2009}} | |||
{{For|his younger brother|John Hunyadi, Ban of Severin}} | |||
{{Pp|small=yes}} | |||
{{Hungarian name|Hunyadi János}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}} | |||
{{Infobox royalty | {{Infobox royalty | ||
| name |
| native name = | ||
| title = {{ubl|Regent-Governor of the Kingdom of Hungary|]}} | |||
| native name = | |||
| image = John Hunyadi (Chronica Hungarorum).jpg | |||
| title = Governor of the Kingdom of Hungary<br /> Voivode of Transylvania | |||
| caption = John Hunyadi depicted in the 15th-century '']'' (], 1488) | |||
| image = Iancu Hunedoara.jpg | |||
| spouse = ] | |||
| imgw = 200px | |||
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| issue = {{Plainlist| | ||
* ] | |||
| succession = ] | |||
* ] | |||
| reign = | |||
}} | |||
| coronation = | |||
| house = ] | |||
| predecessor = | |||
| |
| father = ] | ||
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| mother = Erzsébet Morzsinai | ||
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| birth_date = {{Circa|1406}} | ||
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| birth_place = | ||
| death_date = 11 August {{death year and age|1456|1406}} | |||
| coronation1 = | |||
| death_place = ], Kingdom of Hungary | |||
| predecessor1 = | |||
| place of burial = ], ], Kingdom of Hungary | |||
| successor1 = | |||
| signature = Signature of János Hunyadi.jpg | |||
| succession2 = | |||
| reign2 = | |||
| coronation2 = | |||
| predecessor2 = | |||
| successor2 = | |||
| spouse = | |||
| issue = ]</br>] | |||
| house = ] | |||
| father = Vajk Hunyadi | |||
| mother = Elizabeth Morzsinay | |||
| date of birth = c. 1387 | |||
| place of birth = | |||
| date of death = 1456 | |||
| place of death = Nándorfehérvár, Kingdom of Hungary (now ], ]) | |||
| place of burial= Roman Catholic Cathedral of Gyulafehérvár (now: ]) | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''John Hunyadi''' ({{Langx|hu|Hunyadi János}}; {{Langx|ro|Ioan de Hunedoara}}; {{Langx|hr|Janko Hunjadi}}; {{Langx|sr|Сибињанин Јанко|Sibinjanin Janko}}; {{circa|1406}} – 11 August 1456) was a leading ] military and political figure during the 15th century, who served as ] of the ] from 1446 to 1453, under the minor ]. | |||
{{Disputed-section|date=April 2010}} | |||
'''János (John) Hunyadi ''' (]: ''Hunyadi János'' {{IPAc-hu|'|h|u|ny|a|d|i|-|'|j|á|n|o|s}}, ]: ''Iancu de Hunedoara'', ]: ''Ján Huňady'', ]: Сибињанин Јанко / Sibinjanin Janko; ]: ''Янош Хуняди'' / ''Yanosh Hunyadi'') (c. 1387<ref>http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Janos_Hunyadi</ref> – 11 August 1456), nicknamed ''The White Knight''<ref>White Knight (Clear waters rising: a mountain walk across Europe by Nicholas Crane, Viking, 1996, p. 320), White Knight of Wallachia or White Knight of Hungary (Encyclopedia of the undead, p. 67, Career Press, 2006, Jihad in the West: Muslim conquests from the 7th to the 21st centuries By Paul Fregosi, p. 244., Prometheus Books, 1998) depending on sources</ref> was a Hungarian general (1444–1446) and Regent-Governor (1446–1453) of the ].<ref name=Britannica>{{cite encyclopedia|title=János Hunyadi|encyclopedia=]|year=2010}}</ref>. | |||
According to most contemporary sources, he was the member of a ] of ] ]. Through his struggles against the ], he earned for himself the nickname "Turk-buster" from his contemporaries. Due to his merits, he quickly received substantial land grants. By the time of his death, he was the owner of immense land areas, totaling approximately four million cadastral acres, which had no precedent before or after in the Kingdom of Hungary. His enormous wealth and his military and political weight were primarily directed towards the purposes of the ]. | |||
He is widely celebrated{{By whom|date=April 2010}} in ] history as its most prominent, successful and powerful ] who promoted a revision of dated military doctrine, as such an outstanding and iconic military opponent of the ]; in a sweeping scope of European ] was the pre-eminent strategist and tactician of the 15th century in ].<ref name=Britannica/>. He was also a ] of ] (1441–1446), the ] of the ], and father of the most renowned king in Hungarian history, King ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} | |||
Hunyadi mastered his military skills on the southern borderlands of the Kingdom of Hungary that were exposed to Ottoman attacks. Appointed ] in 1439, appointed ], ] and Chief Captain of Nándorfehérvár (now ]) in 1441 and ] of a several of southern ] of the Kingdom of Hungary, he assumed responsibility for the defense of the frontiers. He adopted the ] ]. He employed professional soldiers, but also mobilized local peasantry against invaders. These innovations contributed to his earliest successes against the Ottoman troops who were plundering the southern ] in the early 1440s. | |||
Hunyadi's martial genius, prowess and wherewithal to prosecute preventive and very muscular aggressive ] ] policies that weld together many ] nationalities against the onslaught of the vastly numerically superior Ottoman ] forces achieved a state of integrity, stalemate and ''détente'' for the Hungarian Kingdom and the many European states that lay to her periphery.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} | |||
In 1442, Hunyadi won four victories against the Ottomans, two of which were decisive.{{sfn|Jefferson|2012|p=278}} In March 1442, Hunyadi defeated Mezid Bey and the raiding Ottoman army at the ] in the south part of the Kingdom of Hungary in ].{{sfn|Jefferson|2012|p=278–286}} In September 1442, Hunyadi defeated a large Ottoman army of ] ], the Provincial Governor of ]. This was the first time that a European army defeated such a large Ottoman force, composed not only of raiders, but of the provincial cavalry led by their own ] (governors) and accompanied by the formidable ].{{sfn|Jefferson|2012|p=286–292}} Although defeated in the ] in 1444 and in the ] in 1448, his successful "]" across the ] in 1443–44 and ] (Nándorfehérvár) in 1456, against troops led personally by the ], established his reputation as a great general. The pope ordered that European churches ring their bells at noon to gather the faithful in prayer for those who were fighting. The bells of ] churches are rung at noon to commemorate the Belgrade victory. | |||
John Hunyadi's aim to re-organize the military constituents of Hungary from strictly a feudal-based aristocratic ] into an efficient, professional, formidable standing army would bring reform to European military components everywhere in a 'post-Roman' European war-making society that his successor and son, King ] would bring to its ultimate culmination with the ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} | |||
John Hunyadi was also an eminent statesman. He actively took part in the civil war between the partisans of ] and the minor Ladislaus V, two claimants to the throne of Hungary in the early 1440s, on behalf of the former. He was popular among the lesser nobility, and in 1445 the ] appointed him one of the seven "]" responsible for the administration of state affairs until Ladislaus V (by that time unanimously accepted as king) came of age. The next Diet went even further, electing Hunyadi as sole ] with the title of governor. When he resigned from this office in 1452, the sovereign awarded him with the first hereditary title in the Kingdom of Hungary, ''(] of Beszterce/Bistrița''). He had by this time become one of the wealthiest landowners in the kingdom, and preserved his influence in the Diet up until his death. | |||
John Hunyadi is often considered{{By whom|date=April 2010}} the bellwether of the European "post-Roman" professional "'']''". Hunyadi is mostly renowned{{By whom|date=April 2010}} as one of the greatest ] field commanders of all time, his overthrow of ] at the ] in 1456 against overpowering odds is regarded as a seminal piece of European military history as "''Having decided the fate of Christendom''"{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}}, and is as decisive a macro-significant event in European ] as the 732 ] and the ] in 1683.{{Citation needed|date=April 2010}} | |||
This '']'' (Christ's Champion), as ] referred to him, died some three weeks after his triumph at ], falling to an epidemic that had broken out in the ] camp. However, his victories over the Turks prevented them from invading the Kingdom of Hungary for more than 60 years. His fame was a decisive factor in the election of his son, ], as king by the Diet of 1457. Hunyadi is a popular historical figure among ], ], ], ], and other nations of the region. | |||
==Family== | |||
{{Main|Hunyadi family}} | |||
], ], Hungary]] | |||
==Childhood ({{circa}} 1406 – {{circa}} 1420)== | |||
Hunyadi is a ]<ref>http://web.axelero.hu/kesz/jel/01_12/hunyadiak.htm#10</ref> noble family — according to most sources — of ]<ref>''Encyclopædia Britannica'' </ref><ref> Ronald D. Bachman, ed. Romania: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1989</ref><ref>http://books.google.ro/books?id=xcp7OXQE0FMC&pg=PA53&lpg=PA53&dq=%22white+knight+of+wallachia%22&source=bl&ots=ZMFi3V9rqD&sig=GXAnsPJU_DiGNCTBeV2CczjtrhU#v=snippet&q=%22john%20hunyadi%20was%20a%20rumanian%22&f=false</ref> origin. There are also alternative researches suggesting ]<ref>, A M. Nemz. Tört. IV. Bp., 1896. - Elekes 1952. - Teke 1980. - Puskely 1994:279.(Hungarian)</ref>, Slavic,<ref>Molnar, Miklos: A Concise History of Hungary. P. 61</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Frucht|first=Richard C. |title=Eastern Europe: an introduction to the people, lands, and culture|publisher=]|date=2005|pages=339|isbn=9781576078006}}</ref><ref name=Lendvai>{{cite book|last=Lendvai |first=Paul|title=The Hungarians: a thousand years of victory in defeat|publisher=C. Hurst & Co. Publishers|date=2003|pages=75|isbn=9781850656821}}</ref>, ]<ref name="Балкански 1996 102–103">{{cite book|last=Балкански|first=Тодор |title=Трансилванските (седмиградските) българи. Етнос. Език. Етнонимия. Ономастика. Просопографии|publisher=ИК Знак 94|Велико Търново|date=1996|pages=102–103|edition=1}}</ref> or ] <ref name="Chadwick 1986 317">{{cite book|last=Chadwick|first=H. Munro|coauthors=Nora Kershaw Chadwick|title=The growth of literature, Volume 2|publisher=]|date=1986|pages=317|isbn=9780521310185}}</ref>{{Dubious|John Hunyadi's ethnicity|date=April 2010}} descendance. Others simply refer to the obscurity surrounding the ethnic origins.<ref>{{cite book|last=Nicholson|first=Helen J.|title=The Crusades|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|date=2004|pages=115|isbn=9780313326851}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Seton-Watson|first=Hugh|title=Eastern Europe between the wars, 1918-1941|pages=25|isbn=9781001284781|publisher=]|quote=The ethnical origin of Hunyadi may be left to the chauvinist historians of Budapest and Bucarest to fight out between them, but the historical fact is that both Hunyadi and his son considered themselves Hungarians.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/hunspir/hsp16.htm|title=János Hunyadi:Defender of Christendom - Hunyadi's Origin Contested|work=Corvinus Library|quote=Historians are still in the dark about the year and place of his birth, and even his parentage seems shrouded in mystery.}}</ref> | |||
{{Further|Hunyadi family}} | |||
]'s charter of the grant of ] (in present-day ], Romania) to Voyk, Magos and Radol (the sons of Serbe), and their uncle or cousin, Radol, and Voyk's son, John]] | |||
], King of Hungary]] | |||
A royal charter of grant issued on 18 October 1409 contains the first reference to John Hunyadi.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=7}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=80}}{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=7}} In the document, ] bestowed ] (in present-day ], Romania) and the lands attached to it upon John's father, ] and Voyk's four kinsmen, including John himself.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|pp=7–8}} According to the document, John's father served in the royal household as a "court knight" at that time, suggesting that he was descended from a respected family.{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=227}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|pp=8–9}} Two 15th-century chroniclers{{mdash}}] and ]{{mdash}}write that Voyk had moved from ] to ] upon King Sigismund's initiative.{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=7}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=83–84}} László Makkai, Malcolm Hebron, ] and other scholars accept the two chroniclers' report of the Wallachian origin of John Hunyadi's father.{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=227}}{{Sfn|Hebron|1997|p=86}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}}{{Sfn|Molnár|2001|p=61}} In contrast with them, Ioan-Aurel Pop says that Voyk was a native of the wider region of Hunyad Castle.{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=294}} | |||
Antonio Bonfini was the first chronicler to have made a passing remark of an alternative story of John Hunyadi's parentage, soon stating that it was just a "tasteless tale" fabricated by Hunyadi's opponent, ].{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|pp=8–9}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}} According to this anecdote, John was actually not Voyk's child, but King Sigismund's illegitimate son.{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|pp=8–9}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}} The story became especially popular during the reign of John Hunyadi's son, ] who erected a statue for King Sigismund in ].{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=9}} The 16th-century chronicler ] repeated and further developed the tale, but modern scholars{{mdash}}for instance, Cartledge, and Kubinyi{{mdash}}regard it as an unverifiable gossip.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}} Hunyadi's popularity among the peoples of the ] give rise to further legends of his royal parentage.{{Sfn|Chadwick|Chadwick|2010|pp=316–317}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=80}} | |||
John's father was described as being of ] descent by medieval chroniclers<ref>Fejer, Georgius. ''Genus et incunabula Joannis, regni Hungariae Gubernatoris''. Magyar Orszagos Leveltar. Buda, 1844. See link: http://www.arcanum.hu/mol/lpext.dll/fejer/33f4/3598/35fb?fn=document-frame.htm&f=templates&2.0</ref> and the majority of modern historians<ref> ''A History of Hungary'' Peter F. Sugar, Péter Hanák, Tibor Frank - History - 1994</ref><ref>Babinger, Franz. et al. ''Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time''. Princeton University Press. 2nd Edition. 1992. p. 20. http://books.google.com/books?id=PPxC6rO7vvsC&pg=PA20&dq=</ref><ref>Engel, Pal. ''Realm of St. Stephen : A History of Medieval Hungary, 895-1526''. London,, GBR: I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2001. p xii.</ref><ref>''Encyclopædia Britannica'' |</ref><ref>''Encyclopedia of the Middle Ages'', Vol 1 | |||
De André Vauchez,Richard Barrie Dobson,Michael Lapidge p. 705 |http://books.google.com/books?id=qtgotOF0MKQC&pg=PR11&dq=Encyclopedia+of+the+Middle+Ages,+Volumul+1++De+Andr%C3%A9+Vauchez,Richard+Barrie+Dobson,Michael+Lapidge&lr=&hl=ro&cd=1#v=onepage&q=&f=false</ref>. Others think he was of ethnic Hungarian origin.<ref name="Chadwick 1986 317"/> | |||
], main entrance]] | |||
According to some, Vojk was a ] from ],<ref>Enea Silvius Piccolomini, (]), ''In Europa'' - ''Historia Austrialis'', BAV, URB, LAT. 405, ff.245, IIII kal. Aprilis MCCCCLVIII, Ex Urbe ]</ref> the son of ''Şerb'' (also spelled as ''Sorb'' or ''Serbe''), a ] ] from the ] of ''Szörény'' (]). According to others, John's grandfather ''Şerb'' had three sons - John's father ''Vojk'' (a Hungarian pagan name, or a properly Vlach name, or even a Turkic or Slavic one), ''Magos'' (''Mogoş'', also ''Mogos'', the latter meaning "tall" in Hungarian), and ''Radol''/''Radul'' (a Romanian name).<ref>Petre P. Panaitescu "Istoria Românilor", 7th edition, Editura didactică şi pedagigică, Bucureşti, 1990, p. 109</ref> Even if Vojk would be from Wallachia, others claim that a few of Wallachian nobles were of ], ], or ] descent. Another theory developed at the end of the 19th century claiming that ''Şerb'', John's grandfather, was originally from ].<ref>Dr. Borovszky Samu, ''Magyarország vármegyéi és városai'', Kiadta az országos monográfiai társaság, Budapest</ref> | |||
What is certain is that Vojk, John's father, took the family name of ''Hunyadi'' in 1409 when he received the estate around the ] from Sigismund and was ennobled as count of Hunyad. | |||
The identification of John Hunyadi's mother is even less certain.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}}{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=9}} In connection with King Sigismund's supposed parentage, both Bonfini and Heltai say that she was the daughter of a rich ], or nobleman, whose estates were located at Morzsina (present-day ], Romania).{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}}{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=9}} Pop proposes that she was called Elisabeth.{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=294}} According to historian László Makkai, John Hunyadi's mother was a member of the Muzsina (or Mușina) ] family from ] (Densuș, Romania), but Pop refuses the identification of the Morzsina and Muzsina families.{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=294}}<ref name='Makkai'>{{Cite web |last=Makkai |first=László |title=Romanian Voivodes and Cnezes, Nobles and Villeins |work= History of Transylvania, Volume I: From the Beginnings to 1606 |publisher=mek.niif.hu |date=2001 |url=http://mek.niif.hu/03400/03407/html/81.html |access-date=22 April 2014}}</ref> | |||
===Legendary origins=== | |||
]'s Chronicle ''Chronica Hungarorum'', ], 1488.]] | |||
With regard of John Hunyadi's mother, Bonfini provides an alternative solution as well, stating that she was a distinguished Greek lady, but does not name her.{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=8}} According to Kubinyi, her alleged Greek origin may simply refer to her ] faith.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}} In a letter of 1489, Matthias Corvinus wrote that his grandmother's sister, whom the ] had captured and forced to join the ] of an unnamed ], became the ancestor of ], the rebellious son of Sultan ].{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=9}} Based on this letter, historian Kubinyi says that the "Greek connection cannot be discounted entirely".{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|pp=9–10}} If Matthias Corvinus' report is valid, John Hunyadi{{mdash}}the hero of anti-Ottoman wars{{mdash}}and the ] ] were first cousins.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=10}} On the other hand, historian Péter E. Kovács writes that Matthias Corvinus's story about his family connection with the Ottoman Sultans was nothing but a pack of lies.{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=145}} | |||
The family can be traced back two generations from John, to Vajk's father Şerban (or Şerb), while the family's name and ascent to ] rank (''count of Hunyad'') were established only by Sigismund's grant. This lack of evidence for ] gave rise to various legends and scholarly constructions about the origins of the Hunyadis, especially during the reign of John's son ], but his origin has also been disputed in modern times.<ref>Cf. Dr. Borovszky Samu, ''Magyarország vármegyéi és városai'' (Hungary's counties and cities), published by: Országos Monográfiai Társaság (the Society for Hungarian Monographies), Budapest.)</ref> | |||
Hunyadi's year of birth is uncertain.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=44}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=84}} Although Gáspár Heltai writes that Hunyadi was born in 1390, he must have actually been born between around 1405 and 1407, because his younger brother was only born after 1409, and a difference of almost two decades between the two brothers' age is not plausible.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}}{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=294}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=84}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=44}} The place of his birth is likewise unknown.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=47}} The 16th-century scholar, ] wrote that John Hunyadi had been "a native" of the ''Hátszeg region'' (now ] in Romania).{{Sfn|Pop|2012|p=14}} Hunyadi's father died before 12 February 1419.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}} A royal charter issued on this day mentions Hunyadi, Hunyadi's two brothers (] and Voyk) and their uncle Radol, but does not refer to their father.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}} | |||
]' court historian ] flattered his king by tracing the family's ancestry to the ] gens Corvina, or Valeriana, while adding: "for this man was indeed born of a ] father and a Hungarian mother"<ref>''Decad. III, lib. 4, ed. cit., p. 448'', in Armbruster, Adolf. ''The Romanity of the Romanians''. Ch 3. Sec 2. p70</ref> Another contemporary historian, the Hungarian ], similarly flattering his king, wrote in the '']'' (''Chronica Hungarorum'') that the Hunyadi family was of ] origin, even calling Matthias Corvinus the second ].<ref name="rubicon">TEKE ZSUZSA: HUNYADI JÁNOS • 1407 k.–1456, 10. évfolyam (1999) 9-10. szám (93-94.) (Rubicon History Magazine, Hungarian)</ref> The 16th century historian ] made Hunyadi the illegitimate son of emperor ] and the young noble Erzsébet Morzsinay<ref>http://www.hik.hu/tankonyvtar/site/books/b152/ch12s01s01.html Heltai Gáspár: Krónika az magyaroknak dolgairól (Hungarian)</ref>. John's son, King Matthias, had a statue of Sigismund in ] and claimed him as his grandfather. | |||
== Rise of a general == | |||
===''Corvinus'' legend=== | |||
=== Youth ({{circa}} 1420–1438) === | |||
The epithet ''Corvinus'' (referring to the raven) was first used by the biographer of his son ], but is also applied to John. It is linked to the legend documented by ], among others. The legend said that John was the illegitimate son of Hungarian King ],<ref name="CE">{{CathEncy|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07564b.htm|title=János Hunyady}}</ref> and that Vajk was a faithful soldier of his father for two decades. After the death of his wife, King Sigismund met Elizabeth Morzsinai, a virgin noblewoman, and fell in love. In the morning, the king gave a royal ring to the lady, promising her that he would take care of the son. After the boy was born, the family set off to ] to the palace of Sigismund. During the trip, they took a rest, and baby John started crying. Elizabeth gave him the ring to make him quiet, whereupon a rook stole the ring. Elizabeth's brother took his bow and arrow and shot the rook, whereupon, as if by a miracle, the rook did not die, and the ring was recovered. Arriving at the royal court in Buda, Sigismund filled the baby's cradle with precious stones. Other versions of the legend state that it was the child John himself, about 6 years old, who shot the arrow. | |||
Andreas Pannonius, who served Hunyadi for five years, wrote that the future commander "accustomed himself to tolerate both cold and heat in good time".{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=84}} Like other young noblemen, John Hunyadi spent his youth serving in the court of powerful magnates.{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=64}} However, the exact list of his employers cannot be completed, because 15th-century authors recorded contradictory data on his early life.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=513}} | |||
