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906
[history
HUNGARY

empire had been raised again from its ruins by Mahommed I

(1402-142 1), and resumed its triumphal progress under Murad II (1421-1451). Yet even now Sigismund, at the head of his Magyars, thrice (1422~1424, 1426-1427, and 1430-1431) encountered the Turks, not ingloriously, in the open field, till, recognizing that Hungary must thenceforth rely entirely on her ovsn resources in any future struggle with Islam, he elaborately fortined the whole southern frontier, and converted the little fort of Nandorfehérvar, later Belgrade, at the junction of the Danube and Save, into an enormous first-class fortress, which proved strong enough to repel all the attacks of the Turks for more than a century It argued no ordinary foresight thus to recognize that Hungary's strategy in her contest with the Turks must be str1ctlv defensive, and the wisdom of S1g1smund was justified by the disasters which almost invariably overcame the later Magyar kings whenever they ventured upon aggressive warfare with the sultans.

A monarch so overburdened with cares was naturally always in need of money, ' and thus obliged to lean heavily upon the support of the estates of the realm. The importance and influence of the d1et increased proportionately. It met every year, sometimes tw1ce a year, during Sigismund's reign, and was no longer, as in the days of Louis the Great, merely a consultative council, but a legislative body in partnership with the king. It was still, however, essentially an assembly of notables, lay and clerical, at which the gentry, though technically eligible, do not seem to have been directly represented At S1g1smund's first diet (1397) it was declared that the king might choose his counsellors where he listed, and at the d1et of 1397 he invited the free and royal towns to send their deputies to the parliament. Subsequently this privilege was apparently erected into a statute, but how far it was acted upon we know not. Sigismund, more fortunate than the Polish kings, seems to have had little trouble with h1s diets This was largely due to his friendly intimacy with the majority of the Magyar notables, from among whom he chose his chief counsellors The estates loyally supported him against the attempted ex actions of the popes, and do not seem to have objected to any of his reforms, chief among which was the army-reform project of 1435, to provide for the better defence of the land against the Turks. This measure obliged all the great dignitaries, and the principal towns also, according to their means, to maintain a bzmderium of five hundred horsemen, or a proportional part thereof, and hold it ready, at the first summons, thus supplying the crown with a standing army 76,875 strong In addition to this, a reserve force called the lelckkalonaszig was recruited from among the lesser gentry according to their tele/es or holdings, every th1rty-three teleks being held responsible for a mounted and fully equipped archer. Moreover, river fleets, built by Genoese masters and manned by Servians, were constructed to patrol and defend” the great rivers of Hungary, especially on the Turkish frontier. Much as he owed to them, however, Sigismund was no mere nobles' king. His care for the common people was sincere and constant, but his benehcial efforts in this d1rect1on were thwarted by the curious interaction of two totally dissimilar social system actors, feudalism and Hussitism. In Sigismund s reign the feudal system, for the first time, became deeply rooted in Magyar soil, and it is a lamentable fact that in 15th»ccntury Hungary it is to be seen at its very worst, especially in those wild tratts, and they were many, in which the k1ng's writ could hardly be said to run. Simultaneously from Hussnes the west came the Hussite propagandists teaching that all men were equal, and that all property should be held in common The suffering Magyar multitudes eagerly responded to these seductive teachings, and the result was a series of dangerous popular risings (the worst in 1433 and 1436) in which heresy and communism were inextricably intermingled “ith the aid of inquisitors from Rome, the evil was literally burnt out, but not before provinces, especially in the south and

1 In 1412 he pawned the twenty-four Zips towns to Poland, and, ;gH;4;:1; he pledged his margraviate of Brandenburg to the Hohen

south-east, had been utterly depopulated They were re peopled by Vlachs.

Yet despite the interminable wars and rebellions which darken the history of Hungary in the reign of Sigismund, the country, on the whole, was progressing. Its ready response to the k1ng's heavy demands for the purpose of the national defence points to the existence of a healthy and self-sacrificing public spirit, and the eagerness with which the youth of all classes now began to flock to the foreign universities is another satisfactory featurc of the age. Between 1362 and 1450 no fewer than 4151 Magyar students frequented the university of Vienna, nearly as many went by preference to Prague, and this, too, despite the fact that there were now two universities in Hungary itself, the old foundation of Louis the Great at Pécs, and a new one established at Buda by Sigismund.

Like Louis the Great before him, Sigismund had failed to found a dynasty, but, hfteen years before h1s death, he had succeeded in providing his only daughter Elizabeth with a consort apparently well able to protect both her and her inheritance in the person of Albert V., duke of Austria. Albert, a sturdy soldier, who had given brilliant proofs of valour and generalship in the Hussite wars, was crowned king of Hungary at Székesfehérvar (Stuhlweissenburg) on the 1st of January 1438, elected king of the Romans at Frankfort on the 18th of March 1438, and crowned king of Bohemia at Prague on the 29th of June 1438. On returning to Buda in 1439, he at once plunged into a war with the Turks, who had, in the meantime, captured the important Servian fortress of Semendria and subjugated the greater part of Bosnia. But the king got no farther than Servia, and was carried off by dysentery (Oct. 27, 1439), in the forty-second year of his age, in the course of the campaign.

Albert left behind him two infant daughters only, but his consort was big with child, and, in the event of that child proving to be an heir male, his father's will bequeathed to him the kingdoms of Hungary and Bohemia, under the regency of his mother. Thus, with the succession uncertain, with the Turk at the very door, with the prospect, dismal at the best, of a long minority, the political outlook was both embarrassing and perilous. Obviously a warrior-king was preferable to a regimen of women and children, and the eyes of the wiser Magyars turned involuntarily towards Wladislaus III. of Poland, who, though only in his nineteenth year, was already renowned for his martial disposition. Wladislaus accepted the proffered throne from the Magyar delegates at Cracow on the 8th of March 1440, but in the meantime (Feb. 22) the queen-widow gave birth to a son who, six weeks later, as Ladislaus V. (qw) was crowned king of Hungary (May 15) at Székesfehérvar. On the 22nd of May the Polish monarch appeared at Buda, was unanimously elected king of Hungary under the title of Vl ladislaus I. (June 24) and crowned on the 17th of July. This duoregnum proved even more injurious to Hungary than the dreaded interregnum. Queen Elizabeth, aided by her kinsmen, the emperor Frederick III. and the counts of Cilli, flooded northern and western Hungary with Hussite mercenaries, one of whom, jan Giszkra, she made her captain-general, vshile Vlladislaus held the central and south-eastern parts of the realm. The resulting civil war was terminated only by the death of Elizabeth on the 13th of December 1443.

All this time the pressure of the Turks upon the southern provinces of Hungary had been continuous, but fortunately all their efforts had so far been frustrated by the J h valour and generalship of the ban of Szorény, John, ;:";, ad, Hunyadi, the fame of whose victories, notably in 1442 and 1443, encouraged the Holy See to place Hungary for the third time at the head of a general crusade against the infidel. The experienced diplomatist Cardinal Cesarini was accordingly sent to Hungary to reconcile Wladislaus with the emperor. The king, who had just returned from the famous “long campaign ” of 1443, willingly accepted the leadership of the Christian League. At the diet of Buda, early in 1444, supplies were voted for the enterprise, and Wladislaus was on the point of quitting

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