Decemb. 23. 1663. Imprimatur. William Morice. FLORUS HUNGARICUS: OR The History OF HUNGARIA AND TRANSYLVANIA Deduced from the Original of that Nation, and their settling in Europe in the Year of our Lord 461, To this Dangerous and Suspectful Period of that Kingdom by the present Turkish Invasion, Anno 1664. john Chantry. sculp LONDON, Printed by W. G. for Hen. Marsh at the Prince's Arms in Chancery-Lane. 1664. To the Right Honourable JOHN Earl of BATH, etc. May it please your Lordship, THIS History (Written Originally in Latin by a Noble Hand, native of that Kingdom) was like a Treatise of that deserving quality, addressed to the Hands of two Illustrious Persons, whom the Translator (sure of doing the Author no injury in this particular) hath represented in your single SELF, to what advantage of Lustre the World shall speak. For (my Lord) it is not the design of this Dedication to bring water to the Ocean, (although the Ever-flowing Tribute that is due to Virtue is natural and necessary) both because this straight and shallow, will not boast or presume to be proud of any Additament to Your Fame; & for that this Candle in such Daylight will prove but a faint and unobserved Glimmering of that full Splendour. Actions and not Words, have entertained the greatest part of your Life, till the late blessed Change, which shall never be mentioned but with Your Name; Pax nescit COMITIS non memor esse sui: Insomuch that your Lordship is a living Epitome of our late War, and is read by most men with Delight and Admiration. Upon that account it is (my Lord) that I humbly present to You this FLORUS HUNGARICUS and Abridgement of their History, not knowing with whose Sum of Glory this Compendium of so renowned a Nation would better suit; for from the Founding of their Empire, Time hath had few respites, and but momentary vacations from Military Affairs. In which Speculation (my Lord) I am so much assured, that you are frequently Conversant, and familiarly please yourself in that Heroical Diversion, that I could not restrain the Ambitious Tender of this COMMENTARY; which although very uneven, and abrupt of Style (as could not be avoided in such a penned and narrow inconvenience of Expression) yet it hath plainly conveyed and continued the story. The Endeavour, what it is, is most humbly submitted to Your Lordship's judgement, and most submissively begs Your Protection and Patronage, under which it doubts not to find acceptance with the World. (My Lord) I am Your most Humble and Obedient Servant J. H. To the READER. THE Affairs and History of Hungary variously agitated under several mutations and Revolutions, are now presented to the World in an Epitome, which nevertheless Comprehends most of the Transactions in Europe, and may entitle itself to be its Remembrancer. This Nation some Ages before, not seen and unheard of, did out of its Ruins rise to a Mighty Kingdom, and as it did so wonderfully increase, so did it with the same Urgencies of Fate, decline as fast, and again recover itself; and so by the inconstancy of its Fortune either added Terror or Hope to its Neighbours: For while this People struggled for Empire, intending to heap up their Glory in the Splendour of one Day, and would allow no futurities to their Felicity, the Justice of Providence decreed them a laborious race, wherein their speed and Strength hath been tired; and by many uneven Ascents and Descents, almost wearied out of Breath: in which time notwithstanding (the space of Twelve hundred years and upwards) it hath effected so many great things both in War and Peace, that it seemeth to have dared and accomplished things far beyond either its Fortune or Ability, Commanding and extending its Power so far over the adjoining Nations, that while its Actions and story is read, both Asia and Europe are concerned, and are again subjected in the review, as Tributaries to the Renown of this Empire. I must confess that so many Vicissitudes, and the Grandeur of the subject do much discompose the Contexture, but so that the shape of the Majesty hereof will sufficiently appear, although it have not its full Proportions. We consider therefore the Hungarian Nation according to these Intervals or Distances, The first Age was most fierce and Sanguinous, while they were under the darkness of Paganism, which lasted almost 600 years, during which time they exceeded the very Beasts in all savage and barbarous Cruelty. The following Age under Geysa and Stephen, Christian Princes, until the Reign of Charles Son of Lewis, in which time passed 340 years, was afflicted and sore put to it; yet it made a shift to rear itself & raise its Glory out of the Dust. Thence to our Times have run 330 years, in which its Glories have been retrograde, and have verged to a decrepit and feeble estate, save that under K. Mathias the Kingdom moved its Arms with some vigour, and seemed to be renewed to a Fresh and active Youth and Virility. But Mathias being taken away by the envious Destinies, the Hungarians soon lost their ancient Courage and Virtue, suffering the Turks to possess themselves of the greatest part of their Country (which they are now like wholly to subdue) while they were divided betwixt the Interests of Ferdinand the Emperor, and john Zapolyai Vayvod of Transylvania, pretenders to that Crown; so that Hungary is