]'s biographer, ] writes that Scolari{{mdash}}who was responsible for the defense of the southern frontier as '']'', or head, of ]{{mdash}}educated Hunyadi from his very youth, suggesting that Hunyadi was Scolari's ] around 1420.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|pp=515–516, 523}} On the other hand, ] writes, in a letter of 1456, that Hunyadi started his military career serving under ].{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=514}} For Nicholas of Ilok was at least six year younger than Hunyadi, historian Pál Engel writes that Capistrano confused him with his brother, Stephen of Ilok.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=514}} Finally, Antonio Bonfini says that at the beginning of his career Hunyadi worked either for Demeter Csupor, ] or for the Csákys.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|pp=516–518}} | |||
The legend may have some basis in fact, as his presumed father, Vojk, had never before had a coat of arms depicting a raven, and suddenly he changed it for some reason; Moreover ]n coat of arms (which changed its appearance trough the ]) depicts a ]-like bird (actually a black ]<ref>{{cite book|title=La Science et L'Art Heraldiques en Roumanie|author=Dan Cernovodeanu|publisher=Editura Stiinţifică şi Enciclopedică|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=tWAoPAAACAAJ&dq=Dan+Cernovodeanu}}</ref>) holding a cross in its beak.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Present State of Turkey|author=Thomas Thornton|publisher=University of California|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=9UpCAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA358&dq=wallachia+raven}}</ref> The family of Vajk received the estates of Hunyad, and John's education was funded by the king. The part of the legend that is most questioned is not the raven and the events surrounding John, but the parentage by Sigismund. The main ] is that John was not able to become king of Hungary because he was not considered of royal blood. It is argued that John, his wife Elizabeth, and their son Matthias invented and/or promoted the legend in order to allow John's son to become king. | |||
According to the Byzantine historian ], the young Hunyadi "stayed for a time" at the court of ], ], who died in 1427.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|pp=514–515, 523}} Hunyadi's marriage with ] substantiates Chalkokondyles' report, because her father, Ladislaus was the Despot's '']'' around 1426.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=515}} The wedding took place around 1429.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=15}} | |||
===Mother=== | |||
While still a young man, Hunyadi entered the ] of King Sigismund.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=84}} He accompanied Sigismund to Italy in 1431 and upon Sigismund's order he joined the army of ], ].{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=49}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=86}}{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=523}} Bonfini says that Hunyadi "served two years" in the Duke's army.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=517}} Modern scholars{{mdash}}for instance, Cartledge, Engel, Mureşanu and Teke{{mdash}}say that Hunyadi familiarized himself with the principles of contemporary military art, including the employment of mercenaries, in ].{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}} {{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=86–87}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=50}} | |||
John's mother was Elisabeta Morşina (Erzsébet Morzsinay), a lady of the lesser nobility. According to primary sources she was the daughter of a ]<ref>"Opulenti Boyeronis (i. e. Valachi nobilis) filiam – ex genere Morsinai – Transalpinus quidam Boyero, nomine Woyk, qui ob simultates valachicas huc (in Transilvaniam) se patriis, ex oris receperat, venustate Morsinaianae captus, duxit. – Elisabetham, vocatam ferunt;" available from: http://www.arcanum.hu/mol/lpext.dll/fejer/33f4/3598/35fb?fn=document-frame.htm&f=templates&2.0</ref> lesser noble from ] (]), Transylvania. Some modern writers suggest she was a ]<ref name="morizsnay">Hóman Bálint- Szekfű Gyula: Magyar történet II., KMENy, Bp., 1936, 432.</ref> while others note that her family (also known as the Demsusi Muzsina family) was a family of Romanians ennobled in the second half of the 15th century <ref> History of Transylvania,by the Institute Of History Of The Hungarian Academy Of Sciences</ref> | |||
Hunyadi again joined the entourage of Sigismund, who had in the meantime been crowned ] in Rome, at the very end of 1433.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=517}} He served the monarch as a "court knight".{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=87}} He loaned 1,200 ] to the Emperor in January 1434.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=87}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=13}} In exchange, Sigismund mortgaged Papi{{mdash}}a ] in ]{{mdash}}and half of the royal incomes from a nearby ] on the ] to Hunyadi and his younger brother.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=87}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=13}} The royal charter of the transaction mentions Hunyadi as John the ] (]).{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=294}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=8}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=87}} In short, Sigismund granted Hunyadi further domains, including ], and ], each incorporating about 10 villages.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=87}} | |||
===Wife=== | |||
In 1432, John married Erzsébet Szilágyi (c. 1410-1483), a ] noblewoman, also of high rank (] being the name of a ] overlapping with present-day ]). | |||
Antonio Bonfini writes of Hunyadi's service in the retinue of one "Francis Csanádi" who "became so fond of him that treated him as if he were his own son".{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=518}} Historian Engel identifies Francis Csanádi with ], ] and ], who was also ''Ispán'' of Csanád County around 1432.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|pp=518–522}} Engel says that Hunyadi served in the Ban's retinue for at least one and a half years from around October 1434.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=524}} A ] of the ] was mortgaged to Hunyadi in this period.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=524}} | |||
===Children=== | |||
John Hunyadi had two children, ] and ]. | |||
Sigismund, who entered ] in the summer of 1436, hired Hunyadi and his 50 lancers for three months in October 1437 for 1,250 gold florins, implying that Hunyadi had accompanied him to ].{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=524}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=88}} Hunyadi seems to have studied the ]' tactics on this occasion, because he later applied its featuring elements, including the ].{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=88}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=52}} On 9 December 1437 Sigismund died; his son-in-law, ] was elected King of Hungary in nine days.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=279}} According to historians Teke and Engel, Hunyadi soon returned to the southern frontiers of the kingdom which had been subject to Ottoman raids.{{Sfn|Engel|2003|p=524}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=88}} In contrast with them, Mureşanu says that Hunyadi served King Albert in Bohemia for at least a year, until the end of 1438.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=53}} | |||
László felt victim to the struggle between Hungary's various barons and its ] king, ] (also king of Bohemia), in the years after the death of John. After the assassination of ], the king felt threatened by László. The king planned to eliminate him by inviting him to Buda. Suspecting no evil, László accompanied the king to Buda, but on arriving there was arrested on a charge of plotting against Ladislaus, condemned to death without the observance of any legal formalities, and beheaded on 16 March 1457. | |||
=== First battles with the Ottomans (1438–1442) === | |||
His brother, Matthias, was also inveigled to Buda by the enemies of his house, and, on the pretext of being concerned in a purely imaginary conspiracy against Ladislaus, was condemned to ], but was spared on account of his youth. In November 1457 the king died. Matthias was taken hostage by ], governor of ], a friend of the Hunyadis who aimed to raise a national king to the Magyar throne. Poděbrady treated Matthias hospitably and affianced him with his daughter Catherine, but still detained him, for safety's sake, in Prague, even after a Magyar deputation had hastened thither to offer the youth the crown. Matthias took advantage of the memory left by his father's deed, and by the general population's dislike of foreign candidates; most the barons, furthermore, considered that the young scholar would be a weak monarch in their hands. An influential section of the magnates, headed by the ] László Garai and by ], ] of ], who had been concerned in the judicial murder of Matthias's brother László, and hated the Hunyadis as semi-foreign upstarts, were fiercely opposed to Matthias's election; however, they were not strong enough to resist against Matthias's uncle ] and his 15,000 veterans. On 20 January 1458, Matthias was elected king by the ]. It was the first time in the medieval Hungarian kingdom that a member of the nobility, without dynastic ancestry and relationship, mounted the royal throne. | |||
{{Main|Hungarian–Ottoman War (1437–1442)}} | |||
] – ], 1488)]] | |||
{{Further|Battle of Hermannstadt}} | |||
The Ottomans had occupied the larger part of Serbia by the end of 1438.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=530}} In the same year, Ottoman troops{{mdash}}supported by ], ]{{mdash}}made an incursion into Transylvania, plundering Hermannstadt/Nagyszeben, ] (present-day Alba Iulia, Romania) and other towns.{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=226}} After the Ottomans laid siege to ], the last important Serbian stronghold in June 1439, ], Despot of Serbia fled to Hungary to seek military assistance.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=530}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=61}} | |||
King Albert proclaimed the general insurrection of the nobility against the Ottomans, but few armed noblemen assembled in the region of ] and were ready to fight.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=280}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=96}} A notable exception was Hunyadi,{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=96}} who made raids against the besiegers and defeated them in smaller skirmishes, which contributed to the rise of his fame.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=96}} The Ottomans captured Smederevo in August.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=61}}{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=17}} King Albert appointed the Hunyadi brothers Bans of Severin, elevating them to the rank of "true barons of the realm".{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=97}} He also mortgaged a Vlach district in Temes County to them.{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=12}} | |||
==Rise of a general== | |||
] | |||
King Albert died of ] on 27 October 1439.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=280}} His widow, ]{{mdash}}Emperor Sigismund's daughter{{mdash}}gave birth to a posthumus son, ].{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=63}} The ] offered the crown to ], ], but Elizabeth had his infant son crowned king on 15 May 1440.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=281}} However, Vladislaus accepted the Estates' offer and was also crowned king on 17 July.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=281}} During the ensuing civil war between the two kings' partisans, Hunyadi supported Vladislaus.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|pp=53–54}} Hunyadi fought against the Ottomans in Wallachia, for which King Vladislaus granted him five domains in the vicinity of his family estates on 9 August 1440.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=65}} | |||
While still a young enterprising man, Hunyadi entered the ] of ], who appreciated his qualities but was also the King's creditor on several occasions. He accompanied the monarch to ] in Sigismund's quest for the ] crown in 1410, took an active part in the ] in 1420, and in 1437 was sent south to successfully raise the Turkish siege of ]. A document describing a loan agreement of 1200 gold florins, dated from 1434 refers to him "János the Wallachian" (John the Wallachian)<ref>Molnar, Miklos : A Concise History of Hungary. p. 61</ref> For these meritorious services he received numerous landed estates and a privileged position in the royal council. His star was soon in the ascendant and in 1438 King ] found Hunyadi promoted to ]<ref name="CE"/> that lay south south of the defensible southern frontiers of Hungary; the ] and the ]/]/] complex, a province subject to constant Ottoman harassment. | |||
], ] and ], whom Hunyadi supported in the civil war of 1440–1442]] | |||
Hunyadi, together with Nicholas of Ilok, annihilated the troops of Vladislaus' opponents at ] at the very beginning of 1441.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}} Their victory effectively put an end to the civil war.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}} The grateful King appointed Hunyadi and his comrade joint ] and ] in February.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=54}} In short, the King also nominated them ''Ispáns'' of Temes County and conferred upon them the command of Belgrade and all other castles along the ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=103}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283}} | |||
Since Nicholas of Ilok spent most of his time in the royal court, in practice Hunyadi administered Transylvania and the southern borderlands alone.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=105}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=66}} Soon after his appointment, Hunyadi visited Transylvania where the child Ladislaus V's partisans had maintained a strong position.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=284}} After Hunyadi pacified Transylvania, the regions under his administration remained undisturbed by internal conflicts, enabling Hunyadi to concentrate on the defence of the borders.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=284}} By effectively defending the interests of local landowners at the royal court, Hunyadi strengthened his position in the provinces under his administration.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=72}} For instance, he obtained land grants and privileges for local noblemen from the King.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=72}} | |||
On the untimely death of Albert in 1439, Hunyadi was of the volition that Hungary was best served by a warrior king and lent his support to the candidature of young ] ] in 1440, and thus came into collision with the powerful ] ], the chief proponent of Albert's widow ] and her infant son, ]. Featuring prominently in the brief ensuing civil war, Władysław III's side was thus reinforced by Hunyadi's noticeable military abilities, and was rewarded by Władysław with the captaincy of the fortress of ], a latter dignity that he shared with ]. | |||
Hunyadi set about repairing the walls of Belgrade, which had been damaged during an Ottoman attack.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}} In retaliation for Ottoman raids in the region of the river ], he made an incursion into Ottoman territory in the summer or autumn of 1441.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=107}} He scored a pitched battle victory over Ishak Bey, the commander of Smederovo.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=20}} | |||
===First Battles with the Ottomans=== | |||
Early the next year, Bey Mezid invaded Transylvania with a force of 17,000 soldiers.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=106–107}} Hunyadi was taken by surprise and lost the first battle near ] (Sântimbru, Romania).{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}}{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=227}} Bey Mezid lay siege to Hermannstadt, but the united forces of Hunyadi and Újlaki, who had in the meantime arrived in Transylvania, forced the Ottomans to lift the siege.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}} The Ottoman forces were annihilated at Gyulafehérvár on 22 March.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}}{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=227}} | |||
The main frame of the conflict with the Turks now resided in his jurisdiction and Hunyadi soon showed and displayed extraordinary capacity in marshalling its defenses with the limited resources at his disposal. In 1441 he scored a pitched battle victory at ] over ]. The following year, not far from ] in ] he annihilated an invasion force of Ottomans that offered stern battle with an immense host, and recovered for Hungary the suzerainty of ]. In February 1450, he signed an alliance treaty with ]. | |||
], who had been an enthusiastic propagator of a new ] against the Ottomans, sent ], Cardinal ] to Hungary.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|pp=21–22}} The Cardinal arrived in May 1442 tasked with mediating a peace treaty between King Vladislaus and Dowager Queen Elisabeth.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=285}} {{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=110}} The Ottoman Sultan, ] dispatched Şihabeddin Pasha{{mdash}}the governor of Rumelia{{mdash}}to invade Transylvania with a force of 70,000.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}} The Pasha stated that the mere sight of his ] would force his enemies to run far away.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=21}} Although Hunyadi could only muster a force of 15,000 men, he inflicted a crushing defeat on the Ottomans at the ] in September.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=285}} John Hunyadi and his 15,000 men defeated the 80,000-strong army of Begler Bey Sehabeddin at Zajkány (today's ]), near the ] of the Danube river in 1442.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bánlaky |first=József |title=A magyar nemzet hadtörténelme |location=Budapest |language=Hungarian |trans-title=The Military History of the Hungarian Nation |chapter=A vaskapui diadal 1442 július havában |trans-chapter=The Triumph of the Iron Gate in July 1442 |chapter-url=https://mek.oszk.hu/09400/09477/html/0010/747.html}}</ref> Hunyadi placed ] on the princely throne of Wallachia, but Basarab's opponent Vlad Dracul returned and forced Basarab to flee in early 1443. | |||
In July 1442, an undaunted and intrepid Hunyadi proceeded march against the enemy with 15,000 Hungarian and ] irregulars against a massed formation of a third Turkish invasion force reinforced by the choicest of Ottoman military numbering 80,000 in ] sent in retaliation for subsequent defeats. Hunyadi's engagement at the ] is one of Hungary's more celebrated victories, Hunyadi's manuvuers of ], ] and ] performed superbly to the astonishment of the Turkish commander Sehabbedin, who was astounded by the smallness of the Magyar army. | |||
{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=107}} | |||
Hunyadi's victories in 1441 and 1442 made him a prominent enemy of the Ottomans and renowned throughout ].{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=285}}{{Sfn|E. Kovács|1990|p=13}} He established a vigorous offensive posture in his battles, which enabled him to counteract the numerical superiority of the Ottomans through decisive maneuver.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=108}} He employed mercenaries (many of them recently disbanded Czech Hussite troops), increasing the professionalism in his ranks {{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=108–109}} and supplementing the numerous ] mustered from local peasantry, whom he had no reservations about employing in the field.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=109}} | |||
These victories made Hunyadi a prominent enemy of the Ottomans and renowned throughout ], and was a prime motivator to undertake in 1443, along with King Władysław, the famous expedition known as the '']''. Hunyadi, at the head of the vanguard, crossed the ] through the ], captured ], defeated three Turkish ]s, and, after taking ], united with the royal army and defeated ] ] at ]. The impatience of the king and the severity of the winter then compelled him (February 1444) to return home, but not before he had utterly broken the Sultan's power in ], ], Serbia, ], and ]. | |||
==General and politician== | |||
No sooner had he regained Hungary than he received tempting offers from ] ], represented by the ] ], from ], ] of Serbia, and ], prince of Albania, to resume the war and realize his ideal of driving the Ottomans from Europe. All the preparations had been made when Murad's envoys arrived in the royal camp at ] and offered a ten years' ] on advantageous terms. Branković bribed Hunyadi -he gave him his vast estates in Hungary- to support the acceptance of the peace. Cardinal ] found a traitorous solution. The king swore that he would never give up the crusade, so all future peace and oath was automatically invalid. After this Hungary accepted the Sultan's offer and Hunyadi in Władysław's name swore on the ]s to observe them. | |||
===The "Long Campaign" (1442–1444)=== | |||
{{Main|Long campaign}} | |||
In April 1443 King Vladislaus and his barons decided to mount a major campaign against the Ottoman Empire.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=113}} With the mediation of Cardinal Cesarini, Vladislaus reached a truce with ], who had been the guardian of the child Ladislaus V.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=283, 285}} The armistice guaranteed that Frederick III would not attack Hungary in the subsequent twelve months.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=285}} | |||
Spending around 32,000 gold florins from his own treasury, Hunyadi hired more than 10,000 mercenaries.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=115}} The King also mustered troops, and reinforcements arrived from Poland and ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=115}} The King and Hunyadi departed for the campaign at the head of an army of 25–27,000 men in the autumn of 1443.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=115}} In theory, Vladislaus commanded the army, but the true leader of the campaign was Hunyadi.{{Sfn|Stavrianos|2000|p=53}} Despot Đurađ Branković joined them with a force of 8,000 men.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=115}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=55}} | |||
]'s ''Polish Chronicle''.]] | |||
] | |||
===Battle of Varna=== | |||
Two days later Cesarini received tidings that a fleet of ] ]s had set off for the ] to prevent Murad (who, crushed by his recent disasters, had retired to ]) from recrossing into Europe, and the cardinal reminded the King that he had sworn to cooperate by land if the western powers attacked the Ottomans by sea. In July the Hungarian army recrossed the frontier and advanced towards the ] coast in order to march to ] escorted by the galleys. | |||
