Siege of Golubac
Siege of Golubac | |||||||
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Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe and Ottoman–Hungarian Wars | |||||||
The Golubac fortress |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Ottoman Empire | Kingdom of Hungary[1] Wallachia[2] Grand Duchy of Lithuania |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Murad II | Sigismund Zawisza Czarny † Dan II of Wallachia |
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Strength | |||||||
unknown | 15–20,000 | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
unknown | heavy casualties |
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The Siege of Golubac (Hungarian: Galambóc) was a military conflict between the Hungarian–Wallachian–Lithuanian alliance and the Ottoman Empire in May 1428. This siege was the first battle in the Hungarian military history, when the Hungarian army used significant artillery. However, they could not capture Golubac as it was defeated by the Ottoman main army, led by Sultan Murad II. After the battle, most of Serbia and Bosnia was conquered by the Ottoman Army.
Background
At the ending of the 14th century, the Ottoman Empire conquered most of the Balkan Peninsula and arrived to the southern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary. After the Battle of Kosovo (1389), Serbia was threatened by the Ottomans. Therefore, in 1426 Stefan Lazarević, the Serbian despot, made an agreement with the Hungarian King, Sigismund of Luxemburg: fortress of Belgrade and Golubac where assigned to Hungary in exchange for Sigismund's protection of Serbia and his recognition of Đurađ Branković as the successor of Stefan as the Serbian despot.
After the death of Lazarević in 1427, Sigismund asked Branković to honor the agreement, but the Serbian despot was reluctant to do so. Therefore, Sigismund had to take the fortress of Belgrade with military force. After these event the Serbian constable of Golubac ceded the fortress to the Ottomans on behalf of Sigismund.
Siege
Because of its strategic location, Sigismund did not want to leave Golubac in the Ottomans' hand. During the winter of 1427, he built the fortress of Lászlóvára ("The fortress of Saint Ladislaus") across the Danube from Golubac. This new fortress became the starting point of the campaign against the Ottomans. When the attack started, Sigismund had around 15,000–20,000 soldiers. Sigismund's army also included Lithuanian and Wallachian auxiliary regiments, commanded by Zawisza Czarny and Dan II of Wallachia.
At the end of April, the Christian troops attacked Golubac. For the first time in the Hungarian military history the Hungarian Army used artillery in a military conflict. The soldiers shelled the fortress from warships and from Lászlóvára. The Ottoman defenders of Golubac resisted well, but the artillery shelling destroyed the walls. Sigismund planned an assault against the walls when a significant Ottoman army, led personally by Murad II, arrived to save the fortress. Sigismund did not engage the Sultan in an open battle and instead reached an armistice: the Christians would stop their attacks and retreat in peace.
The Christian army started crossing the Danube in retreat when the Ottomans broke the armistice and organized a surprise attack. During the battle Sigismund's guards were led by Stephen Rozgonyi, Ispán of Temes County, whose wife, Cicelle Rozgonyi, personally organized the crossing of the Danube. Lithuanian soldiers, including their commander, were killed while covering the crossing of Hungarian and Wallachian troops.
Aftermath
After the Hungarian defeat, Murad II organized an offensive against Serbia, whose despot, Branković, finally accepted being the vassal of the Ottoman Empire. After the Serbian defeat, the Ottomans invaded Bosnia and defeated Tvrtko II of Bosnia, conquering some of the most important fortresses.
Immediately after the battle Sigismund started organizing a defense system against the Ottomans. He sent a significant army to Belgrade and handed defense of the Banate of Szörény to the Teutonic Knights. However, Murad II did not attack Hungary and instead concentrated on the Siege of Thessalonica. In 1430 they reached an armistice, which held till 1432.
References
Sources
- Szilágyi, Sándor: A Magyar Nemzet Története
- Hungarian Catholic Enciclopedy