to be sought in itself. For while the Kingdom was insociable and coveted by many, it became burdened with more weight than it could bear; and that Government which might have been well supported and maintained by one, being shouldered by so many, fell with ruin to the Ground. It is now redevable to the Reader, that I give an account of what Authors have been consulted in the Compiling of this Treatise; Many Hungarian Writers being waived because of their Flattery and fondness of their own Nation, or Fabulous Untruths; of which sort are Ranzanus, Ritius, and others; but one for all is Bonfinius, who hath loaded the Original of the Hungarians with a multitude of Fictions. Thur●●zius hath done something better; in the whole six hundred Authors have been conferred; but those to whom Credence was due are only these; First Nicholas Istuamfi, a man conversant in the story who wrote his Rationale from the life of Mathias the first; but because of his propense affection to the Caesars (for which teason he either neglects Truth or conceals their Vices) foam rare, more Ancient and modern Writers have been contra-examined against him. Next to him, Flavius Ascanius Centorinus, who Composed his History of the Dacian Wars out of the Manuscript Commentaries of Ferdinand, and Castaldus (his General) themselves. Lastly, john Michael Brutus, who wrote of this matter by the Command of Stephen Bathori King of Poland, together with Thuanus and some few not so Eminent. The Reader, it is presumed, will be hereby satisfied of the veracity and Authority of this Discourse, whose Subject (being so much a stranger) needed a very ample Certificate, for that Impostures of these distant Regions are very rife and frequent. All that is to be Apologised and Excused, is the style, which pretends to nothing but understandible English, shut up by such rigid clauses and restraints of matter, that it could not breathe any free Language. And when the Reader shall have perceived how this Volume is crowded to render it a Manual acceptable to the diversion of curious and inquisitive men, he will no doubt vouchsafe a Pardon to this Endeavour. Vale. THE HISTORY OF HUNGARIA AND TRANSYLVANIA. THIS Nation, The Derivation of the Huns not seen nor known in Europe, before the decrepit Estate of the Roman Empire, had their formidable Extract from the extremest part of Maeotis, inhabited by the Massagetes, next neighbours to the Dahi, as Plinius, Mela and Ptolemy do report, though some Authors have derived them from the Parthians, both seated betwixt the Rivers Oxus and jaxarta. Former Times called all that Tract of ground lying North and North-east, by the Name of Scythia, and under that general Appellation the Inhabitants were notified to the world, which now is distinguished into the different Tribes of the present Tartarian Empire; who at this day continue that vagrant, incursive, and predatory disposition, that brought these necessitous Huns in vast multitudes into fertiler though never so distant Regions. It will be therefore requisite to give some brief account of this Nursery and source of so many Martial Nations, Scythia their place of Extraction. and particularly of this of the Huns, because of this singular remark, that none of her swarms besides, were ever blest with the Christian Faith; and arrived to, and persisted in the Glory of a Kingdom and Empire under the Ensign of the Cross, entire, separate and unmixed from other Nations, in all the Fortunes of War, and the variation of their Estate. Scythia by the Ancients was divided into the European and Asiatic; It's Description and division. the former made stretching itself from the Springs of Tanais by the Banks of the Lake Maeotis and the Euxine Sea, to Ister (so named when swelled with the Confluence of the Danow, Savus and Dravus, 3 great Rivers by the City of Belgrade) the reason of which mistake was, for that they falsely supposed Asia to be divided from Europe by the Tanais: For from Taenarus the Extreme promontory of Peloponesus to the Springs and rise of Tanais, not more than half the Line extending to the Northern Ocean, is Comprehended; that River arising in the Confines of the greater Russia, and the lesser Tartary, from a Lake called Ivanowo jezcier, not out of the Riphaean Mountains, as is fabled by the Ancients; for that there are no such Hills in nature, nor was it ever agreed among Geographers where they should be sited. And it is since manifest that from the Lake aforesaid there is as much space of ground lying between the Sea, as is betwixt it and Peloponensus, so that many places are assigned to Asia in this Region, which do truly belong to Europe. This is the rather insisted, to rectify the general mistake in most of the modern Maps and descriptions of the World. The vastness of the Asian Scythia is so great, The Asian Scythia. that its bounds were neither known in the past, not discovered to the present Age; Circumscribed to the East with the opposite shore of unknown Seas; to the North with the Frozen Scythian Sea; to the West with the Cimmerian Bosphorus, Maeotis, Tanais, and a Line drawn to the White Sea; to the South with the Indies; whence it comes to pass that the Strait of Anian is yet controverted; some allowing no such Sea; others so narrow a one, that the Scythians are feigned to have had their originals