Hunyadi commanded the vanguards and routed four smaller Ottoman forces, hindering their unification.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=116–117}} He captured ], ] and ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=117–119}}{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=548}} However, the Hungarian troops could not break through the passes of the Balkan Mountains towards ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=119}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=93}} Cold weather and the lack of supplies forced the Christian troops to stop the campaign at ].{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=286}}{{Sfn|Fine|1994|pp=548–549}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=93}} After being victorious in the ], they returned to ] in January and ] in February 1444.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=119–120}} | |||
], however, fearful of the sultan's vengeance in case of disaster, privately informed Murad of the advance of the Christian host, and prevented ] from joining it. On reaching Varna, the Hungarians found that the Venetian galleys had failed to prevent the transit of the Sultan - indeed, the ] transported the Sultan's army (and received, according to legend, one gold piece for each soldier shipped over). Hunyadi, on 10 November 1444, confronted the Ottomans with less than half the Hungarian forces. Nevertheless, victory was still possible in the ] as Hunyadi with his superb military skills managed to rout both flanks of the Sultan's army. At this point, however, king ], who up to that point had remained in the background and relinquished full leadership to Hunyadi, assumed command and with his bodyguards carried out an all-out attack on the elite troops of the Sultan, the ]. The Janissaries readily massacred the king's men, also killing the king, exhibiting his head on a pole. The king's death caused disarray in the Hungarian army, which was subsequently routed by the Ottomans; Hunyadi himself narrowly escaped. On his way home, ] of ] imprisoned Hunyadi; only the threats of the palatine of Hungary brought the ], theoretically an ally of Hunyadi against the Ottomans, to release him.<ref>{{cite web|title=National Geographic Magyarország: A várnai csata|language=Hungarian|url=http://www.geographic.hu/index.php?act=napi&rov=5&id=742|accessdate=2008-06-02}}</ref> | |||
===Battle of Varna and its aftermath (1444–1446)=== | |||
==Regent of the Kingdom of Hungary== | |||
{{Main|Battle of Varna}} | |||
===Brief personal rule=== | |||
], as depicted in the 1564 edition of ]'s ''Polish Chronicle'']] | |||
At the ] which met in February 1445 a ] consisting of five ]s was formed, with Hunyadi receiving ] and four counties bordering on the ], called the '']'' or '']'', to rule. As the anarchy resulting from the division became unmanageable, Hunyadi was elected ] of Hungary (''Regni Gubernator'') on 5 June 1446 in the name of ] and given the powers of a regent. His first act as regent was to proceed against the German king ], who refused to release Ladislaus V. After ravaging ], ], and ] and threatening ], Hunyadi's difficulties elsewhere compelled him to make a truce with Frederick for two years. | |||
Although no major Ottoman forces had been defeated, Hunyadi's "]" stirred enthusiasm throughout Christian Europe.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=286}} Pope Eugenius, ], ] and other European powers demanded a new crusade, promising financial or military support.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=56}} The formation of a "party"{{mdash}}a group of noblemen and clerics{{mdash}}under Hunyadi's leadership can be dated to this period.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=96}} Their main purpose was the defence of Hungary against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=96}} According to a letter of Đurađ Branković, Hunyadi spent more than 63,000 gold florins to hire mercenaries in the first half of the year.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=130}} An eminent representative of ] in Hungary, ] became Hunyadi's close friend around that time.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=96}} | |||
] Chronicle woodcut]] | |||
In 1448 he received a golden chain and the title of Prince from ], and immediately afterwards resumed the war with the Ottomans. He lost the two-day ] (7 October-10 1448, owing to the treachery of ], then pretender to the throne, and of his old rival Branković, who intercepted Hunyadi's planned Albanian reinforcements led by ], preventing them from ever reaching the battle. Branković also imprisoned Hunyadi for a time in the ]s of the fortress of ], but he was ransomed by his countrymen and, after resolving his differences with his powerful and numerous political enemies in Hungary, led a punitive expedition against the Serbian prince, who was forced to accept harsh terms of peace. | |||
The advance of Christian forces in Ottoman territory also encouraged the peoples of the ] to revolt in the peripheries of the Ottoman Empire.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=119}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=286}} For instance, ], an ] noble, expelled the Ottomans from ] and all other fortresses once held by his family.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|pp=548, 556}} Sultan Murad II, whose main concern was a rebellion by the ] in ], offered generous terms of peace to King Vladislaus.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=56}} He even promised to withdraw the Ottoman garrisons from Serbia, thus restoring its semi-autonomous status under Despot Đurađ Branković.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=549}} He also offered a truce for ten years.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=129}} The Hungarian envoys accepted the Sultan's offer in Edirne on 12 June 1444.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=129}} | |||
In 1450 Hunyadi went to ] to negotiate with ] ] the terms of the surrender of Ladislaus V, but no agreement could be reached. Several of John Hunyadi's enemies, including ], accused him of ] to overthrow the King. In order to defuse the increasingly volatile domestic situation, he relinquished his regency and the title of regent. | |||
Đurađ Branković, who was grateful for the restoration of his realm, donated his estates at ] (present-day Șiria, Romania) in ] to Hunyadi on 3 July.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=131}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=101–102}} Hunyadi proposed King Vladislaus to confirm the advantageous treaty, but Cardinal Cesarini urged the monarch to continue the crusade.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=102}} On 4 August Vladislaus took a solemn oath of launching a campaign against the Ottoman Empire before the end of the year even if a peace treaty were concluded.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} According to Johannes de Thurocz, the King appointed Hunyadi to sign the peace treaty on 15 August.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} In a week, Đurađ Branković mortgaged his extensive domains in the Kingdom of Hungary{{mdash}}including ], ] (present-day Mukacheve, Ukraine), and ] (present-day Baia Mare, Romania){{mdash}}to Hunyadi.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} | |||
On his return to Hungary at the beginning of 1453, Ladislaus named him count of ] and Captain General of the kingdom. The king also expanded his coat-of-arms with the so-called ''Beszterce Lions''. | |||
King Vladislaus, whom Cardinal Cesarini urged to keep his oath, decided to invade the Ottoman Empire in autumn.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=56}} Upon the Cardinal's proposal, he offered Hunyadi the crown of Bulgaria.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} | |||
===Belgrade victory and death=== | |||
The crusaders departed from Hungary on 22 September.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} They planned to advance towards the Black Sea across the Balkan Mountains.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|pp=56–57}}{{Sfn|Stavrianos|2000|p=53}} They expected that the ] fleet would hinder Sultan Murad from transferring Ottoman forces from Anatolia to the Balkans, but the ] transported the Sultan's army across the ].{{Sfn|Stavrianos|2000|p=53}} | |||
] / ] Catholic Cathedral.]] | |||
The two armies clashed near ] on 10 November.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=287}} | |||
Meanwhile, the Ottoman issue had again become acute, and, after the ] in 1453, it seemed natural that ] ] was rallying his resources in order to subjugate Hungary. His immediate objective was Nándorfehérvár (today Belgrade). Nándorfehérvár was a major castle-fortress, and a gate keeper of south Hungary. The fall of this stronghold would have opened a clear way to the heart of ]. Hunyadi arrived at the ] at the end of 1455, after settling differences with his domestic enemies. At his own expense, he restocked the supplies and arms of the fortress, leaving in it a strong garrison under the command of his brother-in-law ] and his own eldest son ]. He proceeded to form a relief army, and assembled a ] of two hundred ships. His main ally was the ] ], ], whose fiery oratory drew a large ] made up mostly of peasants. Although relatively ill-armed (most were armed with farm equipment, such as ]s and ]s) they flocked to Hunyadi and his small corps of seasoned ] and ]. | |||
Although outnumbered by two to one, the crusaders initially ruled the battlefield against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Stavrianos|2000|p=54}} However, the young King Vladislaus launched a premature attack against the ] and was killed.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}} Taking advantage of the crusaders' panic, the Ottomans annihilated their army.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Molnár|2001|p=63}} Hunyadi narrowly escaped from the battlefield, but was captured and imprisoned by Wallachian soldiers.{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|pp=10, 111}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=111}} However, Vlad Dracul set him free before long.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=111}} | |||
On 14 July 1456 the ] assembled by Hunyadi destroyed the Ottoman fleet. On 21 July, Szilágyi's forces in the fortress repulsed a fierce assault by the ]n army, and Hunyadi pursued the retreating Ottoman forces into their camp, taking advantage of the Turkish army's confused flight from the city. After fierce but brief fighting, the camp was captured, and Mehmet lifted the siege and returned to ]. A 70 year period of relative peace on Hungary's southeastern border began with his flight. However, plague broke out in Hunyadi's camp three weeks after the lifting of the siege, and he died August 11. On his deathbed, Hunyadi told his countrymen: 'Defend, my friends, Christendom and Hungary from all enemies….Do not quarrel among yourselves. If you should waste your energies in altercations, you will seal your own fate as well as dig the grave of our country.'<ref>http://www.historynet.com/ottoman-hungarian-wars-siege-of-belgrade-in-1456.htm/5</ref> He is buried in the Roman Catholic Cathedral of Gyulafehérvár (now: ]) next to his younger brother, John. Sultan Mehmet II paid him tribute:"Although he was my enemy I feel grief over his death, because the world has never seen such a man." | |||
At the next ], which assembled in April 1445, the Estates decided that they would unanimously acknowledge the child Ladislaus V's rule if King Vladislaus, whose fate was still uncertain, had not arrived in Hungary by the end of May.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=288}} The Estates also elected seven "]", including Hunyadi, each being responsible for the restoration of internal order in the territory allotted to them.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=67}} Hunyadi was assigned to administer the lands east of the river ].{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=146}} Here he possessed at least six castles and owned lands in about ten counties, which made him the most powerful baron in the region under his rule.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=149}} | |||
====The Noon Bell==== | |||
Pope Callixtus III ordered the bells of every European church to be rung every day at noon, as a call for believers to pray for the defenders of the city. However, in many countries (like England and Spanish kingdoms), news of the victory arrived before the order, and the ringing of the church bells at noon thus transformed into a commemoration of the victory. The Popes didn't withdraw the order, and Catholic (and the older Protestant) churches still ring the noon bell in the Christian world to this day. | |||
Hunyadi was planning to organize a new crusade against the Ottoman Empire.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=154}} For this purpose, he barraged the Pope and other Western monarchs with letters in 1445.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=154}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=120}} In September he had a meeting, at ], with Waleran de Wavrin (nephew of the chronicler ]), the captain of eight Burgundian galleys, and ] of Wallachia, who had seized small fortresses along the ] from the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Vaughan|2002|p=272}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=154}}{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=109}} However, he did not risk a clash with the Ottoman garrisons stationed on the south bank of the river, and returned to Hungary before winter.{{Sfn|Vaughan|2002|p=272}} Vlad Dracul soon concluded a peace treaty with the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=109}} | |||
] depicted on the '']'', the origin of the name ''Corvinus''.]] | |||
===Governorship (1446–1453)=== | |||
] (in present-day ], Romania)]] | |||
] | |||
The Estates of the realm proclaimed Hunyadi regent, bestowing the title "governor" upon him on 6 June 1446.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=288}}{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=49}} His election was primarily promoted by the lesser nobility, but Hunyadi had by that time become one of the richest barons of the kingdom.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=127–128}} His domains covered an area exceeding {{convert|800000|ha|acre}}.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=128}} Hunyadi was one of the few contemporaneous barons who spent a significant part of their revenues to finance the wars against the Ottomans, thus bearing a large share of the cost of fighting for many years.{{Sfn|Makkai|1994|p=227}} | |||
As governor, Hunyadi was authorized to exercise most ]s for the period of King Ladislaus V's minority.{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=67}} For instance, he could make land grants, but only up to the size of 32 peasant holdings.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=288}} Hunyadi attempted to pacify the border regions.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}} Soon after his election, he launched an unsuccessful campaign against ].{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=290}} Count Ulrich administered ] with the title ] (which he had arbitrarily adopted) and refused to renounce of it in favor of Hunyadi's appointee.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=290}} Hunyadi could not force him to submit.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=290}} | |||
Hunyadi persuaded ]{{mdash}}a Czech commander who controlled the northern regions (in present-day Slovakia){{mdash}}to sign an armistice for three years on 13 September.{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=49}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}} However, Jiskra did not keep the truce, and armed conflicts continued.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}} In November Hunyadi proceeded against Frederick III of Germany, who had refused to release Ladislaus V and seized ], ] and other towns along the western border.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|pp=288–289}} Hunyadi's troops plundered Austria, ], ] and ], but no decisive battle was fought.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=288}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=137}} A truce with Frederick III was signed on 1 June 1447.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=289}} Although Frederick renounced of ], his position as the minor King's guardian was confirmed.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=289}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=138}} The Estates of the realm were disappointed and the Diet elected ]{{mdash}}a leader of Hunyadi's opponents{{mdash}}Palatine in September 1447.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=57}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=167}} | |||
Hunyadi accelerated his negotiations, which had been commenced in the previous year, with ], ] and ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=167}} He even offered the crown to Alfonso in exchange for the King's participation in an anti-Ottoman crusade and the confirmation of his position as governor.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=167}} However, King Alfonso refrained from signing an agreement.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=168}} | |||
Hunyadi invaded Wallachia and dethroned Vlad Dracul in December 1447.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=289}}{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=109}} According to the contemporaneous Polish chronicler ], Hunyadi had "the very man he promised to make voivode" blinded, and planned "to appropriate"<ref>''The Annals of Jan Długosz'' (A.D. 1447), p. 501.</ref> Wallachia for himself.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=142}} Hunyadi styled himself "voivode of the Transalpine land" and referred to the Wallachian town, ] as "our fortress" in a letter of 4 December.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=141–142}} It is without doubt that Hunyadi installed a new voivode in Wallachia, but modern historians debate whether the new voivode was ] (to whom Hunyadi referred as his relative in a letter) or Dan (who seems to have been a son of Basarab II).{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=109}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=141–143}} {{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=152}} In February 1448 Hunyadi sent an army to ] to support the pretender ] in seizing the throne.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=144}} In exchange, Peter acknowledged Hunyadi's suzerainty and contributed to the installation of a Hungarian garrison in the fort of ] on the Lower Danube.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=144}} | |||
Hunyadi made a new attempt to expel Count Ulrich of Celje from Slavonia, but could not defeat him.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=290}} In June Hunyadi and the Count reached an agreement, which confirmed Count Ulrich's position of Ban in Slavonia.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=290}} In short time Hunyadi sent his envoys to the two most prominent Albanian leaders{{mdash}}Scanderbeg and his father-in-law, ]{{mdash}}to seek their assistance against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=152}} Pope Eugenius suggested that the anti-Ottoman campaign should be postponed.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=168}} However, Hunyadi stated, in a letter dated 8 September 1448, that he "have had enough of our men enslaved, our women raped, wagons loaded with the severed heads of our people" and expressed his determination to expel "the enemy from Europe".{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=168}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} In the same letter, he explained his military strategy to the Pope, stating that "ower is always greater when used in attack rather than in defence".{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=150}} | |||
]'s palace in the ]{{mdash}}Hunyadi was kept prisoner in this fort after his defeat in the ] in 1448]] | |||
Hunyadi departed for the new campaign at the head of an army of 16,000 soldiers in September 1448.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} About 8,000 soldiers from Wallachia also joined his campaign.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=150}} For Đurađ Branković refused to assist the crusaders, Hunyadi treated him as the Ottoman's ally and his army marched through Serbia plundering the countryside.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=554}} In order to prevent the unification of the armies of Hunyadi and Skanderbeg, Sultan Murad II joined battle with Hunyadi on ] on 17 October.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} The ], which lasted for three days, ended with the crusaders' catastrophic defeat.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}} Around 17,000 Hungarian and Wallachian soldiers were killed or captured and Hunyadi could hardly escape from the battlefield.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} On his way home, Hunyadi was captured by Đurađ Branković who kept him prisoner in the fort of Smederevo.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=174}} The Despot was initially contemplating to surrender Hunyadi to the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=174}} However, the Hungarian barons and prelates who assembled at ] persuaded him to make peace with Hunyadi.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=174}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} According to the treaty, Hunyadi was obliged to pay a ransom of 100,000 gold florins and to return all the domains that he had acquired from Đurađ Branković.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=174}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} Hunyadi's oldest son, ] was sent to the Despot as a hostage.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=168}} Hunyadi was released, and he returned to Hungary in late December 1448.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=174}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=168}} | |||
His defeat and his humiliating treaty with the Despot weakened Hunyadi's position.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=58}} The prelates and the barons confirmed the treaty and assigned Branković to negotiate with the Ottomans, and Hunyadi resigned from the office of Voivode of Transylvania.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=175}} He invaded the lands controlled by John Jiskra and his Czech mercenaries in the autumn of 1449, but could not defeat them.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=175–176}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=172}} On the other hand, the rulers of two neighboring countries{{mdash}}], ], and ], ]{{mdash}}concluded a treaty with Hunyadi, promising that they would remain loyal to him.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=177}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=173}} In early 1450 Hunyadi and Jiskra signed a peace treaty in ], acknowledging that many prosperous towns in ]{{mdash}}including Pressburg/Pozsony (present-day Bratislava, Slovakia) and ] (present-day Košice, Slovakia){{mdash}}remained under Jiskra's rule.{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=177–178}} | |||
Upon Hunyadi's demand, the Diet of March 1450 ordered the confiscation of Branković's estates in the Kingdom of Hungary.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=173}} Hunyadi and his troops departed for Serbia, forcing Branković to release his son.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=178}} Hunyadi, Ladislaus Garai and Nicholas Újlaki concluded a treaty on 17 July 1450, promising each other assistance to preserve their offices in case King Ladislaus V returned to Hungary.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=178}} In October Hunyadi made peace with Frederick III of Germany, which confirmed the German monarch's position as guardian of Ladislaus V for further eight years.{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=178}} With the mediation of Újlaki and other barons, Hunyadi also concluded a peace treaty with Branković in August 1451, which authorized Hunyadi to redeem the debated domains for 155,000 gold florins.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=181}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}} Hunyadi launched a military expedition against Jiskra, but the Czech commander routed the Hungarian troops near ] (present-day Lučenec, Slovakia) on 7 September.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}}{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}} With the mediation of Branković, Hungary and the Ottoman Empire signed a three-year truce on 20 November.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=176}} | |||
The Austrian noblemen rose up in open rebellion against Frederick III of Germany, who governed the duchy in the name of Ladislaus the Posthumus at the turn of 1451 and 1452.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}}{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=68}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=180}} The leader of the rebellion, Ulrich Eizinger sought the assistance of the Estates of Ladislaus's two other realms, Bohemia and Hungary.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=292}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=180}} The Diet of Hungary, which assembled in Pressburg/Pozsony in February 1452, sent a delegation to ].{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}} On 5 March the Austrian and Hungarian Estates jointly requested Frederick III to renounce the guardianship of their young sovereign.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=181}} Frederick, who had been crowned ], initially refused to satisfy their demand.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=182}} Hunyadi convoked a Diet to discuss the situation, but before the Diet made any decision the united troops of the Austrian and Bohemian Estates forced the Emperor to hand over the young monarch to Count Ulrich of Celje on 4 September.{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=182}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=59}} In the meantime, Hunyadi had met Jiskra in ] (present-day Kremnica, Slovakia) where they concluded a treaty on 24 August.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}}{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}} According to the treaty, Jiskra retained ] (present-day Levica, Slovakia) and his right to collect the "]"{{mdash}}a custom duty{{mdash}}at ] (present-day Kežmarok, Slovakia) and ] (present-day Stará Ľubovňa, Slovakia).{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=291}} {{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|pp=50, 318}} In September Hunyadi sent envoys to ] and promised military assistance to the ] ].{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=99}} In exchange, he demanded two Byzantine forts on the Black Sea, ] and ], but the Emperor refused.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|pp=99–100}} | |||
Hunyadi convoked a Diet to Buda, but the barons and the prelates preferred to visit Ladislaus V in Vienna in November.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=182}} At the Diet of Vienna, Hunyadi renounced the regency, but the King appointed him "captain general of the kingdom" on 30 January 1453.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=182}}{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=293}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=178}} The King even authorized Hunyadi to keep the royal castles and royal revenues that he possessed at that time.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=293}} Hunyadi also received ] (present-day Bistrița, Romania){{mdash}}a district of the ]{{mdash}}with the title "]" from Ladislaus V, which was the first grant of a hereditary title in the Kingdom of Hungary.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=293}}{{Sfn|Bak|1994|p=68}} | |||
===Conflicts and reconciliations (1453–1455)=== | |||
], ] and ], and ]]] | |||
In a letter of 28 April 1453, ]{{mdash}}the future Pope Pius II{{mdash}}stated that King Ladislaus V's realms were administered by "three men": Hungary by Hunyadi, Bohemia by George of Poděbrady, and Austria by Ulrich of Celje.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=185}} However, Hunyadi's position gradually weakened, because even many of his former allies considered his acts to retain his power with suspicion.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=294}} The citizens of Beszterce forced him to issue a charter confirming their traditional liberties on 22 July.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=179}} Hunyadi's longtime friend, Nicholas Újlaki made a formal alliance with Palatine Ladislaus Garai and ] Ladislaus Pálóci, declaring their intention to restore royal authority in September.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=295}} | |||
Hunyadi accompanied the young King to Prague and concluded a treaty with Ulrich Eizinger (who had expelled Ulrich of Celje from Austria) and George of Poděbrady at the end of the year.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=189–190}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}} Having returned to Hungary, Hunyadi convoked, in the name of the King but without his authorization, a Diet in order to make preparations for a war on the Ottomans who had in May 1453 ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=190–191}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}} The Diet ordered the mobilization of the armed forces and Hunyadi's position of supreme commander was confirmed for a year, but many of the decisions was never carried out.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=191–192}} For instance, the Diet obliged all landowners to equip four cavalrymen and two infantrymen for every hundred peasant households on their domains, but this law was never applied in practise.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=59}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}} | |||
Ladislaus V convoked a new Diet which assembled in March or April.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=192}} At the Diet, his envoys{{mdash}}three Austrian noblemen{{mdash}}announced that the King was planning to administer royal revenues through officials elected by the Diet and to set up two councils (also with members elected by the Estates) in order to assist him in governing the country.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=294}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=182}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=192–193}} However, the Diet refused to ratify most of the royal proposals, only the establishment of a royal council consisting of six prelates, six barons and six noblemen was accepted.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=195}} Hunyadi, who was well aware that the King attempted to limit his authority, demanded an explanation, but the King denied that he had knowledge of his representatives' act.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=183}} On the other hand, Jiskra returned to Hungary upon Ladislaus V's request and the King entrusted him with the administration of the mining towns.{{Sfn|Bartl|Čičaj|Kohútova|Letz|2002|p=50}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=183}} In response, Hunyadi persuaded Ulrich of Celje to cede him a number of royal fortresses (and the lands pertaining to them) which had been mortgaged in ].{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=196}} | |||
The Ottoman Sultan, ] invaded Serbia in May 1454 and laid siege to Smederevo, thus violating the truce of November 1451 between his empire and Hungary.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=183}} Hunyadi decided to intervene and started to assemble his armies at Belgrade, forcing the Sultan to lift the siege and leave Serbia in August.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=198}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=184–185}} However, an Ottoman force of 32,000 strong continued to pillage Serbia up until Hunyadi routed them at ] on 29 September.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=294}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=198, 231}} He made a raid against the Ottoman Empire and destroyed Vidin before returning to Belgrade.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=110}} | |||
Emperor Frederick III convoked the ] to ] to discuss the possibilities of a new crusade against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=184}}{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=124}} At the conference, where the envoys of the Hungarian, Polish, Aragonese and Burgundian monarchs were also present, no final decisions were made, because the Emperor refrained from a sudden attack against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=184}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=199}} According to Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini, the Emperor hindered Hunyadi from participating at the meeting.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=199}} In contrast with the Emperor, the new Pope, ] was a fierce supporter of the crusade.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=201}} | |||
King Ladislaus V visited ] in February 1456.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|pp=294–295}} Ulrich of Celje, who accompanied the King to Buda, confirmed his former alliance with Ladislaus Garai and Nicholaus Újlaki.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=203}} The three barons turned against Hunyadi and accused him of abusing his authority.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=295}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=184}} A new Ottoman invasion against Serbia promoted a new reconciliation between Hunyadi and his opponents, and Hunyadi resigned the administration of part of the royal revenues and three royal fortresses, including Buda.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=295}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=185}} On the other hand, Hunyadi, Garai and Újlaki made an agreement that they would refrain the King from employing foreigners in the royal administration in June 1455.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=203}} Hunyadi and Count Ulrich were also reconciled in next month, when Hunyadi's younger son, ] and the Count's daughter, Elizabeth were engaged.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=186}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|pp=204–205}} | |||
===Belgrade victory and death (1455–1456)=== | |||
] (1468)]] | |||
] / ] Catholic Cathedral.]] | |||
Envoys from ] (Dubrovnik, Croatia) were the first to have informed the Hungarian leaders of the preparations that Mehmed II had made for an invasion against Hungary.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=206}} In a letter addressed to Hunyadi, whom he styled as "the ] of our time", the papal legate, ] made it clear that there was not much chance of foreign assistance against the Ottomans.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=188}} With the Ottomans' support, Vladislav II of Wallachia even plundered the southern parts of Transylvania in late 1455.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=191}} | |||
], a ] ] and papal ], started to preach an anti-Ottoman crusade in Hungary in February 1456.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=208}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=189}} The Diet ordered the mobilization of the armed forces in April, but most barons failed to obey and continued to war against their local adversaries, including the Hussites in Upper Hungary.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=208}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=189}} Before departing from Transylvania against the Ottomans, Hunyadi had to face a rebellion by the Vlachs in ].{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=191}} He also supported ]{{mdash}}a son of the late ]{{mdash}}to seize the Wallachian throne from Vladislav II.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=191}}{{Sfn|Bolovan|Constantiniu|Michelson|Pop|1997|p=113}} | |||
King Ladislaus V left Hungary for Vienna in May.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=190}} Hunyadi hired 5,000 Hungarian, Czech and Polish mercenaries and sent them to Belgrade, which was the key fortress of the defense of Hungary's southern frontiers.{{Sfn|Pop|2005|p=296}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=190}} The Ottoman forces marched through Serbia and approached ] (modern-day Belgrade) in June.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=139}} A crusade made up mostly of peasants from the nearby counties, who had been roused by John of Capistrano's fiery oratory, also started to assemble at the fortress in the first days of July.{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=209}} The Ottoman ], which was personally commanded by Sultan Mehmed II, began with the bombardment of the walls on 4 July.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=296}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=190}} | |||
Hunyadi proceeded to form a relief army, and assembled a ] of 200 ships on the Danube.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=195}} The ] assembled by Hunyadi destroyed the Ottoman fleet on 14 July.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=195}}{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=60}} This triumph prevented the Ottomans from completing the blockade, enabling Hunyadi and his troops to enter the fortress.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=141}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=196}} The Ottomans started a general assault on 21 July.{{Sfn|Babinger|1978|p=141}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=197}} With the assistance of crusaders who were continuously arriving to the fortress, Hunyadi repulsed the fierce attacks by the Ottomans and broke into their camp on 22 July.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|pp=197–199}}{{Sfn|Stavrianos|2000|pp=61–62}} Although wounded during the fights, Sultan Mehmed II, decided to resist, but a riot in his camp forced him to lift the siege and retreat from Belgrade during the night.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=60}} | |||
The crusaders' victory over the Sultan who had conquered Constantinople generated enthusiasm throughout Europe.{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=199}} Processions to celebrate Hunyadi's triumph were made in Venice and ].{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=199}} However, in the crusaders' camp unrest was growing, because the peasants denied that the barons had played any role in the victory.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=296}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=217}} In order to avoid an open rebellion, Hunyadi and Capistrano disbanded the crusaders' army.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=296}}{{Sfn|Teke|1980|p=217}} | |||
Meanwhile, a plague had broken out and killed many people in the crusaders' camp.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=296}} Hunyadi was also taken ill and died near Zimony (present-day ], Serbia) on 11 August.{{Sfn|Cartledge|2011|p=60}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=199}} He was buried in the Roman Catholic ] in Gyulafehérvár (Alba Iulia).{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=200}} | |||
{{Blockquote| ''governed the country with an iron rod, as they say, and while the king was away he was regarded as his equal. After routing the Turks at Belgrade , he survived for a brief time before dying of disease. When he was ill, they say that he forbade the ] to be brought to him, declaring that it was unworthy for a king to enter the house of a servant. Although his strength was failing, he ordered himself to be carried out to church, where he made his ], received the divine ], and surrendered his soul to God in the arms of the priests. Fortunate soul to have arrived in Heaven as both herald and author of the heroic action at Belgrade.''|]: ''Europe''<ref>''Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Europe'' (ch. 1.10.), p. 60.</ref>}} | |||
==Family== | |||
In 1432, Hunyadi married ] (c. 1410–1483), a ] noblewoman.{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=23}}{{Sfn|Mureşanu|2001|p=49}} John Hunyadi had two children, ] and ].{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=23}}{{Sfn|Kubinyi|2008|p=25}} The former was executed on the order of King Ladislaus V for the murder of ], a relative of the king.{{Sfn|Engel|2001|p=297}}{{Sfn|Tanner|2009|p=49}} The latter was elected king on 20 January 1458, Matthias after Ladislaus V's death. It was the first time in the history of the Kingdom of Hungary that a member of the nobility, without dynastic ancestry and relationship, mounted the royal throne.{{Sfn|Tanner|2009|p=50}} | |||
==Legacy== | ==Legacy== | ||
], ], Hungary]] | |||
The rise of ] has led to ] images of John Hunyadi in the discourse of several local nationalities – each in its own way has claimed him as their own, although he lived in and fought for Hungary and was a Governor of the Hungarian Kingdom. | |||
===The noon bell=== | |||
Along with his son ], John is considered a Hungarian national hero and praised as its defender against the Ottoman threat. He was born in and had a career in the ], Hunyadi was a member of the Hungarian aristocracy and a subject of the ]. His whole life was dedicated to the Hungarian and Christian cause; he married a Hungarian noblewoman (Erzsébet Szilágyi); and he reared his children as Magyars.<ref name=Defender>{{cite web|url=http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/hunspir/hsp16.htm|title=János Hunyadi:Defender of Christendom - Hunyadi's Origin Contested|work=Corvinus Library}}</ref> He no doubt was born in the ] faith, which his father probably had already professed. He has not only become member of the Hungarian nobility but has also risen according to their deserts to the highest positions in the land.<ref name=Sketches>{{cite book|last=Lukinich|first=Imre|title=A History of Hungary in Biographical Sketches|publisher=Ayer Publishing}}</ref> John Hunyadi is mentioned in ], a poem which is considered a "second anthem" of Hungary. | |||
] ordered the bells of every European church to be rung every day at noon, as a call for believers to pray for the Christian defenders of the city of Belgrade.<ref> (see in Chapter 6)</ref> The practice of ] is traditionally attributed to the international commemoration of the Belgrade victory and to the order of Pope Callixtus III.<ref>{{Cite book | author = Kerny, Terézia | title =The Hungarian Quarterly|chapter=The Renaissance – Four Times Over. Exhibitions Commemorating Matthias’s Accession to the Throne | issue=190/2008| publisher = Society of the Hungarian Quarterly | location =], ] | year = 2008 | pages =79–90 | quote = On July 22, 1456, John Hunyadi won a decisive victory at Belgrade over the armies of Sultan Mehmed II. Hunyadi’s feat—carried out with a small standing army combined with peasants rallied to fight the infidel by the Franciscan friar St John of Capistrano—had the effect of putting an end to Ottoman attempts on Hungary and Western Europe for the next seventy years, and is considered to have been one of the most momentous victories in Hungarian military history. The bells ringing at noon throughout Christendom are, to this day, a daily commemoration of John Hunyadi’s victory.| issn = 0441-4470 | oclc = 1752412 | chapter-url =http://www.ceeol.com/aspx/issuedetails.aspx?issueid=36917033-77c7-4622-8f76-dae90f531363&articleId=ca7d4a8b-cee0-4d8b-beab-fb1536ba3597 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|author= John Hunyadi|title= Hungary in American History Textbooks|url=http://www.hungarianhistory.com/lib/hunyadi/hu01.htm|website=Corvinus Library: Hungarian History|access-date=26 May 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://nq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/CLXVII/sep08/171-d |title=Welcome to nginx! |website=nq.oxfordjournals.org |access-date=2 February 2022 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120717060247/http://nq.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/CLXVII/sep08/171-d |archive-date=17 July 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
] depicted on the '']'', the origin of the name ''Corvinus''.]] | |||
The custom still exists even among Protestant and Orthodox congregations. In the history of Oxford University, the victory was welcomed with a peal of bells and great celebrations in England too. Hunyadi sent a special courier (among others), Erasmus Fullar, to Oxford with the news of the victory.<ref>Imre Lukinich: ''A History of Hungary in Biographical Sketches'' (page: 109.)</ref> | |||
On his deathbed Hunyadi said ''Defend, my friends, Christendom and Hungary from all enemies... Do not quarrel among yourselves. If you should waste your energies in altercations, you will seal your own fate as well as dig the grave of our country.''<ref>{{cite book|last=Sisa|first=Stephen |title=The spirit of Hungary: a panorama of Hungarian history and culture|publisher=Vista Books (original from ])|date=1990|pages=56|edition=2}}</ref> | |||
===The national hero=== | |||
Hunyadi has an important place in the history of ] too. He is remembered in Romania as a national hero mostly due to his alleged Romanian origin and his role as Voivode of Transylvania (a region at the time part of the ] now part of ]). Hunyadi was also responsible for establishing the careers of both ] and the controversial ]. Probably he spoke the ] only during his youth, because for most of his adult life, he was in a ]-speaking environment. John Hunyadi is mentioned in the ]. | |||
Along with his son ], Hunyadi is considered a Hungarian national hero and praised as its defender against the Ottoman threat.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Volume 7 of World and Its Peoples: Europe|publisher=]|year=2009|pages=891|isbn=978-0-7614-7883-6|quote=In the war, Janos Hunyadi (1387–1456), subsequently a Hungarian national hero, emerged to lead Hungary's political life.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Shaw|first=Stanford Jay|title=History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, Volume 1|publisher=]|year=1976|pages=|isbn=978-0-521-29163-7|quote=Hunyadi had suddenly risen as the great Hungarian national hero as a result of his victories over the Turks in 1442.|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofottoman00stan/page/51}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Dupuy|first=Richard Ernest |title=The encyclopedia of military history from 3500 B.C. to the present|publisher=], original from ]|year=1986|pages=435|isbn=978-0-06-181235-4|quote= John Hunyadi, the national hero of Hungary, and his son Mathias Corvinus, who reigned as King of Hungary}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Matthews|first=John P. C.|title=Explosion: the Hungarian Revolution of 1956|year= 2007|publisher=Hippocrene Books|isbn=978-0-7818-1174-3|quote=One of the most powerful personalities in Hungarian history, Hunyadi established a national unity and order which transcended privileges and special interests and succeeded in raising Hungary to the status of a great power.|pages=73–74}}</ref> | |||