from America. The uncertainty of our knowledge of this Country is imputed to this main Cause, for that none of the Mighty of the world could ever boast of a Conquest thereof. We read of Expeditions made against the Scythians, both towards the East and the West, but no way remarkable for their progression. Cyrus never reached jaxarta; Darius attempting the European Scythians, came not to the Mountains of Dacia. Trajan who went further than any of his Predecessors, arrived not to the Springs of Marusius. The Arms of Alexander the Great, the more inward Inhabitants only heard of, but felt not. And Pliny complains that in his time the vastness of the Maeotick Lake was altogether unknown, some saying it was a Gulf or Bay of the Sea; others that it was divided from it by an Isthmus or small piece of ground. And even now although Zingis Chan, and Temur or Tamerlane Chan, attained the Dominion of all Scythia, and their Acts are extant and read by many Men in the Arabic Tongue; yet the places thereof are so obscured by their barbarous and confused names that they afford imperfect light to any Discovery. The very word Scythian, Scythia now called Tartary. in former times extended not its self further than to the Taurica Chersonesu; led by which reason, Strabo called that Scythia the Less, now termed by Pinetus, Precopsa and Gazara, and even at this day, on the same account is Tartary the Less denominated: For what ever Ancient Times called Scythia, the greatest part thereof by the latter is called Tartary or Tataria, The Country of a most Warlike Nation, addicted to Prey and Robbery. The whole is almost Desert and desolate, so that Planocarpus the Nuncio of Innocent the fourth, found the better half of it to be Sandy Plains, and destitute of Inhabitants; who have no certain or fixed Habitations, as counting it a sin and a crime to build a City; It's Desert and Inhabitable side (as is reported of the Ancient Nomads, whose Progeny these are) but carry their Tents about with them. This Desert Tartary (called in Arabic, Kafshak and Barka, from whence the Hungarians are deduced) is shut up to the South with the Caspian and Euxine Seas, and the interjacent Hills of the Circassian Mamalukes, anciently Caucasus. The East is limited by the Chovaresmi, by Strabo called Chorasmasini; by Stephanus, Chorameni (a People derived from the Massagetae and Sacae, to whom Bessus and Spiramenes fled from the Bactrians and Sogdianis) Atcar and Schagnak; until ranging to other Regions as far as Turquestana (which is Seated betwixt Oxus and jaxara, the peculiar derivation of the Huns) it joins with the Getae, and the Chinese, who Conterminate with the Mogoles and the Chattaei. On the North is the Region of Siberia, vast solitudes and Deserts, and Sands like Mountains. Lastly, on the West, Russia, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire. There are many Tribes of this People, but quite different in Language, as much as the Borderers differ in their several manners from the peaceable simple dispositions of the Inlanders. The Nation of the Sythians, The Antiquity of the Scythians, their propagation. justin affirms, to have been most Ancient, although much disputed for Antiquity by the Egyptians. For the Mountainous places were first Inhabited, than the Plains. Nor is there scarce any People of Europe or Asia, which have not been propagated out of the North, even the Eastern parts as far as India, where under the Name of Parthians, as mentioned before, now called Persians, they dilated their Empire; and the Western, to the Regions of Polonia, Germany, Pannonia, and Denmark; known now and denominated from the Seats of the Sauromatae, Goths, Huns, and Cymbri, Cumani, Comoiri, Geloni, the same with the Peucini▪ Othogothi, Thuringi, Eastern Gotths, and Gepidae originally deduced from the Confines of Tanais, and many more, to which are added the Celtaes; part of whom had their Seat in Thracia, as another part of them gave Name to the Germans, Gauls, and Britons; so that the world hath been peopled in a manner out of these Regions. But in the middle Age of the World, Their change of Name into Huns. those Scythians were dreaded by fewer Names, and renownedly by that of the Huns, subdivided into the White and Black by Procopius (to omit the Gorths who are also allied to the said People by a nearer Etymology, for that according to the Aeolian Dialect which rendered the Scythian, the Character 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. is added before the Consonant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence are derived the Goths, by barbarous pronunciation. The White were the People seated, The Destruction of the Huns. as aforesaid, betwixt Oxus and jaxarta, that gave Name and being to the Hungariane. But because no sure and undoubted Authority thereof can be produced (which may not be wondered at, because the most certain things are scarce testifiable and mostly fabulous, and the Romans after the Decay of their Empire intent to their own, became (as justly ashamed) incurious of other affairs) we must content ourselves with the best Conjectures, and among others, with that of St. Jerome, who Writes, that the Huns came from the Massagetae, and the Extremest parts of the Maeotis; and next with allusion of words, for that Abtela and Attila, the first whereof was the Name of the Euthalitan Kings (to which stock generally the Huns are referred) and the last of the Hungarians, are Names so alike that they cannot be discriminated. To omit many more witnesses, viz. Menander, Paulus Diaconus, Ammianus, and Fernandes, who are copious in the proof thereof by divers most Convincing Arguments, to which we must refer the Reader. Certain it is, they were Conterminous to the first Extract of the Turks now called Turcomania, Bordering North-east upon Persia, where they Inhabited until vanquished by their Sultan or Chan, in the Time of justinian, when part of them mixing and uniting with the Turks, the other part fled Northwards; of whose remains descended the Avares, who after their Progenitors migration Westward, Combated often with the Turks, and likewise by them at last worsted, seconded their fellows into Europe. The Western Huns are those who at this day are called Tartars, part of whom by the Name of Cimmerii since Cymbri, possessed themselves of Denmark. So that after the race of so many Ages, the same Quarrel is revived now under the same Names of both Nations, if we give credit to Antiquity. Next we consider the former Inhabitants of Hungary. The Mysians Inhabited both the Banks of Danubius, The former inhabitants of Hungary. against whom Darius led an innumerable Army; They were called by Homer, Galactophagi, Milk-eaters, a Generation of most just and honest men. Of those a part were the Getae, whose King Dormichaetes so despised Riches, that content with Victory, he released Lysimachus his prisoner, which simplicity is alleged to this day, as the cause of their Servitude to other Nations. Syrmius had Dominion afterward of the same Nation, as King of the Triballi, who for fear of Alexander the Great, fled into the Island Peuce, the Fame of whom remains to this day, by that Tract of Ground which lies between Varadin Peter, and Belgrade, called by his Name Syrmia. From these came those Mysians, who possesed themselves of Habitations between the Lydians, Phrygians, and Trojans; with an equal simplicity, as unwilling to obey, as ambitious of Commanding. The Daci, Dahi, Daae, and Dahae are the same People; part of them sat down by the Mountainous places of Transylvania, part between Oxus and jaxarta, near to the Massagetes, which space of ground, because it is so great, Strabo cannot be induced to assign the same originals to them both; but how weakly, their migrations and invasions into remotest distanced Regions do sufficiently evince. Plinius makes no distinction between the Daci and the Getae, but only of Name; For as Cottisan is styled by Horace, the King of the Daci, so by Suetonius, he is called Prince of the Getae: But Strabo makes them thus to differ, the Getae to be those whose Country bended towards the East and the Sea; and the Dacians those who stretched themselves oppositely towards Germany, and the rise of the River Ister; although he presently adds, that they both use the same Language. Neither doth he herein agree with himself, because he makes the River Marus or Marusius, to glide through the Getae, and fall into the Danow, which by a due distinction should be said to pass by the Country of the Daci. For this River by Herodotus termed Maris, by others Marsus or Margus; and by the Hungarians, Maros; which ariseth from the Carpathian Hill belonging to the Daci, bends towards the South, till before Alba, winding to the Westward, it is mingled with the Tybiscus, from whence another Error of the same Author is discovered, in that he writes that the Marusius flows into the Danow. Nor are there wanting some (justus Lipsius, and Isaac Causabon) who expound that Marus in Tacitus of this Marisus, by which name also Cluverius understands Morava, as giving Name to Moravia. Of these Nations as of Servile manners and Spirits, the Names of Slaves or Servants were borrowed, represented in Comedies (as they either personated true, or seeming-true Slaves) by Davus and Geta, as the Scholiast on Aristophanes witnesseth, and is further proved by the Authority of the Comical Apollodorus in one of his Fables, where they are both named, and whence Terence borrowed them, whence soon after the said Names were applied to unlearned and ignorant men. Hence the same Terence, Davus sum non Oedipus, of no capacity to resolve Riddles. This Danubius, The Danubius. since mention is to be frequently made of it and occurs here; Eustathius the Interpreter of Dionysus, out of Strabo and Stephanus reports to have been once called Matthoas; but when the Scythians in passing over it were sorely afflicted, it came to be called Danusius or Danubius, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Danum, in the Macedon Language signifying Death, as Plutarch witnesseth; between which River and Ister, Peolomy and Pliny so distinguish, that the upper part from Axiopolis, which the Pannonians and jazyges possess, to its Springs be called the Danow; and the rest to the Seaward be named Ister; which difference at this day, is hardly or not at all observed. Some have fabled that this River fell from the Riphean Hills, and that one of its Arms disembogued itself into the Adriatic Sea. Now that which afterwards more peculiarly was called Dacia, The Description of Dacia. Comprehends at this time, Transylvania, Moldavia, Valachia