] writes that ''Hunyadi did not increase so much the glory of the Hungarians, but especially the glory of the Romanians among whom he was born.<ref>http://books.google.com/books?cd=1&id=edFBAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22In+his+Historia+de+Europa%2C+Pope+Pius+II+states+%22&q=%22In+his+Historia+de+Europa%2C+Pope+Pius+II+states+%22#search_anchor</ref><ref>http://books.google.com/books?q=%22+Iancu+of+Hunedoara%29+whose+name+overshadows+all+others%2C+has+enhanced+the+glory+not+so+much+of+the+Hungarians%2C+but+of+the+Romanians%2C+out+of+whom+he+came+%22&btnG=Search+Books</ref><ref>http://www.scribd.com/doc/12693963/ioan-aurel-pop-istoria-transilvaniei-medievale| page 82</ref><ref>http://books.google.ro/books?id=W1M_AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA89&lpg=PA89&dq=%22non+tam+Hungaris+quam+Valachis+ex+quibus+natus+erat+gloriam+auxit%22&source=bl&ots=cJ2ffvfW1G&sig=mBd_mfi71EFTefWjcDvVyZXgOSg&hl=ro&ei=NW_NS7ekMs2LOMzLrdcP&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&#v=onepage&q=%22non%20tam%20Hungaris%20quam%20Valachis%20ex%20quibus%20natus%20erat%20gloriam%20auxit%22&f=false</ref> | |||
Romanian historiography adopted Hunyadi and gives him a place of importance in the ] too.{{Sfn|Boia|2001|pp=135–136}} However, Romanian national consciousness did not embrace him to the extent that Hungarian national conscience did.{{Sfn|Boia|2001|pp=135–136}} John Hunyadi, a Hungarian hero, was subordinated to the ideology of ] in the era of Ceaușescu and transmuted into a hero of ].<ref name="Petrescu">{{Cite web |url=http://www.eurhistxx.de/spip.php%3Farticle78&lang=en.html |title=Rethinking National Identity after National-Communism? The case of Romania (by Cristina Petrescu, University of Bucharest) |publisher=www.eurhistxx.de |access-date=3 April 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140305225844/http://www.eurhistxx.de/spip.php%3Farticle78%26lang%3Den.html |archive-date=5 March 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | |||
In Bulgarian folklore, the memory of Hunyadi was preserved in the epic song hero character of ''Yankul(a) Voivoda'', along with ''Sekula Detentse'', a fictitious hero perhaps inspired by Hunyadi's nephew, János Székely.<ref name="Балкански 1996 102–103"/> | |||
Pope Pius II writes that "Hunyadi did not increase so much the glory of the Hungarians, but especially the glory of the Romanians among whom he was born."<ref>{{Cite book |title=The making of the Romanian national unitary state |last1=C. Giurescu|first1= Dinu|last2=C. Giurescu|first2=Constantin|year=1980 |publisher=Meridiane Pub. House |page=60 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=edFBAAAAYAAJ&q=%22In+his+Historia+de+Europa%2C+Pope+Pius+II+states+%22 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Transylvania in the history of Romania: an historical outline |last1=C. Giurescu|first1=Constantin|year=1969 |publisher=Garnstone Pub. House |page=82 |isbn=978-0900391408|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FLpnAAAAMAAJ&q=%22+Iancu+of+Hunedoara%29+whose+name+overshadows+all+others,+has+enhanced+the+glory+not+so+much+of+the+Hungarians,+but+of+the+Romanians,+out+of+whom+he+came+%22 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Istoria Transilvaniei medievale: de la etnogeneza românilor până la Minai Viteazul |last=Aurel Pop |first=loan |year=1997 |publisher=Presa Universitară Clujeană |location=] |language=ro |isbn=973-9261-24-8 |page=82 |url=https://www.scribd.com/doc/12693963/ioan-aurel-pop-istoria-transilvaniei-medievale }}{{Dead link|date=August 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Rerum Germanicarum Scriptores aliquot insignes |last=Burkhard Gotthelf Struve |year=1717 |volume=2|page= 89|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W1M_AAAAcAAJ&q=%22non+tam+Hungaris+quam+Valachis+ex+quibus+natus+erat+gloriam+auxit%22&pg=PA89 }}</ref> | |||
Among John's noted qualities, is his regional primacy in recognizing the insufficiency and unreliability of the ], instead regularly employing large ]. His notable contribution to the development of the science of European warfare included the emphasis on ] and ] in place of over-reliance on ]s and ]s. | |||
The French writer and diplomat ] described Hunyadi as "a very valiant gentleman, called the White Knight of Wallachia, a person of great honour and prudence, who for a long time had governed the kingdom of Hungary, and had gained several battles over the Turks".<ref name=Commynes>{{Cite book|last=Scoble|first=Andrew Richard|title=The Memoirs of Philippe De Commynes, Lord of Argenton (Volume 2); Containing the Histories of Louis Xi and Charles Viii, Kings of France|page=87|isbn=978-1-150-90258-1}}</ref> | |||
His ], strategic, and tactical skills allowed him to serve his country well. After his death, ] stated that "the light of the world has passed away", considering his defense of Christendom against the Ottoman threat. The same pope ordered the ] to be rung for the memory of Hunyadi's victory in ], and to mark the resistance to ]ic progression inside Europe. | |||
] wrote in his work ''Annales omnium temporum'' (1490–1492) that John Hunyadi was commonly called "Ianco"' (''„Ioanne Huniate, Ianco vulgo cognominator''). In chronicles written by ] authors (such as ] and ]) he is called „Ianco/Iango", „Iancou/Iangou", „Iancos/Iangos", „Iancoula/Iangoula", „Gianco/Giango" and „Ghiangou"{{citation needed|date=December 2022}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
], made by József Marastoni.]] | |||
{{Reflist|2}} | |||
Byzantine literature treated Hunyadi as a saint: | |||
{{Blockquote| | |||
<poem>First, I glorify the Emperor of Hellas | |||
who Alexander the Macedon, the son of Olympias. | |||
The Christian Emperor, who is the peak and the root | |||
and found the cross, the mighty Constantine. | |||
and the third one is the absolutely marvelous Emperor John. | |||
How to write a tribute for him | |||
and should my mind how rise to exalted praise? | |||
Because like the two Emperors mentioned above | |||
I also pay such respect to the above Emperor. | |||
It is worthy and appropriate that the Church of Rome | |||
and the whole generation of Eastern and Western Christians | |||
respectfully draw a full memory of the present. | |||
Who became famous in the battles of wars | |||
the brave and the timid ones and all the generations, I say, | |||
to fall before John of Hungary today, | |||
glorify him as a knight | |||
glorify him today as an Emperor, | |||
together with the ancient, mighty, and brave Samson, | |||
with the terrible Alexander and the mighty Constantine. | |||
I glorify the evangelists, I also glorify the prophets, | |||
and the mighty Saints fighting for Christ, | |||
and among them, I glorify Emperor John.</poem> | |||
|Greek poem on the Battle of Varna<ref>Moravcsik, Gyula: Magyar-görög tanulmányok 1 – Görög költemény a várnai csatáról (page 16, line 17–38) http://real-eod.mtak.hu/7843/2/MTA_Konyvek_124140.pdf</ref>}} | |||
] at the remains of the ], ], Serbia]] | |||
]]] | |||
Hunyadi was "recognised as being Hungarian..." and "frequently called Ugrin Janko, 'Janko the Hungarian'" in the Serbian and Croatian societies of the 15th century,{{Sfn|Varga|1982|p=66}} while another ] makes him of Serbian origin.{{Sfn|Chadwick|Chadwick|2010|pp=316–317}} According to a '']'' (a ] popular poem), he was the son of Despot Stefan Lazarević and Stefan's alleged wife, a girl from ]/Nagyszeben (present-day Sibiu, Romania).{{Sfn|Chadwick|Chadwick|2010|p=317}} Actually, the Despot did not father any children.{{Sfn|Fine|1994|p=523}} He is also portrayed as an ardent supporter of the ] of Orthodox peoples.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8LkrAQAAIAAJ&q=iancu+de |title = Studia Universitatis Babeș-Bolyai: Historia|last1 = Babeș-Bolyai|first1 = Universitatea|year = 1999}}</ref> | |||
In Bulgarian folklore, the memory of Hunyadi was preserved in the epic song hero character of ''Yankul(a) Voivoda'', along with ''Sekula Detentse'', a fictitious hero perhaps inspired by Hunyadi's nephew, Thomas Székely.<ref name="Балкански 1996 102–103">{{Cite book|last=Балкански|first=Тодор |title=Трансилванските (седмиградските) българи. Етнос. Език. Етнонимия. Ономастика. Просопографии|publisher=ИК Знак 94 Велико Търново|year=1996|pages=102–103|edition=1}}</ref> | |||
He was subsidiary to ] as the role model for the fictional character of ], the epic romance written by ], published in Valencia in 1490. They both shared, for instance, the device of a raven on their shield. | |||
] was the nephew of John Hunyadi.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y4EsAQAAIAAJ&q=iancu+de |title = The History of Transylvania: De la 1541 Până la 1711|isbn = 978-9737784063|last1 = Bărbulescu|first1 = Mihai|year = 2005| publisher=Romanian Cultural Institute }}</ref> | |||
In 1515, the English printer Wynkyn de Worde published a long metrical romance called ''''Capystranus'''', a graphic account of the defeat of the Turks.{{Sfn|Wheatcroft|2009|page=56}} | |||
In 1791, ] produced a new play called ''''Huniades or The Siege of Belgrade'''', which played to a packed house in the King's Theatre, ].{{Sfn|Wheatcroft|2009|page=56}} | |||
] in ], Romania is named after him.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.iancuhd.ro/scurt-istoric|title=Scurt istoric | Colegiul Național Iancu de Hunedoara|access-date=9 June 2021|archive-date=18 June 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210618214601/https://www.iancuhd.ro/scurt-istoric|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery class="center" widths="300" heights="300"> | |||
File:Nádasdy Mausoleum - Hunyadi János.jpg|John Hunyadi (], 1664) | |||
File:Hunyadi Janos P9300275-lev-1000.jpg|Statue of John Hunyadi in the ] in ], ] (made by István Tóth in 1903) | |||
File:Millenniumi Emlékmű3.jpg|Statue of John Hunyadi at the ], ], ] (made by Ede Margó in 1906) | |||
File:Statutes of Julian Cesarini, John Hunyadi and John of Capistrano in the Szeged Pantheon.jpg|Statutes of ], John Hunyadi and ] in ], ] (made by Ferenc Sidló in 1930) | |||
File:Hunyadi Pátzay Pécs.JPG|Statue of John Hunyadi in ], ] (made by Pál Pátzay in 1956) | |||
File:Hunyadi János Szeged.jpg|Relief of John Hunyadi on the pedestal of the statue of ] in ], ] (made by Gábor Józsa in 2001) | |||
</gallery> | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist|3}} | |||
{{Commons category|John Hunyadi}} | |||
*{{1911}} | |||
== Sources == | |||
*Sources cited by the ''Encyclopædia Britannica'': | |||
=== Primary sources === | |||
**R.N. Bain, "The Siege of Belgrade, 1456", in ''Eng. Hist. Rev.'', 1892. | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
**], ''Rerum ungaricarum libri xlv, editio septima'' (in Latin; ~contemporary source). Hungarian edition Balassi Kiado 2001 | |||
* ''Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Europe (c. 1400–1458)'' (Translated by Robert Brown, introduced and commented by Nancy Bisaha) (2013). The Catholic University of America press. {{ISBN|978-0-8132-2182-3}}. | |||
**J. de Chassin, ''Jean de Hunyad'', (in French), Paris, 1859. | |||
* ''The Annals of Jan Długosz'' (An English abridgement by Maurice Michael, with commentary by Paul Smith) (1997). IM Publications. {{ISBN|1-901019-00-4}}. | |||
**], ''Genus, incunabula et virtus Joannis Corvini de Hunyad'' (in Latin), ], 1844. | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
**], ''Cardinal Carjaval and his Missions to Hungary'', (in Hungarian), ], 1889. | |||
**P. Frankl, ''Der Friede von Szegedin und die Geschichte seines Bruches'' (in German), ], 1904. | |||
=== Secondary sources === | |||
**A. Pcr, ''Life of Hunyadi'' (in Hungarian), Budapest, 1873. | |||
**], ''The Age of the Hunyadis in Hungary'' (in Hungarian), ], 1852–1857; (supplementary volumes by D. Csinki 1895). | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Jefferson |first=John |title=The Holy Wars of King Wladislas and Sultan Murad: The Ottoman-Christian Conflict from 1438–1444 |publisher=] |year=2012 |isbn=978-90-04-21904-5 |location=]}} | |||
*Enea Silvius Piccolomini (]) ''In Europa - Historia Austrialis'', BAV, URB, LAT. 405, ff.245, IIII kal. Aprilis MCCCCLVIII, Ex Urbe ] Bilanguical (German-Latin) edition: | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
*], ''John Hunyadi. Defender of Christendom'', Iaşi-Oxford-Portland 2001 | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Babinger |first=Franz |year=1978 |title=Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=0-691-09900-6 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/mehmedconqueror00fran }} | |||
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Hunyadi, János| volume= 13 |last= Bain |first= Robert Nisbet |author-link= Robert Nisbet Bain| pages = 955–956}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Bak |first=János |editor1-last=Sugar |editor1-first=Peter F. |editor2-last=Hanák |editor2-first=Péter |editor3-last=Frank |editor3-first=Tibor |title=A History of Hungary |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=1994 |pages=54–82 |chapter=The Late Medieval Period, 1382–1526 |isbn=963-7081-01-1}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Bartl |first1=Július |last2=Čičaj |first2=Viliam |last3=Kohútova |first3=Mária |last4=Letz |first4=Róbert |last5=Segeš |first5=Vladimír |last6=Škvarna |first6=Dušan |year=2002|title=Slovak History: Chronology & Lexicon |publisher= Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Slovenské Pedegogické Nakladatel'stvo |isbn=0-86516-444-4}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Boia |first=Lucian |year=2001|title=History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness |publisher=CEU Press |isbn=963-9116-96-3}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Bolovan |first1=Ioan |last2=Constantiniu |first2=Florin |last3=Michelson |first3=Paul E. |last4=Pop |first4=Ioan Aurel |last5=Popa |first5=Cristian |last6=Popa |first6=Marcel |last7=Scurtu |first7=Ioan |last8=Treptow |first8=Kurt W. |last9=Vultur |first9=Marcela |last10=Watts |first10=Larry L. |year= 1997 |title=A History of Romania |publisher=The Center for Romanian Studies |isbn=973-98091-0-3}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Cartledge |first=Bryan |year=2011|title=The Will to Survive: A History of Hungary |publisher=C. Hurst & Co. |isbn=978-1-84904-112-6}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last1=Chadwick |first1=H. Munro |last2=Chadwick |first2=Nora K. |year=2010 |title=The Growth of Literature, Volume 2 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-31019-2 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/growthofliteratu0000chad_p0v7 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=E. Kovács |first=Péter |year=1990 |title=Matthias Corvinus |publisher=Officina Nova |isbn=963-7835-49-0 |language=hu}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Engel |first=Pál |year=2001 |title=The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526 |publisher= I.B. Tauris Publishers |isbn=1-86064-061-3}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Engel |first=Pál |editor-last=Csukovits |editor-first=Enikő |title=Engel Pál. Honor, vár, ispánság: Válogatott tanulmányok '''' |publisher=Osiris Kiadó |year=2003 |pages=512–526 |chapter=Hunyadi pályakezdése |isbn=963-389-392-5 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Fine |first=John V. A |year=1994 |title=The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest |publisher= The University of Michigan Press |isbn=0-472-08260-4}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Hebron |first=Malcolm |year=1997 |title=The Medieval Siege: Theme and Image in Middle English Romance |publisher= Clarendon Press |isbn=0-19-818620-7}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Kubinyi |first=András |year=2008 |title=Matthias Rex |publisher= Balassi Kiadó |isbn=978-963-506-767-1}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Makkai |first=László |editor1-last=Köpeczi |editor1-first=Béla |editor2-last=Barta |editor2-first=Gábor |editor3-last=Bóna |editor3-first=István |editor4-last=Makkai |editor4-first=László |editor5-last=Szász |editor5-first=Zoltán |editor6-last=Borus |editor6-first=Judit | title=History of Transylvania |publisher=Akadémiai Kiadó |year=1994 |pages=178–243 |chapter=The Three Nations of Transylvania (1360–1526) |isbn=963-05-6703-2}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Molnár |first=Miklós |year=2001 |title=A Concise History of Hungary |url=https://archive.org/details/concisehistoryof00moln |url-access=registration |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-66736-4 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Mureşanu |first=Camil |author-link=Camil Mureşanu |year=2001 |title=John Hunyadi: Defender of Christendom |publisher=The Center for Romanian Studies |isbn=973-9432-18-2 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Pop |first=Ioan-Aurel |editor1-last=Pop |editor1-first=Ioan-Aurel |editor2-last=Nägler |editor2-first=Thomas |title=The History of Transylvania, Vol. I. (Until 1541) |publisher=] (Center for Transylvanian Studies) |year=2005 |pages=247–298 |chapter=Transylvania in the 14th century and the first half of the 15th century (1300–1456) |isbn=973-7784-00-6}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last=Pop |first=Ioan-Aurel |year=2012 |title=The Names in the Family of King Matthias Corvinus: From Old Sources to Contemporary Historiography |url=http://renaissance.elte.hu/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Ioan-Aurel-Pop-The-Names-in-the-Family-of-King-Matthias-Corvinus.pdf |journal=Ethnographica et Folkloristica Carpathica |publisher=Debreceni Egyetem Néprajzi Tanszék |volume=17 / 35 |pages=11–40 |issn=0139-0600 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Stavrianos |first=L. S. |year=2000 |title=The Balkans since 1453 ''(with a new Introduction by Traian Stoianovich)'' |publisher=Hurst & Company |isbn=978-1-85065-551-0 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Tanner |first=Marcus |year=2009 |title=The Raven King: Matthias Corvinus and the Fate of his Lost Library |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=978-0-300-15828-1}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Teke |first=Zsuzsa |year=1980 |title=Hunyadi János és kora '''' |publisher=Gondolat |isbn=963-280-951-3 |language=hu}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Varga |first=Domokos |year=1982 |title=Hungary in Greatness and Decline: the 14th and 15th centuries |publisher= Hungarian Cultural Foundation |isbn=0-914648-11-X}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Vaughan |first=Richard |year=2002 |title=Philip the Good: The Apogee of Burgundy |publisher=The Boydell Press |isbn=978-0-85115-917-1 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XkLDVyYZPBYC |title=The Enemy at the Gate: Habsburgs, Ottomans, and the Battle for Europe |last=Wheatcroft |first=Andrew |publisher=Basic Books |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-465-01374-6}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
{{Portal|Christianity|Hungary}} | |||
{{Crusadesportal}} | |||
{{Commons category|John Hunyadi}} | |||
In English: | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
* {{Cite book | last = Held | first = Joseph | title = Hunyadi: Legend and Reality | publisher = Columbia University Press | year = 1985 | isbn = 0-88033-070-8}} | |||
| last = Held | |||
* {{Cite book | last = Florescu | first = Radu and Raymond T. McNally | title = Dracula, Prince of Many Faces: His Life and His Times | publisher = Back Bay Books | year = 1990 | isbn = 0-316-28656-7}} | |||
| first = Joseph | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
| title = Hunyadi: Legend and Reality | |||
| publisher = Columbia University Press | |||
| date = 1985 | |||
| isbn = 0880330701 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last = Muresanu | |||
| first = Camil (Trans. by Laura Treptow) | |||
| title = John Hunyadi: Defender of Christendom | |||
| publisher = Center for Romanian Studies | |||
| date = 2000 | |||
| isbn = 9739432182 | |||
}} | |||
Additional Books that Mention John Hunyadi: | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last = Florescu | |||
| first = Radu and Raymond T. McNally | |||
| title = Dracula, Prince of Many Faces: His Life and His Times | |||
| publisher = Back Bay Books | |||
| date = 1990 | |||
| isbn = 0316286567 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last = Lord Kinross | |||
| first = Patrick Balfour | |||
| title = The Ottoman Centuries: The Rise and Fall of the Turkish Empire | |||
| publisher = Harper Perennial | |||
| date = 1979 | |||
| isbn = 0688080936 | |||
}} | |||
{{S-start}} | |||
In Hungarian: | |||
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* {{cite book | |||
|- | |||
| last = Benedek | |||
{{S-bef|before=]}} | |||
| first = Elek | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]<br /><small>alongside ] (1439–1440)</small><br /><small>alongside ] (1445–1446)</small>|years=1439–1446}} | |||
| title = Nagy Magyarok Élete: Hunyadi János - Hunyadi Mátyás | |||
{{S-aft|after=''vacant''}} | |||
| publisher = Pannon-Literatúra Kft. | |||
{{S-bef|before=]<br />& ]}} | |||
| isbn = 9639355941 | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]<br /><small>alongside ]</small>|years=1441–1446}} | |||
}} | |||
{{S-aft|after=]<br />& ]}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
{{S-bef|before=]<br />& ]}} | |||
| last = Czuczor | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]<br /><small>alongside ]</small>|years=1441–1446}} | |||
| first = Gergely | |||
{{S-aft|after=]}} | |||
| title = Hunyadi János és három más történet | |||
{{S-bef|before=]}} | |||
| publisher = Unikornis Kiadó | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]<br /><small>alongside ] (1441–1446)</small>|years=1441–1456}} | |||
| isbn = 9634274625 | |||
{{S-aft|after=]}} | |||
}} | |||
{{S-bef|before=Seven captains}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]|years=1446–1453}} | |||
| last = Darvas | |||
{{S-aft|after=]<br /><small>as King</small>}} | |||
| first = József | |||
{{S-bef|before=]}} | |||
| title = A törökverő | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]|years=1450–1452}} | |||
| publisher = Korona Kiadó Kft. | |||
{{S-aft|rows=2|after=]}} | |||
| date = 2004 | |||
{{S-bef|before=]}} | |||
| isbn = 9639376930 | |||
{{S-ttl|title=]|years=1454–1456}} | |||
}} | |||
{{s-end}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
{{Serbian epic poetry}} | |||
| last = Földi | |||
| first = Pál | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
| title = Hunyadi János, a hadvezér | |||
| publisher = Anno Kiadó | |||
| date = 2004 | |||
| isbn = 9633753465 | |||
}} | |||
* {{cite book | |||
| last = Szentmihályi Szabó | |||
| first = Péter | |||
| title = Kapisztrán és Hunyadi | |||
| publisher = Szépirodalmi Könyvkiadó | |||
| year = 2007 | |||
| isbn = 9789638618450 | |||
}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 14:29, 4 January 2025
15th-century military and political figure in the Kingdom of Hungary For his younger brother, see John Hunyadi, Ban of Severin.The native form of this personal name is Hunyadi János. This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals.