beyond the Alps; between the European Sarmatia, and the Rivers of Danubius and Tyra, and the Iazyg●s Metanastae: Moldavia stretcheth itself to the Euxine Sea. Transalpina along the Banks of the Danubius. Transylvania is bounded and Confined by the aforesaid Principalities, White-Russia and Hungary. To the Dacians between the Carpathian Mounrains and Ister, the jazyges were conterminate, to these the Pannonians, being encompassed with two great Forests, and three Rivers, the Savus, Dravus, and Ister. The Grecians called them Paeones, but wherefore doth not appear; for that Paeonia, according to justin Ptolemy, is sited in Macedonia, whose Inhabitants (passing by an ancienter fiction of Endymion's Son) are fabled by Lazius upon the Discomfiture given the Macedonians by Aemilius, to have retreated and Planted themselves by Ister. But Dion Cassius oppugning this Error, derives the Name of the Pannones from Pannus, a word signifying Cloth, Pannonia whence so called. of which they made themselves patched Clothes of divers Colours and pieces; which observation of Habit gave Names to several of the Ancient Nations. Greece was thereby termed Palliata, i. e. Cloaked. Rome, Togata, Gowned. France was divided into Togata & Braccata, Gowned and Breeched. But I do not understand how the excellent Isaac Causabon, by the words of Dion, can conceive that Pannus was a word of the Pannonian Mother Tongue as he largely shows, for the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by Dion is rather referrible to the Custom of wearing the garment, than to the Language of the Nation; nor is the word Pannus of so modern an Extraction but that it was well known to Polybius and other Grecians. By all which it may be supposed that by a small mutation from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the noted Name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 may arise, and be in use with the Grecians, as is abovesaid. But to their story. THE first Captain that led the Huns into these parts of Hungary was Belamber, incited thereto by a Nobleman, The invitation of the Huns into Europe. (who pursuing a Deer that took the great River Tanais, (the supposed bound of Asia and Europe) to the other side, was ravished with the view of so delightful a Prospect, and fruitful Soil) and by his own Ambition of rendering himself Famous and Terrible to the World. His passage over the Tanais, lost him a multitude of Men (for Bridges and Boats were, the one impossible, and the convenient use of the other not known) yet not so disabled Him but that He continued his Expedition by the cheerfulness of his People, and discomfited the * or Roxolans now Russes. Alani; thence he turned his victorious Arms towards the Inhabitants of the Black Sea, and subduing them, persuaded them to take up Arms with him against the Mysians and Dacians, the former Possessors of Servia, Russia, Bulgaria, Moldavia, etc. who made stout opposition. When Melamber, aged and wearied out, left the Achievement to his Son Mundzuch alias Bendeguz, B●lamber their first Captain's Conquest. who Defeated the Goths (after two unlucky and almost fatal Combats) than Conquerors of Pannonia and that Tract of the World, and in a mortal Battle slew the Terror of the Huns, Alatheus and Saprax, the Guardians of Videricus King of the Goths, and stretched his Conquest over all the Territory which lieth betwixt the River Ister and Borysthenes, which includes the Country they now possess. He dying left two Sons (the terrible) Attila and Bleda, Attila his Son succeeds him. to the Tuition of his Brothers Hottar and Rugila, who having vanquished the Eastern parts and utterly expelled the Visigoths from all Thracia, mastering also Macedonia, and Illyria, compelled or frighted the Romans to purchase their Peace with the present payment of 700 l. of Gold, and 300 afterwards yearly, for pretended default whereof and other piques, Attila marching through Germany ruined Argentorate, which he re-edifying caused to be called Strasburg, and in the Catalaunian Fields, gave Battle to Aetius Lieutenant to * not Chaalans in Burgundy as is mistaken, by a place called Maurice near the River Matrona or Marn in France. Valentinianus the Emperor, assisted by the Kings of the Goths and Gauls. Attila had in his Army 50000. some say, 700 thousand men, but the Fate of Europe struggling with this Emergent and sudden danger, and loath to resign her Glory to such a tumultuous and barbarous enemy courageously maintained her Title, and made the Hun retreat with the Common mutual loss of 170 thousand men, to his Conquest of Hungary; to which he never had returned had the Goths, or Romans pursued their success and victory. Attila troubled with this his first Disappointment resolved to recover the reputation of his Puissance, and therefore having provided himself in five years' vacancy from War of another Terrible Host, purposed by Tyrol to descend into Italy, but finding those difficult passes defended by Valentinian, he turned his Force upon Dalmatia, and conquering the Roman Army near the Tergestine Bay, besieged, and after three years' leaguer took and sacked Aquileia. From thence he passed to Vreona in Italy, but advancing further towards Ravenna was met in his way by Pope Leo; and by him dehorted and entreated from a further pursuit