John Hunyadi | |
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| |
John Hunyadi depicted in the 15th-century Chronica Hungarorum (Brno, 1488) | |
Born | c. 1406 |
Died | 11 August 1456 (aged 49–50) Zimony, Kingdom of Hungary |
Burial | St. Michael's Catholic Cathedral, Gyulafehérvár, Kingdom of Hungary |
Spouse | Erzsébet Szilágyi |
Issue | |
House | House of Hunyadi |
Father | Voyk |
Mother | Erzsébet Morzsinai |
Signature |
John Hunyadi (Hungarian: Hunyadi János; Romanian: Ioan de Hunedoara; Croatian: Janko Hunjadi; Serbian: Сибињанин Јанко, romanized: Sibinjanin Janko; c. 1406 – 11 August 1456) was a leading Hungarian military and political figure during the 15th century, who served as regent of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1446 to 1453, under the minor Ladislaus V.
According to most contemporary sources, he was the member of a noble family of Wallachian ancestry. Through his struggles against the Ottoman Empire, he earned for himself the nickname "Turk-buster" from his contemporaries. Due to his merits, he quickly received substantial land grants. By the time of his death, he was the owner of immense land areas, totaling approximately four million cadastral acres, which had no precedent before or after in the Kingdom of Hungary. His enormous wealth and his military and political weight were primarily directed towards the purposes of the Ottoman wars.
Hunyadi mastered his military skills on the southern borderlands of the Kingdom of Hungary that were exposed to Ottoman attacks. Appointed Ban of Szörény in 1439, appointed Voivode of Transylvania, Counts of the Székelys and Chief Captain of Nándorfehérvár (now Belgrade) in 1441 and head of a several of southern counties of the Kingdom of Hungary, he assumed responsibility for the defense of the frontiers. He adopted the Hussite method of using wagons for military purposes. He employed professional soldiers, but also mobilized local peasantry against invaders. These innovations contributed to his earliest successes against the Ottoman troops who were plundering the southern marches in the early 1440s.
In 1442, Hunyadi won four victories against the Ottomans, two of which were decisive. In March 1442, Hunyadi defeated Mezid Bey and the raiding Ottoman army at the Battle of Szeben in the south part of the Kingdom of Hungary in Transylvania. In September 1442, Hunyadi defeated a large Ottoman army of Beylerbey Şehabeddin, the Provincial Governor of Rumelia. This was the first time that a European army defeated such a large Ottoman force, composed not only of raiders, but of the provincial cavalry led by their own sanjak beys (governors) and accompanied by the formidable janissaries. Although defeated in the battle of Varna in 1444 and in the second battle of Kosovo in 1448, his successful "Long Campaign" across the Balkan Mountains in 1443–44 and defence of Belgrade (Nándorfehérvár) in 1456, against troops led personally by the sultan, established his reputation as a great general. The pope ordered that European churches ring their bells at noon to gather the faithful in prayer for those who were fighting. The bells of Christian churches are rung at noon to commemorate the Belgrade victory.
John Hunyadi was also an eminent statesman. He actively took part in the civil war between the partisans of Wladislas I and the minor Ladislaus V, two claimants to the throne of Hungary in the early 1440s, on behalf of the former. He was popular among the lesser nobility, and in 1445 the Diet of Hungary appointed him one of the seven "Captains in Chief" responsible for the administration of state affairs until Ladislaus V (by that time unanimously accepted as king) came of age. The next Diet went even further, electing Hunyadi as sole regent with the title of governor. When he resigned from this office in 1452, the sovereign awarded him with the first hereditary title in the Kingdom of Hungary, (perpetual count of Beszterce/Bistrița). He had by this time become one of the wealthiest landowners in the kingdom, and preserved his influence in the Diet up until his death.
This Athleta Christi (Christ's Champion), as Pope Pius II referred to him, died some three weeks after his triumph at Belgrade, falling to an epidemic that had broken out in the crusader camp. However, his victories over the Turks prevented them from invading the Kingdom of Hungary for more than 60 years. His fame was a decisive factor in the election of his son, Matthias Corvinus, as king by the Diet of 1457. Hunyadi is a popular historical figure among Hungarians, Romanians, Serbs, Bulgarians, and other nations of the region.
Childhood (c. 1406 – c. 1420)
Further information: Hunyadi familyA royal charter of grant issued on 18 October 1409 contains the first reference to John Hunyadi. In the document, King Sigismund of Hungary bestowed Hunyad Castle (in present-day Hunedoara, Romania) and the lands attached to it upon John's father, Voyk and Voyk's four kinsmen, including John himself. According to the document, John's father served in the royal household as a "court knight" at that time, suggesting that he was descended from a respected family. Two 15th-century chroniclers—Johannes de Thurocz and Antonio Bonfini—write that Voyk had moved from Wallachia to Hungary upon King Sigismund's initiative. László Makkai, Malcolm Hebron, Pál Engel and other scholars accept the two chroniclers' report of the Wallachian origin of John Hunyadi's father. In contrast with them, Ioan-Aurel Pop says that Voyk was a native of the wider region of Hunyad Castle.
Antonio Bonfini was the first chronicler to have made a passing remark of an alternative story of John Hunyadi's parentage, soon stating that it was just a "tasteless tale" fabricated by Hunyadi's opponent, Ulrich II, Count of Celje. According to this anecdote, John was actually not Voyk's child, but King Sigismund's illegitimate son. The story became especially popular during the reign of John Hunyadi's son, Matthias Corvinus who erected a statue for King Sigismund in Buda. The 16th-century chronicler Gáspár Heltai repeated and further developed the tale, but modern scholars—for instance, Cartledge, and Kubinyi—regard it as an unverifiable gossip. Hunyadi's popularity among the peoples of the Balkan Peninsula give rise to further legends of his royal parentage.
The identification of John Hunyadi's mother is even less certain. In connection with King Sigismund's supposed parentage, both Bonfini and Heltai say that she was the daughter of a rich boyar, or nobleman, whose estates were located at Morzsina (present-day Margina, Romania). Pop proposes that she was called Elisabeth. According to historian László Makkai, John Hunyadi's mother was a member of the Muzsina (or Mușina) kenez family from Demsus (Densuș, Romania), but Pop refuses the identification of the Morzsina and Muzsina families.
With regard of John Hunyadi's mother, Bonfini provides an alternative solution as well, stating that she was a distinguished Greek lady, but does not name her. According to Kubinyi, her alleged Greek origin may simply refer to her Orthodox faith. In a letter of 1489, Matthias Corvinus wrote that his grandmother's sister, whom the Ottoman Turks had captured and forced to join the harem of an unnamed Sultan, became the ancestor of Cem, the rebellious son of Sultan Mehmed II. Based on this letter, historian Kubinyi says that the "Greek connection cannot be discounted entirely". If Matthias Corvinus' report is valid, John Hunyadi—the hero of anti-Ottoman wars—and the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II were first cousins. On the other hand, historian Péter E. Kovács writes that Matthias Corvinus's story about his family connection with the Ottoman Sultans was nothing but a pack of lies.
Hunyadi's year of birth is uncertain. Although Gáspár Heltai writes that Hunyadi was born in 1390, he must have actually been born between around 1405 and 1407, because his younger brother was only born after 1409, and a difference of almost two decades between the two brothers' age is not plausible. The place of his birth is likewise unknown. The 16th-century scholar, Antun Vrančić wrote that John Hunyadi had been "a native" of the Hátszeg region (now Țara Hațegului in Romania). Hunyadi's father died before 12 February 1419. A royal charter issued on this day mentions Hunyadi, Hunyadi's two brothers (John the younger and Voyk) and their uncle Radol, but does not refer to their father.
Rise of a general
Youth (c. 1420–1438)
Andreas Pannonius, who served Hunyadi for five years, wrote that the future commander "accustomed himself to tolerate both cold and heat in good time". Like other young noblemen, John Hunyadi spent his youth serving in the court of powerful magnates. However, the exact list of his employers cannot be completed, because 15th-century authors recorded contradictory data on his early life.
Filippo Scolari's biographer, Poggio Bracciolini writes that Scolari—who was responsible for the defense of the southern frontier as Ispán, or head, of Temes County—educated Hunyadi from his very youth, suggesting that Hunyadi was Scolari's page around 1420. On the other hand, John of Capistrano writes, in a letter of 1456, that Hunyadi started his military career serving under Nicholas of Ilok. For Nicholas of Ilok was at least six year younger than Hunyadi, historian Pál Engel writes that Capistrano confused him with his brother, Stephen of Ilok. Finally, Antonio Bonfini says that at the beginning of his career Hunyadi worked either for Demeter Csupor, Bishop of Zagreb or for the Csákys.
According to the Byzantine historian Laonikos Chalkokondyles, the young Hunyadi "stayed for a time" at the court of Stefan Lazarević, Despot of Serbia, who died in 1427. Hunyadi's marriage with Elisabeth Szilágyi substantiates Chalkokondyles' report, because her father, Ladislaus was the Despot's familiaris around 1426. The wedding took place around 1429. While still a young man, Hunyadi entered the retinue of King Sigismund. He accompanied Sigismund to Italy in 1431 and upon Sigismund's order he joined the army of Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan. Bonfini says that Hunyadi "served two years" in the Duke's army. Modern scholars—for instance, Cartledge, Engel, Mureşanu and Teke—say that Hunyadi familiarized himself with the principles of contemporary military art, including the employment of mercenaries, in Milan.
Hunyadi again joined the entourage of Sigismund, who had in the meantime been crowned Holy Roman Emperor in Rome, at the very end of 1433. He served the monarch as a "court knight". He loaned 1,200 gold florins to the Emperor in January 1434. In exchange, Sigismund mortgaged Papi—a market town in Csanád County—and half of the royal incomes from a nearby ferry on the Maros River to Hunyadi and his younger brother. The royal charter of the transaction mentions Hunyadi as John the Vlach (Romanian). In short, Sigismund granted Hunyadi further domains, including Békésszentandrás, and Hódmezővásárhely, each incorporating about 10 villages.
Antonio Bonfini writes of Hunyadi's service in the retinue of one "Francis Csanádi" who "became so fond of him that treated him as if he were his own son". Historian Engel identifies Francis Csanádi with Franko Talovac, Croatian nobleman and Ban of Severin, who was also Ispán of Csanád County around 1432. Engel says that Hunyadi served in the Ban's retinue for at least one and a half years from around October 1434. A Vlach district of the Banate of Severin was mortgaged to Hunyadi in this period.
Sigismund, who entered Prague in the summer of 1436, hired Hunyadi and his 50 lancers for three months in October 1437 for 1,250 gold florins, implying that Hunyadi had accompanied him to Bohemia. Hunyadi seems to have studied the Hussites' tactics on this occasion, because he later applied its featuring elements, including the use of wagons as a mobile fortress. On 9 December 1437 Sigismund died; his son-in-law, Albert was elected King of Hungary in nine days. According to historians Teke and Engel, Hunyadi soon returned to the southern frontiers of the kingdom which had been subject to Ottoman raids. In contrast with them, Mureşanu says that Hunyadi served King Albert in Bohemia for at least a year, until the end of 1438.
First battles with the Ottomans (1438–1442)
Main article: Hungarian–Ottoman War (1437–1442) Further information: Battle of HermannstadtThe Ottomans had occupied the larger part of Serbia by the end of 1438. In the same year, Ottoman troops—supported by Vlad II Dracul, Prince of Wallachia—made an incursion into Transylvania, plundering Hermannstadt/Nagyszeben, Gyulafehérvár (present-day Alba Iulia, Romania) and other towns. After the Ottomans laid siege to Smederevo, the last important Serbian stronghold in June 1439, Đurađ Branković, Despot of Serbia fled to Hungary to seek military assistance.
King Albert proclaimed the general insurrection of the nobility against the Ottomans, but few armed noblemen assembled in the region of Titel and were ready to fight. A notable exception was Hunyadi, who made raids against the besiegers and defeated them in smaller skirmishes, which contributed to the rise of his fame. The Ottomans captured Smederevo in August. King Albert appointed the Hunyadi brothers Bans of Severin, elevating them to the rank of "true barons of the realm". He also mortgaged a Vlach district in Temes County to them.
King Albert died of dysentery on 27 October 1439. His widow, Elisabeth—Emperor Sigismund's daughter—gave birth to a posthumus son, Ladislaus. The Estates of the realm offered the crown to Vladislaus, King of Poland, but Elizabeth had his infant son crowned king on 15 May 1440. However, Vladislaus accepted the Estates' offer and was also crowned king on 17 July. During the ensuing civil war between the two kings' partisans, Hunyadi supported Vladislaus. Hunyadi fought against the Ottomans in Wallachia, for which King Vladislaus granted him five domains in the vicinity of his family estates on 9 August 1440.
Hunyadi, together with Nicholas of Ilok, annihilated the troops of Vladislaus' opponents at Bátaszék at the very beginning of 1441. Their victory effectively put an end to the civil war. The grateful King appointed Hunyadi and his comrade joint Voivodes of Transylvania and Counts of the Székelys in February. In short, the King also nominated them Ispáns of Temes County and conferred upon them the command of Belgrade and all other castles along the Danube.
Since Nicholas of Ilok spent most of his time in the royal court, in practice Hunyadi administered Transylvania and the southern borderlands alone. Soon after his appointment, Hunyadi visited Transylvania where the child Ladislaus V's partisans had maintained a strong position. After Hunyadi pacified Transylvania, the regions under his administration remained undisturbed by internal conflicts, enabling Hunyadi to concentrate on the defence of the borders. By effectively defending the interests of local landowners at the royal court, Hunyadi strengthened his position in the provinces under his administration. For instance, he obtained land grants and privileges for local noblemen from the King.
Hunyadi set about repairing the walls of Belgrade, which had been damaged during an Ottoman attack. In retaliation for Ottoman raids in the region of the river Sava, he made an incursion into Ottoman territory in the summer or autumn of 1441. He scored a pitched battle victory over Ishak Bey, the commander of Smederovo.
Early the next year, Bey Mezid invaded Transylvania with a force of 17,000 soldiers. Hunyadi was taken by surprise and lost the first battle near Marosszentimre (Sântimbru, Romania). Bey Mezid lay siege to Hermannstadt, but the united forces of Hunyadi and Újlaki, who had in the meantime arrived in Transylvania, forced the Ottomans to lift the siege. The Ottoman forces were annihilated at Gyulafehérvár on 22 March.
Pope Eugenius IV, who had been an enthusiastic propagator of a new crusade against the Ottomans, sent his legate, Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini to Hungary. The Cardinal arrived in May 1442 tasked with mediating a peace treaty between King Vladislaus and Dowager Queen Elisabeth. The Ottoman Sultan, Murad II dispatched Şihabeddin Pasha—the governor of Rumelia—to invade Transylvania with a force of 70,000. The Pasha stated that the mere sight of his turban would force his enemies to run far away. Although Hunyadi could only muster a force of 15,000 men, he inflicted a crushing defeat on the Ottomans at the Ialomița River in September. John Hunyadi and his 15,000 men defeated the 80,000-strong army of Begler Bey Sehabeddin at Zajkány (today's Zeicani), near the Iron Gate of the Danube river in 1442. Hunyadi placed Basarab II on the princely throne of Wallachia, but Basarab's opponent Vlad Dracul returned and forced Basarab to flee in early 1443.