of his success. The event was not less wonderful than the former eruptions of this destroyer were unnexpected, but the reverence meekness, Gravity and Humility of those Fathers of the Church were even attractives to those Savage Barbarians. At the approach of them notwithstanding, The Original of the Venetians the Venetians then inhabiting the same Lands which yet belong to their Territory, fled to the Islands in which their Glorious signory now continues, and laid the Foundation of their Greatness upon the fear of their ruin; That which then was their temporary shelter proving the impregnable Fortress and Defyant Bulwark of Christendom against all other Invasions through a long duration of time and honour. Attila at his return died in Hungary, Attila's Death. suffocated with blood which he used to excern by his Nostrils in some abundance, but now falling into his mouth, whether by the Judgement of God in satisfaction of all that he had so inhumanely spilt, or by practice of his brother's friends (whom he had caused to be killed upon suspicion of his aspiring to the sole Command) who made a violent advantage of that infirmity and diverted its course, is not certainly delivered. To sum up the story of this Attila for satisfaction of the Reader I have adjoined his Title, not unlike that which the Turkish Sultan's now use towards these very Hungarians, retorting their own insolence and arrogance upon the impotent feeble remnant of that once mighty and most populous Nation; in haec verba; ATTILA the Nephew of Nimrod, His Title. nourished in Engaddi, by the Grace of God, King of Huns, Medes, Goths, and Dacians, The Terror of the World, and Scourge of God. Which last he added after his Conference with an Hermit. This (however denied by some Hungarian Authors) is reported by so many others, that the Reader may give credit to it; for though Attila was not then a Christian professed, yet certainly he was not altogether a Pagan, as his assent to Leo beforementioned will partly evince. Attila Dying left two Sons Aladerick and Chaback, His two Sons succeed. who (as the fortune of the World and War varies) lost all with the same career of Ruin as their Father gained Dominion by monstrous Accessions; for at his Death the Limits of his Territories were on the one part stretched to the Huns and jugri in Scythia, and on the other to France, and Italy; so that this Empire laboured under its own weight and fell by unnatural and Intestine Divisions. This same Aladerick is supposed by many to have been begotten by Attila upon Honoria the Daughter of the Emperor Valentinian, but this opinion is rejected by others, The intestine feuds of the Huns because they say Attila died before she arrived at his Camp. Whatever his Birth was, it was certain he was Favoured by the Princes of Germany, and Dieterick of Verona, and aided against his Elder Brother, advanced to the Supreme Power by the Huns, who notwithstanding as is usual in such fraternal and Civil Feuds, revolted soon after to Aladerick, Their Destruction▪ & so sheathing their Swords in their own Bowels, made easy way to their Enemy's designs of revenge against them. The first that engaged and Encountered them was Arderick King of the Gepidae, who vindicated his People from the slavery of the Huns, killing of them 30000 in one Battle, and so pursued his success upon their frighted remains that they lost all their several Conquests at one breath (Aladerick himself coming to this Bloody end, as a victim and sacrifice to those infinite slaughters that had been committed by his People) for hereupon Ardarick seized Dacia; the Goths, both the Pannonia's or Hungary; the Alani or Russes Mysia; while Chaba the other Brother difficultly recovered his Country of Scythia; Uto and Ischalmus, with some others of his Huns diverted into Romania, whose Posterity is remaining to this day in the Town of Gala●z. Ermedzar and Uzindur Cousins of the said two Captains, sat down between the Rivers Marusius and Alutha, and by the ascents to the Mountainous places of Dacia, and to avoid the suspicion of the name of Huns, called themselves * Now called Siculi. Szekeli, which term or word signifieth a fixed place and habitation, not vagabonds or Fugitives, for which their Nation was now so infamous. The Roman Dominions being thus freed of the Successors of Attila, The Lombard's possess Hung●●y▪ was anew oppressed with the alternate and Vicissitudinary Power of the Rugi, Goths, and Lombard's; who successively by the crafty instigation of the feeble Romans subdued one another; the Lombard's assisted by Swain K. of Denmark, after other Conquests seating themselves in Pannonia: whither the A●ARES (not the same but another Tribe of Huns) being beaten out of the Northern Scythia by the Euthalitae * The Original of the firrt Huns. who had themselves been beaten by the Turk●, in the Year 500 after the Incarnation, possessed themselves of the Country of Ister, having expelled the Goths from Taur●ca, and utterly extinguished the Name of the Gepidae. In their advance to Pannonia; Alboynus Captain of the Longobards, to prevent the fortune of War with so necessitous a People, made a friendly Composition with them, whereby it was agreed that the Avares should be possessed of Hungaria, upon Condition to restore it again if the Lumbards' failed of their Enterprise & design upon Italy: but that succeeding, these Huns being quietly possessed, stayed not here but Invaded the Territories of the Romans; The AVARES possess themselves of Hungary. from whom (once defeated by them) their Leader under pretence of making Baths, borrowed some Carpenters, which he employed in making Bridges over the Dawbius, that he might more easily Invade & infest their Dominions. His first Conquest by this means was of Syrmia, by which his Forces grew so terrible, that they were counted the avengers of the sins of the Eastern Europe; having compelled the Emperor Maurice to purchase a Peace of him with the sum of Fourscore thousand pound of Gold, which lasted no longer than two years; for the Barbarian regardless of his Faith, demanded an increase of the Tribute, Afflict the Roman Dominions. and upon the denial thereof seized Strigonium and Viminacum, and in several encounters greatly endamaged many of their Provinces and wasted and consumed more of their Legions. Their Empire or Government continued after that time with very various fortune, at first with great overthrows often weakening their Foster-friends the Lombard's, until the time of Charles the Great, when they grew into a Coalition with the Bojarij, from whom now came the new name of the Bavarians, (hateful enough to the Boijs or Bohemians) with whose King Tùdun, Charles the Great and his Son, managed divers Wars, not with the Hungarians themselves, as many have erroneously maintained. At which time (as nothing gained by humane power is durable) these Avares either lost their Name among other Nations, The Avares extinguished. or else were wholly cut off and extinguished. Nicephorus saith the following Huns or Hungarians, dissolved their power and extirpated them; the Germane Writers assign Charlemaigne to that work, as Suidas doth the Bulgarian's; whence most certain it is to be concluded, that they stuck in all the snares, and by one or all of their hands came to the period of their Name and Greatness. But leaving them to that Final Suppression, let us consider from the Premises, what Sad and Doleful Ages those were that brought up the Rear of the Roman Monarchy! On which like a Bear damned to the Stake, so many fierce Mastiffs were let fly together. But it is more wonderful how Christianity amidst such horrid and continual subversions of Things could ever get footing? nay, dilate itself with the Progress of these Infidels? Which though a Diversion, I cannot but mind the Reader for the Honour and convincing verity of our Religion, to take notice of. There being now no visible footsteps remaining of the Hungarian Nation in this Territory; it shamed a Noble people to bear the Yoke of a Foreign Ruler, having been used themselves to Govern and Command others. The remains of the old Huns repossess themselv●s And hereupon those Huns who fled that great Defeat given to Attila's Sons, & were scattered into Transylvania & Russia (where now there is a Tribe of them yet remaining towards Siberia, called jugri by Geographers) impatient of their retirement and obscure condition, invited their kindred & Countrymen, who now had breathed from their expulsion out of Europe into Scythia, and Siberia, and the Northermost parts of Europe, as aforesaid, to return again and make another venture with them for the Restauration of their Name and Honour by their former Conquests. Little invitation served a penurious and warlike Nation made and designed for great things and addicted to Glory, besides that the dangerous condition of their European friends, who sculkt from the fury of the victorious Goths, did urgently call for their assistance. In the year 890. seven several Armies of them under seven Leaders all vested with equal power invaded Dacia again, Their Successes. and after some exploratory peace-pretending Messages to Suatopolugus then King of those Countries proceeded to attaque him, who making resistance was defeated & driven beyond Danubius; thence pursuing their success they laid waste the whole Country of Illyria, and pierced into Moravia and Bohemia, and subdued all Hungary, and as much more Territory as is contained between the River Gran, the Swevian Hills & from Ister to the Sea, extending it thence also towards the East. Yet so uneven and fluctuating was their Fortune, that though Arnulphus the Emperor was glad to seek and obtain Peace of them, yet Luithpoldus the Emperor's General after Arnulphus his Decease, upon their return from a new incursion under Chussales their King into Germany the length of 250 leagues on the North side of the Danow, where they destroyed all before them, encountered them near Vienna in Austria, The Huns defeated by Luithpoldus. wearied with spoil and the length of the Journey & overthrew them, 12000 of them perishing in that river whose Banks had suffered so often by their bloody & frequent Inundations; the rest were driven & pursued to Presburgh, having lost their K. whose generous spirit could not endure the fatal dishonour of that bloody Field, wherein the Huns were like again to have run the same hazard of their former ruin but that a mutiny amongst the victor Army opportunely stopped a further pursuit. The news of this defeat did not long keep the Huns at home but grown strong with rest, and more robust by the divisions of the