Hunyadi's victories in 1441 and 1442 made him a prominent enemy of the Ottomans and renowned throughout Christendom. He established a vigorous offensive posture in his battles, which enabled him to counteract the numerical superiority of the Ottomans through decisive maneuver. He employed mercenaries (many of them recently disbanded Czech Hussite troops), increasing the professionalism in his ranks and supplementing the numerous irregulars mustered from local peasantry, whom he had no reservations about employing in the field.
General and politician
The "Long Campaign" (1442–1444)
Main article: Long campaignIn April 1443 King Vladislaus and his barons decided to mount a major campaign against the Ottoman Empire. With the mediation of Cardinal Cesarini, Vladislaus reached a truce with Frederick III of Germany, who had been the guardian of the child Ladislaus V. The armistice guaranteed that Frederick III would not attack Hungary in the subsequent twelve months.
Spending around 32,000 gold florins from his own treasury, Hunyadi hired more than 10,000 mercenaries. The King also mustered troops, and reinforcements arrived from Poland and Moldavia. The King and Hunyadi departed for the campaign at the head of an army of 25–27,000 men in the autumn of 1443. In theory, Vladislaus commanded the army, but the true leader of the campaign was Hunyadi. Despot Đurađ Branković joined them with a force of 8,000 men.
Hunyadi commanded the vanguards and routed four smaller Ottoman forces, hindering their unification. He captured Kruševac, Niš and Sofia. However, the Hungarian troops could not break through the passes of the Balkan Mountains towards Edirne. Cold weather and the lack of supplies forced the Christian troops to stop the campaign at Zlatitsa. After being victorious in the Battle of Kunovica, they returned to Belgrade in January and Buda in February 1444.
Battle of Varna and its aftermath (1444–1446)
Main article: Battle of VarnaAlthough no major Ottoman forces had been defeated, Hunyadi's "long campaign" stirred enthusiasm throughout Christian Europe. Pope Eugenius, Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy and other European powers demanded a new crusade, promising financial or military support. The formation of a "party"—a group of noblemen and clerics—under Hunyadi's leadership can be dated to this period. Their main purpose was the defence of Hungary against the Ottomans. According to a letter of Đurađ Branković, Hunyadi spent more than 63,000 gold florins to hire mercenaries in the first half of the year. An eminent representative of Renaissance humanism in Hungary, John Vitéz became Hunyadi's close friend around that time.
The advance of Christian forces in Ottoman territory also encouraged the peoples of the Balkan Peninsula to revolt in the peripheries of the Ottoman Empire. For instance, Skanderbeg, an Albanian noble, expelled the Ottomans from Krujë and all other fortresses once held by his family. Sultan Murad II, whose main concern was a rebellion by the Karamanids in Anatolia, offered generous terms of peace to King Vladislaus. He even promised to withdraw the Ottoman garrisons from Serbia, thus restoring its semi-autonomous status under Despot Đurađ Branković. He also offered a truce for ten years. The Hungarian envoys accepted the Sultan's offer in Edirne on 12 June 1444.
Đurađ Branković, who was grateful for the restoration of his realm, donated his estates at Világos (present-day Șiria, Romania) in Zaránd County to Hunyadi on 3 July. Hunyadi proposed King Vladislaus to confirm the advantageous treaty, but Cardinal Cesarini urged the monarch to continue the crusade. On 4 August Vladislaus took a solemn oath of launching a campaign against the Ottoman Empire before the end of the year even if a peace treaty were concluded. According to Johannes de Thurocz, the King appointed Hunyadi to sign the peace treaty on 15 August. In a week, Đurađ Branković mortgaged his extensive domains in the Kingdom of Hungary—including Debrecen, Munkács (present-day Mukacheve, Ukraine), and Nagybánya (present-day Baia Mare, Romania)—to Hunyadi.
King Vladislaus, whom Cardinal Cesarini urged to keep his oath, decided to invade the Ottoman Empire in autumn. Upon the Cardinal's proposal, he offered Hunyadi the crown of Bulgaria. The crusaders departed from Hungary on 22 September. They planned to advance towards the Black Sea across the Balkan Mountains. They expected that the Venetian fleet would hinder Sultan Murad from transferring Ottoman forces from Anatolia to the Balkans, but the Genoese transported the Sultan's army across the Dardanelles. The two armies clashed near Varna on 10 November.
Although outnumbered by two to one, the crusaders initially ruled the battlefield against the Ottomans. However, the young King Vladislaus launched a premature attack against the janissaries and was killed. Taking advantage of the crusaders' panic, the Ottomans annihilated their army. Hunyadi narrowly escaped from the battlefield, but was captured and imprisoned by Wallachian soldiers. However, Vlad Dracul set him free before long.
At the next Diet of Hungary, which assembled in April 1445, the Estates decided that they would unanimously acknowledge the child Ladislaus V's rule if King Vladislaus, whose fate was still uncertain, had not arrived in Hungary by the end of May. The Estates also elected seven "Captains in Chief", including Hunyadi, each being responsible for the restoration of internal order in the territory allotted to them. Hunyadi was assigned to administer the lands east of the river Tisza. Here he possessed at least six castles and owned lands in about ten counties, which made him the most powerful baron in the region under his rule.
Hunyadi was planning to organize a new crusade against the Ottoman Empire. For this purpose, he barraged the Pope and other Western monarchs with letters in 1445. In September he had a meeting, at Nicopolis, with Waleran de Wavrin (nephew of the chronicler Jean de Wavrin), the captain of eight Burgundian galleys, and Vlad Dracul of Wallachia, who had seized small fortresses along the Lower Danube from the Ottomans. However, he did not risk a clash with the Ottoman garrisons stationed on the south bank of the river, and returned to Hungary before winter. Vlad Dracul soon concluded a peace treaty with the Ottomans.
Governorship (1446–1453)
The Estates of the realm proclaimed Hunyadi regent, bestowing the title "governor" upon him on 6 June 1446. His election was primarily promoted by the lesser nobility, but Hunyadi had by that time become one of the richest barons of the kingdom. His domains covered an area exceeding 800,000 hectares (2,000,000 acres). Hunyadi was one of the few contemporaneous barons who spent a significant part of their revenues to finance the wars against the Ottomans, thus bearing a large share of the cost of fighting for many years.
As governor, Hunyadi was authorized to exercise most royal prerogatives for the period of King Ladislaus V's minority. For instance, he could make land grants, but only up to the size of 32 peasant holdings. Hunyadi attempted to pacify the border regions. Soon after his election, he launched an unsuccessful campaign against Ulrich II, Count of Celje. Count Ulrich administered Slavonia with the title ban (which he had arbitrarily adopted) and refused to renounce of it in favor of Hunyadi's appointee. Hunyadi could not force him to submit.
Hunyadi persuaded John Jiskra of Brandýs—a Czech commander who controlled the northern regions (in present-day Slovakia)—to sign an armistice for three years on 13 September. However, Jiskra did not keep the truce, and armed conflicts continued. In November Hunyadi proceeded against Frederick III of Germany, who had refused to release Ladislaus V and seized Kőszeg, Sopron and other towns along the western border. Hunyadi's troops plundered Austria, Styria, Carinthia and Carniola, but no decisive battle was fought. A truce with Frederick III was signed on 1 June 1447. Although Frederick renounced of Győr, his position as the minor King's guardian was confirmed. The Estates of the realm were disappointed and the Diet elected Ladislaus Garai—a leader of Hunyadi's opponents—Palatine in September 1447.
Hunyadi accelerated his negotiations, which had been commenced in the previous year, with Alfonso the Magnanimous, King of Aragon and Naples. He even offered the crown to Alfonso in exchange for the King's participation in an anti-Ottoman crusade and the confirmation of his position as governor. However, King Alfonso refrained from signing an agreement.
Hunyadi invaded Wallachia and dethroned Vlad Dracul in December 1447. According to the contemporaneous Polish chronicler Jan Długosz, Hunyadi had "the very man he promised to make voivode" blinded, and planned "to appropriate" Wallachia for himself. Hunyadi styled himself "voivode of the Transalpine land" and referred to the Wallachian town, Târgoviște as "our fortress" in a letter of 4 December. It is without doubt that Hunyadi installed a new voivode in Wallachia, but modern historians debate whether the new voivode was Vladislav II (to whom Hunyadi referred as his relative in a letter) or Dan (who seems to have been a son of Basarab II). In February 1448 Hunyadi sent an army to Moldavia to support the pretender Peter in seizing the throne. In exchange, Peter acknowledged Hunyadi's suzerainty and contributed to the installation of a Hungarian garrison in the fort of Chilia Veche on the Lower Danube.
Hunyadi made a new attempt to expel Count Ulrich of Celje from Slavonia, but could not defeat him. In June Hunyadi and the Count reached an agreement, which confirmed Count Ulrich's position of Ban in Slavonia. In short time Hunyadi sent his envoys to the two most prominent Albanian leaders—Scanderbeg and his father-in-law, Gjergj Arianiti—to seek their assistance against the Ottomans. Pope Eugenius suggested that the anti-Ottoman campaign should be postponed. However, Hunyadi stated, in a letter dated 8 September 1448, that he "have had enough of our men enslaved, our women raped, wagons loaded with the severed heads of our people" and expressed his determination to expel "the enemy from Europe". In the same letter, he explained his military strategy to the Pope, stating that "ower is always greater when used in attack rather than in defence".
Hunyadi departed for the new campaign at the head of an army of 16,000 soldiers in September 1448. About 8,000 soldiers from Wallachia also joined his campaign. For Đurađ Branković refused to assist the crusaders, Hunyadi treated him as the Ottoman's ally and his army marched through Serbia plundering the countryside. In order to prevent the unification of the armies of Hunyadi and Skanderbeg, Sultan Murad II joined battle with Hunyadi on Kosovo Polje on 17 October. The battle, which lasted for three days, ended with the crusaders' catastrophic defeat. Around 17,000 Hungarian and Wallachian soldiers were killed or captured and Hunyadi could hardly escape from the battlefield. On his way home, Hunyadi was captured by Đurađ Branković who kept him prisoner in the fort of Smederevo. The Despot was initially contemplating to surrender Hunyadi to the Ottomans. However, the Hungarian barons and prelates who assembled at Szeged persuaded him to make peace with Hunyadi. According to the treaty, Hunyadi was obliged to pay a ransom of 100,000 gold florins and to return all the domains that he had acquired from Đurađ Branković. Hunyadi's oldest son, Ladislaus was sent to the Despot as a hostage. Hunyadi was released, and he returned to Hungary in late December 1448.
His defeat and his humiliating treaty with the Despot weakened Hunyadi's position. The prelates and the barons confirmed the treaty and assigned Branković to negotiate with the Ottomans, and Hunyadi resigned from the office of Voivode of Transylvania. He invaded the lands controlled by John Jiskra and his Czech mercenaries in the autumn of 1449, but could not defeat them. On the other hand, the rulers of two neighboring countries—Stjepan Tomaš, King of Bosnia, and Bogdan II, Voivode of Moldavia—concluded a treaty with Hunyadi, promising that they would remain loyal to him. In early 1450 Hunyadi and Jiskra signed a peace treaty in Mezőkövesd, acknowledging that many prosperous towns in Upper Hungary—including Pressburg/Pozsony (present-day Bratislava, Slovakia) and Kassa (present-day Košice, Slovakia)—remained under Jiskra's rule.
Upon Hunyadi's demand, the Diet of March 1450 ordered the confiscation of Branković's estates in the Kingdom of Hungary. Hunyadi and his troops departed for Serbia, forcing Branković to release his son. Hunyadi, Ladislaus Garai and Nicholas Újlaki concluded a treaty on 17 July 1450, promising each other assistance to preserve their offices in case King Ladislaus V returned to Hungary. In October Hunyadi made peace with Frederick III of Germany, which confirmed the German monarch's position as guardian of Ladislaus V for further eight years. With the mediation of Újlaki and other barons, Hunyadi also concluded a peace treaty with Branković in August 1451, which authorized Hunyadi to redeem the debated domains for 155,000 gold florins. Hunyadi launched a military expedition against Jiskra, but the Czech commander routed the Hungarian troops near Losonc (present-day Lučenec, Slovakia) on 7 September. With the mediation of Branković, Hungary and the Ottoman Empire signed a three-year truce on 20 November.
The Austrian noblemen rose up in open rebellion against Frederick III of Germany, who governed the duchy in the name of Ladislaus the Posthumus at the turn of 1451 and 1452. The leader of the rebellion, Ulrich Eizinger sought the assistance of the Estates of Ladislaus's two other realms, Bohemia and Hungary. The Diet of Hungary, which assembled in Pressburg/Pozsony in February 1452, sent a delegation to Vienna. On 5 March the Austrian and Hungarian Estates jointly requested Frederick III to renounce the guardianship of their young sovereign. Frederick, who had been crowned Holy Roman Emperor, initially refused to satisfy their demand. Hunyadi convoked a Diet to discuss the situation, but before the Diet made any decision the united troops of the Austrian and Bohemian Estates forced the Emperor to hand over the young monarch to Count Ulrich of Celje on 4 September. In the meantime, Hunyadi had met Jiskra in Körmöcbánya (present-day Kremnica, Slovakia) where they concluded a treaty on 24 August. According to the treaty, Jiskra retained Léva (present-day Levica, Slovakia) and his right to collect the "thirtieth"—a custom duty—at Késmárk (present-day Kežmarok, Slovakia) and Ólubló (present-day Stará Ľubovňa, Slovakia). In September Hunyadi sent envoys to Constantinople and promised military assistance to the Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI. In exchange, he demanded two Byzantine forts on the Black Sea, Silivri and Misivri, but the Emperor refused.
Hunyadi convoked a Diet to Buda, but the barons and the prelates preferred to visit Ladislaus V in Vienna in November. At the Diet of Vienna, Hunyadi renounced the regency, but the King appointed him "captain general of the kingdom" on 30 January 1453. The King even authorized Hunyadi to keep the royal castles and royal revenues that he possessed at that time. Hunyadi also received Beszterce (present-day Bistrița, Romania)—a district of the Transylvanian Saxons—with the title "perpetual count" from Ladislaus V, which was the first grant of a hereditary title in the Kingdom of Hungary.
Conflicts and reconciliations (1453–1455)
In a letter of 28 April 1453, Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini—the future Pope Pius II—stated that King Ladislaus V's realms were administered by "three men": Hungary by Hunyadi, Bohemia by George of Poděbrady, and Austria by Ulrich of Celje. However, Hunyadi's position gradually weakened, because even many of his former allies considered his acts to retain his power with suspicion. The citizens of Beszterce forced him to issue a charter confirming their traditional liberties on 22 July. Hunyadi's longtime friend, Nicholas Újlaki made a formal alliance with Palatine Ladislaus Garai and Judge royal Ladislaus Pálóci, declaring their intention to restore royal authority in September.
Hunyadi accompanied the young King to Prague and concluded a treaty with Ulrich Eizinger (who had expelled Ulrich of Celje from Austria) and George of Poděbrady at the end of the year. Having returned to Hungary, Hunyadi convoked, in the name of the King but without his authorization, a Diet in order to make preparations for a war on the Ottomans who had in May 1453 captured Constantinople. The Diet ordered the mobilization of the armed forces and Hunyadi's position of supreme commander was confirmed for a year, but many of the decisions was never carried out. For instance, the Diet obliged all landowners to equip four cavalrymen and two infantrymen for every hundred peasant households on their domains, but this law was never applied in practise.
Ladislaus V convoked a new Diet which assembled in March or April. At the Diet, his envoys—three Austrian noblemen—announced that the King was planning to administer royal revenues through officials elected by the Diet and to set up two councils (also with members elected by the Estates) in order to assist him in governing the country. However, the Diet refused to ratify most of the royal proposals, only the establishment of a royal council consisting of six prelates, six barons and six noblemen was accepted. Hunyadi, who was well aware that the King attempted to limit his authority, demanded an explanation, but the King denied that he had knowledge of his representatives' act. On the other hand, Jiskra returned to Hungary upon Ladislaus V's request and the King entrusted him with the administration of the mining towns. In response, Hunyadi persuaded Ulrich of Celje to cede him a number of royal fortresses (and the lands pertaining to them) which had been mortgaged in Trencsén County.
The Ottoman Sultan, Mehmed II invaded Serbia in May 1454 and laid siege to Smederevo, thus violating the truce of November 1451 between his empire and Hungary. Hunyadi decided to intervene and started to assemble his armies at Belgrade, forcing the Sultan to lift the siege and leave Serbia in August. However, an Ottoman force of 32,000 strong continued to pillage Serbia up until Hunyadi routed them at Kruševac on 29 September. He made a raid against the Ottoman Empire and destroyed Vidin before returning to Belgrade.
Emperor Frederick III convoked the Imperial Diet to Wiener Neustadt to discuss the possibilities of a new crusade against the Ottomans. At the conference, where the envoys of the Hungarian, Polish, Aragonese and Burgundian monarchs were also present, no final decisions were made, because the Emperor refrained from a sudden attack against the Ottomans. According to Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini, the Emperor hindered Hunyadi from participating at the meeting. In contrast with the Emperor, the new Pope, Callixtus III was a fierce supporter of the crusade.
King Ladislaus V visited Buda in February 1456. Ulrich of Celje, who accompanied the King to Buda, confirmed his former alliance with Ladislaus Garai and Nicholaus Újlaki. The three barons turned against Hunyadi and accused him of abusing his authority. A new Ottoman invasion against Serbia promoted a new reconciliation between Hunyadi and his opponents, and Hunyadi resigned the administration of part of the royal revenues and three royal fortresses, including Buda. On the other hand, Hunyadi, Garai and Újlaki made an agreement that they would refrain the King from employing foreigners in the royal administration in June 1455. Hunyadi and Count Ulrich were also reconciled in next month, when Hunyadi's younger son, Matthias and the Count's daughter, Elizabeth were engaged.
Belgrade victory and death (1455–1456)
Envoys from Ragusa (Dubrovnik, Croatia) were the first to have informed the Hungarian leaders of the preparations that Mehmed II had made for an invasion against Hungary. In a letter addressed to Hunyadi, whom he styled as "the Maccabeus of our time", the papal legate, Cardinal Juan Carvajal made it clear that there was not much chance of foreign assistance against the Ottomans. With the Ottomans' support, Vladislav II of Wallachia even plundered the southern parts of Transylvania in late 1455.
John of Capistrano, a Franciscan friar and papal inquisitor, started to preach an anti-Ottoman crusade in Hungary in February 1456. The Diet ordered the mobilization of the armed forces in April, but most barons failed to obey and continued to war against their local adversaries, including the Hussites in Upper Hungary. Before departing from Transylvania against the Ottomans, Hunyadi had to face a rebellion by the Vlachs in Fogaras County. He also supported Vlad Dracula—a son of the late Vlad Dracul—to seize the Wallachian throne from Vladislav II.
King Ladislaus V left Hungary for Vienna in May. Hunyadi hired 5,000 Hungarian, Czech and Polish mercenaries and sent them to Belgrade, which was the key fortress of the defense of Hungary's southern frontiers. The Ottoman forces marched through Serbia and approached Nándorfehérvár (modern-day Belgrade) in June. A crusade made up mostly of peasants from the nearby counties, who had been roused by John of Capistrano's fiery oratory, also started to assemble at the fortress in the first days of July. The Ottoman siege of Belgrade, which was personally commanded by Sultan Mehmed II, began with the bombardment of the walls on 4 July.
Hunyadi proceeded to form a relief army, and assembled a fleet of 200 ships on the Danube. The flotilla assembled by Hunyadi destroyed the Ottoman fleet on 14 July. This triumph prevented the Ottomans from completing the blockade, enabling Hunyadi and his troops to enter the fortress. The Ottomans started a general assault on 21 July. With the assistance of crusaders who were continuously arriving to the fortress, Hunyadi repulsed the fierce attacks by the Ottomans and broke into their camp on 22 July. Although wounded during the fights, Sultan Mehmed II, decided to resist, but a riot in his camp forced him to lift the siege and retreat from Belgrade during the night.
The crusaders' victory over the Sultan who had conquered Constantinople generated enthusiasm throughout Europe. Processions to celebrate Hunyadi's triumph were made in Venice and Oxford. However, in the crusaders' camp unrest was growing, because the peasants denied that the barons had played any role in the victory. In order to avoid an open rebellion, Hunyadi and Capistrano disbanded the crusaders' army.
Meanwhile, a plague had broken out and killed many people in the crusaders' camp. Hunyadi was also taken ill and died near Zimony (present-day Zemun, Serbia) on 11 August. He was buried in the Roman Catholic St. Michael's Cathedral in Gyulafehérvár (Alba Iulia).
governed the country with an iron rod, as they say, and while the king was away he was regarded as his equal. After routing the Turks at Belgrade , he survived for a brief time before dying of disease. When he was ill, they say that he forbade the Body of Our Lord to be brought to him, declaring that it was unworthy for a king to enter the house of a servant. Although his strength was failing, he ordered himself to be carried out to church, where he made his confession in Christian way, received the divine Eucharist, and surrendered his soul to God in the arms of the priests. Fortunate soul to have arrived in Heaven as both herald and author of the heroic action at Belgrade.
— Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Europe
Family
In 1432, Hunyadi married Erzsébet Szilágyi (c. 1410–1483), a Hungarian noblewoman. John Hunyadi had two children, Ladislaus and Matthias Corvinus. The former was executed on the order of King Ladislaus V for the murder of Ulrich II of Celje, a relative of the king. The latter was elected king on 20 January 1458, Matthias after Ladislaus V's death. It was the first time in the history of the Kingdom of Hungary that a member of the nobility, without dynastic ancestry and relationship, mounted the royal throne.
Legacy
The noon bell
Pope Callixtus III ordered the bells of every European church to be rung every day at noon, as a call for believers to pray for the Christian defenders of the city of Belgrade. The practice of noon bell is traditionally attributed to the international commemoration of the Belgrade victory and to the order of Pope Callixtus III.
The custom still exists even among Protestant and Orthodox congregations. In the history of Oxford University, the victory was welcomed with a peal of bells and great celebrations in England too. Hunyadi sent a special courier (among others), Erasmus Fullar, to Oxford with the news of the victory.
The national hero
Along with his son Matthias Corvinus, Hunyadi is considered a Hungarian national hero and praised as its defender against the Ottoman threat.
Romanian historiography adopted Hunyadi and gives him a place of importance in the history of Romania too. However, Romanian national consciousness did not embrace him to the extent that Hungarian national conscience did. John Hunyadi, a Hungarian hero, was subordinated to the ideology of National Communism in the era of Ceaușescu and transmuted into a hero of Romania.
Pope Pius II writes that "Hunyadi did not increase so much the glory of the Hungarians, but especially the glory of the Romanians among whom he was born."
The French writer and diplomat Philippe de Commines described Hunyadi as "a very valiant gentleman, called the White Knight of Wallachia, a person of great honour and prudence, who for a long time had governed the kingdom of Hungary, and had gained several battles over the Turks".
Pietro Ranzano wrote in his work Annales omnium temporum (1490–1492) that John Hunyadi was commonly called "Ianco"' („Ioanne Huniate, Ianco vulgo cognominator). In chronicles written by Byzantine Greek authors (such as George Sphrantzes and Laonikos Chalkokondyles) he is called „Ianco/Iango", „Iancou/Iangou", „Iancos/Iangos", „Iancoula/Iangoula", „Gianco/Giango" and „Ghiangou"
Byzantine literature treated Hunyadi as a saint:
First, I glorify the Emperor of Hellas
— Greek poem on the Battle of Varna
who Alexander the Macedon, the son of Olympias.
The Christian Emperor, who is the peak and the root
and found the cross, the mighty Constantine.
and the third one is the absolutely marvelous Emperor John.
How to write a tribute for him
and should my mind how rise to exalted praise?
Because like the two Emperors mentioned above
I also pay such respect to the above Emperor.
It is worthy and appropriate that the Church of Rome
and the whole generation of Eastern and Western Christians
respectfully draw a full memory of the present.
Who became famous in the battles of wars
the brave and the timid ones and all the generations, I say,
to fall before John of Hungary today,
glorify him as a knight
glorify him today as an Emperor,
together with the ancient, mighty, and brave Samson,
with the terrible Alexander and the mighty Constantine.
I glorify the evangelists, I also glorify the prophets,
and the mighty Saints fighting for Christ,
and among them, I glorify Emperor John.
Hunyadi was "recognised as being Hungarian..." and "frequently called Ugrin Janko, 'Janko the Hungarian'" in the Serbian and Croatian societies of the 15th century, while another bugarštica makes him of Serbian origin. According to a bugarštica (a Serbian popular poem), he was the son of Despot Stefan Lazarević and Stefan's alleged wife, a girl from Hermannstadt/Nagyszeben (present-day Sibiu, Romania). Actually, the Despot did not father any children. He is also portrayed as an ardent supporter of the Catholicization of Orthodox peoples.
In Bulgarian folklore, the memory of Hunyadi was preserved in the epic song hero character of Yankul(a) Voivoda, along with Sekula Detentse, a fictitious hero perhaps inspired by Hunyadi's nephew, Thomas Székely.
He was subsidiary to Roger de Flor as the role model for the fictional character of Tirant lo Blanc, the epic romance written by Joanot Martorell, published in Valencia in 1490. They both shared, for instance, the device of a raven on their shield.
Nicolaus Olahus was the nephew of John Hunyadi.
In 1515, the English printer Wynkyn de Worde published a long metrical romance called 'Capystranus', a graphic account of the defeat of the Turks.
In 1791, Hannah Brand produced a new play called 'Huniades or The Siege of Belgrade', which played to a packed house in the King's Theatre, Norwich.
Iancu de Hunedoara National College in Hunedoara, Romania is named after him.
Gallery
- John Hunyadi (Nádasdy Mausoleum, 1664)
- Statue of John Hunyadi in the Royal Castle in Budapest, Hungary (made by István Tóth in 1903)
- Statue of John Hunyadi at the Heroes' Square, Budapest, Hungary (made by Ede Margó in 1906)
- Statutes of Julian Cesarini, John Hunyadi and John of Capistrano in Szeged, Hungary (made by Ferenc Sidló in 1930)
- Statue of John Hunyadi in Pécs, Hungary (made by Pál Pátzay in 1956)
- Relief of John Hunyadi on the pedestal of the statue of Matthias Corvinus in Szeged, Hungary (made by Gábor Józsa in 2001)
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- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 111.
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- Teke 1980, p. 149.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 154.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 120.
- ^ Vaughan 2002, p. 272.
- ^ Bolovan et al. 1997, p. 109.
- ^ Bartl et al. 2002, p. 49.
- Mureşanu 2001, pp. 127–128.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 128.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 290.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 291.
- Engel 2001, pp. 288–289.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 137.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 289.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 138.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 167.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 168.
- The Annals of Jan Długosz (A.D. 1447), p. 501.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 142.
- Mureşanu 2001, pp. 141–142.
- Mureşanu 2001, pp. 141–143.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 152.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 144.
- ^ Cartledge 2011, p. 58.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 150.
- Fine 1994, p. 554.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 174.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 168.
- Teke 1980, p. 175.
- Teke 1980, pp. 175–176.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 172.
- Teke 1980, p. 177.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 173.
- ^ Bartl et al. 2002, p. 50.
- Teke 1980, pp. 177–178.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 292.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 178.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 181.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 176.
- ^ Bak 1994, p. 68.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 180.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 182.
- ^ Cartledge 2011, p. 59.
- Bartl et al. 2002, pp. 50, 318.
- Babinger 1978, p. 99.
- Babinger 1978, pp. 99–100.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 293.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 178.
- Teke 1980, p. 185.
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- ^ Engel 2001, p. 295.
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- Teke 1980, pp. 190–191.
- Teke 1980, pp. 191–192.
- Teke 1980, p. 192.
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- Teke 1980, p. 195.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 183.
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- Teke 1980, p. 198.
- Mureşanu 2001, pp. 184–185.
- Teke 1980, pp. 198, 231.
- Babinger 1978, p. 110.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 184.
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- ^ Teke 1980, p. 199.
- Teke 1980, p. 201.
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- ^ Teke 1980, p. 203.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 185.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 186.
- Teke 1980, pp. 204–205.
- Teke 1980, p. 206.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 188.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 191.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 208.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 189.
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- Pop 2005, p. 296.
- Babinger 1978, p. 139.
- Teke 1980, p. 209.
- ^ Engel 2001, p. 296.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 195.
- ^ Cartledge 2011, p. 60.
- ^ Babinger 1978, p. 141.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 196.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 197.
- Mureşanu 2001, pp. 197–199.
- Stavrianos 2000, pp. 61–62.
- ^ Mureşanu 2001, p. 199.
- ^ Teke 1980, p. 217.
- Mureşanu 2001, p. 200.
- Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Europe (ch. 1.10.), p. 60.
- ^ Kubinyi 2008, p. 23.
- Kubinyi 2008, p. 25.
- Engel 2001, p. 297.
- Tanner 2009, p. 49.
- Tanner 2009, p. 50.
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On July 22, 1456, John Hunyadi won a decisive victory at Belgrade over the armies of Sultan Mehmed II. Hunyadi's feat—carried out with a small standing army combined with peasants rallied to fight the infidel by the Franciscan friar St John of Capistrano—had the effect of putting an end to Ottoman attempts on Hungary and Western Europe for the next seventy years, and is considered to have been one of the most momentous victories in Hungarian military history. The bells ringing at noon throughout Christendom are, to this day, a daily commemoration of John Hunyadi's victory.
- John Hunyadi. "Hungary in American History Textbooks". Corvinus Library: Hungarian History. Retrieved 26 May 2016.
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- Imre Lukinich: A History of Hungary in Biographical Sketches (page: 109.)
- Volume 7 of World and Its Peoples: Europe. Marshall Cavendish. 2009. p. 891. ISBN 978-0-7614-7883-6.
In the war, Janos Hunyadi (1387–1456), subsequently a Hungarian national hero, emerged to lead Hungary's political life.
- Shaw, Stanford Jay (1976). History of the Ottoman Empire and modern Turkey, Volume 1. Cambridge University Press. pp. 51. ISBN 978-0-521-29163-7.
Hunyadi had suddenly risen as the great Hungarian national hero as a result of his victories over the Turks in 1442.
- Dupuy, Richard Ernest (1986). The encyclopedia of military history from 3500 B.C. to the present. Harper & Row, original from University of Michigan. p. 435. ISBN 978-0-06-181235-4.
John Hunyadi, the national hero of Hungary, and his son Mathias Corvinus, who reigned as King of Hungary
- Matthews, John P. C. (2007). Explosion: the Hungarian Revolution of 1956. Hippocrene Books. pp. 73–74. ISBN 978-0-7818-1174-3.
One of the most powerful personalities in Hungarian history, Hunyadi established a national unity and order which transcended privileges and special interests and succeeded in raising Hungary to the status of a great power.
- ^ Boia 2001, pp. 135–136.
- "Rethinking National Identity after National-Communism? The case of Romania (by Cristina Petrescu, University of Bucharest)". www.eurhistxx.de. Archived from the original on 5 March 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
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- Burkhard Gotthelf Struve (1717). Rerum Germanicarum Scriptores aliquot insignes. Vol. 2. p. 89.
- Scoble, Andrew Richard. The Memoirs of Philippe De Commynes, Lord of Argenton (Volume 2); Containing the Histories of Louis Xi and Charles Viii, Kings of France. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-150-90258-1.
- Moravcsik, Gyula: Magyar-görög tanulmányok 1 – Görög költemény a várnai csatáról (page 16, line 17–38) http://real-eod.mtak.hu/7843/2/MTA_Konyvek_124140.pdf
- Varga 1982, p. 66.
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- Bărbulescu, Mihai (2005). The History of Transylvania: De la 1541 Până la 1711. Romanian Cultural Institute. ISBN 978-9737784063.
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Sources
Primary sources
- Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini: Europe (c. 1400–1458) (Translated by Robert Brown, introduced and commented by Nancy Bisaha) (2013). The Catholic University of America press. ISBN 978-0-8132-2182-3.
- The Annals of Jan Długosz (An English abridgement by Maurice Michael, with commentary by Paul Smith) (1997). IM Publications. ISBN 1-901019-00-4.
Secondary sources
- Jefferson, John (2012). The Holy Wars of King Wladislas and Sultan Murad: The Ottoman-Christian Conflict from 1438–1444. Leiden: Brill Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-21904-5.
- Babinger, Franz (1978). Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09900-6.
- Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Hunyadi, János" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 955–956.
- Bak, János (1994). "The Late Medieval Period, 1382–1526". In Sugar, Peter F.; Hanák, Péter; Frank, Tibor (eds.). A History of Hungary. Indiana University Press. pp. 54–82. ISBN 963-7081-01-1.
- Bartl, Július; Čičaj, Viliam; Kohútova, Mária; Letz, Róbert; Segeš, Vladimír; Škvarna, Dušan (2002). Slovak History: Chronology & Lexicon. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Slovenské Pedegogické Nakladatel'stvo. ISBN 0-86516-444-4.
- Boia, Lucian (2001). History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness. CEU Press. ISBN 963-9116-96-3.
- Bolovan, Ioan; Constantiniu, Florin; Michelson, Paul E.; Pop, Ioan Aurel; Popa, Cristian; Popa, Marcel; Scurtu, Ioan; Treptow, Kurt W.; Vultur, Marcela; Watts, Larry L. (1997). A History of Romania. The Center for Romanian Studies. ISBN 973-98091-0-3.
- Cartledge, Bryan (2011). The Will to Survive: A History of Hungary. C. Hurst & Co. ISBN 978-1-84904-112-6.
- Chadwick, H. Munro; Chadwick, Nora K. (2010). The Growth of Literature, Volume 2. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31019-2.
- E. Kovács, Péter (1990). Matthias Corvinus (in Hungarian). Officina Nova. ISBN 963-7835-49-0.
- Engel, Pál (2001). The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526. I.B. Tauris Publishers. ISBN 1-86064-061-3.
- Engel, Pál (2003). "Hunyadi pályakezdése ". In Csukovits, Enikő (ed.). Engel Pál. Honor, vár, ispánság: Válogatott tanulmányok . Osiris Kiadó. pp. 512–526. ISBN 963-389-392-5.
- Fine, John V. A (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
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- Makkai, László (1994). "The Three Nations of Transylvania (1360–1526)". In Köpeczi, Béla; Barta, Gábor; Bóna, István; Makkai, László; Szász, Zoltán; Borus, Judit (eds.). History of Transylvania. Akadémiai Kiadó. pp. 178–243. ISBN 963-05-6703-2.
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- Stavrianos, L. S. (2000). The Balkans since 1453 (with a new Introduction by Traian Stoianovich). Hurst & Company. ISBN 978-1-85065-551-0.
- Tanner, Marcus (2009). The Raven King: Matthias Corvinus and the Fate of his Lost Library. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-15828-1.
- Teke, Zsuzsa (1980). Hunyadi János és kora (in Hungarian). Gondolat. ISBN 963-280-951-3.
- Varga, Domokos (1982). Hungary in Greatness and Decline: the 14th and 15th centuries. Hungarian Cultural Foundation. ISBN 0-914648-11-X.
- Vaughan, Richard (2002). Philip the Good: The Apogee of Burgundy. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-917-1.
- Wheatcroft, Andrew (2009). The Enemy at the Gate: Habsburgs, Ottomans, and the Battle for Europe. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-01374-6.
Further reading
- Held, Joseph (1985). Hunyadi: Legend and Reality. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-88033-070-8.
- Florescu, Radu and Raymond T. McNally (1990). Dracula, Prince of Many Faces: His Life and His Times. Back Bay Books. ISBN 0-316-28656-7.
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded byFranko Talovac | Ban of Severin alongside John Hunyadi, Jr. (1439–1440) alongside Nicholas Újlaki (1445–1446) 1439–1446 |
Succeeded byvacant |
Preceded byLadislaus Jakcs & Michael Jakcs |
Voivode of Transylvania alongside Nicholas Újlaki 1441–1446 |
Succeeded byNicholas Újlaki & Emeric Bebek |
Preceded byEmeric Bebek & Stephen Bánfi |
Count of the Székelys alongside Nicholas Újlaki 1441–1446 |
Succeeded byFrancis Csáki |
Preceded byGeorge Orbonász | Ispán of Temes alongside Nicholas Újlaki (1441–1446) 1441–1456 |
Succeeded byLadislaus Hunyadi |
Preceded bySeven captains | Regent of Hungary 1446–1453 |
Succeeded byLadislaus V as King |
Preceded bySebastian Rozgonyi | Ispán of Pozsony 1450–1452 |
Succeeded byLadislaus Hunyadi |
Preceded byUlrich II, Count of Celje | Ispán of Trencsén 1454–1456 |
- 1400s births
- 1456 deaths
- Hungarian soldiers
- Hunyadi family
- Medieval Transylvanian people
- 15th-century deaths from plague (disease)
- Burials at St. Michael's Cathedral, Alba Iulia
- Hungarian Roman Catholics
- 15th-century Roman Catholics
- Characters in Serbian epic poetry
- Christians of the Crusade of Varna
- Counts of the Székelys
- Voivodes of Transylvania
- 15th-century Hungarian nobility
- Romanian Roman Catholics
- Bans of Severin
- Athleta Christi