Germans, and having newly substituted Dursack and Bugoth, to the Regal Dignity, they again resumed their former design; which the next year they enterprised, possessing themselves of all Paninonia, exhausted already by continual spoil, carrying also Colonies, with them and placing them in the Countries of the Boii. To oppose them, Lewis the Emperor having called a Counsel, and by their Concurrence raised a great Army, encountered them at * Auspurg seated near the River Rhodanum, on whose Banks this Field was ●ought. Augusta Vindelicorum, where he was worsted in a famous Battle; Luithpoldus the former successful General, with Eysenrick His Arch-Sewer and 15 Counts, being slain on the place, together with most of the Army. Nor fared he better at his second Conflict, having for safety of Germany induced all the Provinces to take sudden Arms with him, being defeated by this Stratagem; the Huns had fought almost to a desperate Event, in the Fields near the Leman Lake, when advised by imminet danger, they counterfeited a flight, and by th●t means drew the enemy into the Woods upon their Ambushes, Lewis the Emperor defeated the second time by the Hun●. and there made a cruel and vast slaughter of them; and following their good fortune, made Havoc of all the Country round about with fire and Sword in their usual manner, neither Churches, Monasteries, Bishops, or Priests escaping their sacrilegious and destroying hands. No stop being like to be put to their fury, they burned down Utinum, and passing the river Oenus, dispeopled the Canton of Zurick, and compelling Schleckdorp and Damasia, beyond the Iser, with other Towns by famine and thirst to surrender, demolished and ruined them. Auspurg was served in the same manner, and numberless multitudes of men led Captives like beasts after them, which luggage with their other spoils invited the Boii to fall upon them, but they were so sharply entertained, that with the slaughrer there and in the whole Territory the Huns seemed to have made a final end at this one bout. Ratisbone was now burnt by them, Their ravage and Devastations. whence by Osterhof they passed the D●nubius, putting the Bohemians, Franconians, and the adjacent Nations to the Sword, So that most of the rivers of Germany were turned into blood, and Lewis broken with so many mischiefs, glad to make the Empire Tributary to the Huns, who leaving Germany (as prone to War, and enlargement of Dominion, fell next upon the Grecian Empire (which they had only touched in the former War) by the beginning of the next Spring, They invade Grecia. when passing through the Mysia superior and wasting Thracia infesting also the Macedonians, they conquered Bulgaria (which yet made some resistance) and all those stranger Countries, insomuch that Constantine the Colleague of Alexander his Uncle, refused not being terrified by these approaches, the payment and Tribute imposed on his Cities. The Huns being thus established and fixed in their former possession gained by their Sword in Hungary, The Description of Hungaria as then possessed by that Nation. it will be requisite to describe that tract of ground, which came under the said appellation and was then a most ample and spacious Dominion. The Kingdom of Pannonia did not formerly exceed the Banks of the Danubius, and because it extended itself from the said River as far as the Carpathian Hills, which terminate the European Sarmatia, it was called the hither and the further Hungary. The upper part of the hither, contained Styria and Austria, the inferior was all that tract of ground between the River Dravus, the Balaton Lake (which upon the coming of Christ broke out in the country of Gisa) the Deserts of Vertha and the Danubius. The further Hungary separated by the Carpathian Hills from Moravia of the Marcomanni, Silesia and Poland contains that part of the jazyges Metanastae, & Dacia which is on this side the Hills, which the River Tybiscus runs thorough, arising from the Maromorusian Hills above Zigeth * not that in Lower Hungary. & between Zemlin and Salankien is mingled with the Danube. Between the Rivers Dravus and Savus, lieth Sclavonia reaching as far as the River of Hun. Below Savus lies Croatia, both the Bosnia's, Dardania, now Dalmatia; The Illyrians possess the further parts, the same with the Liburnians, bounded with the Adriatic Sea, and Eastward with the River Bosna: To this Confine both the Mysia's, the Upper, in which is Servia and Rascia, and the lower now called Bulgaria: for the Bulgarians now coming from Asia, compelled the Bessi, ejected out of the Lower Mysia, to seat themselves in the Upper: Both of them lie between the Danube, and mountain of Hun: The Danube emptying itself into the Euxine Sea. To the Eastward of Hither Hungary lieth Dacia betvveen the River Tyra, the Danube, and the Sea, comprehending Transylvania, Moldavia, and Transalpina, or Valachia. Transylvania is compassed with Woods and Hills, in manner and form of a Crown. These Countries being subdued by the Huns they contented themselves with Tribute for Germany, who soon disdaining that servile under Barbarians, under Conrade Duke of Franconia, saluted Caesar in place of Lewis, and Arnulphus the Son of Luithpoldus proclaimed King of the Boii, took Arms again, but the B●ii were at the entrance of the War so consternated, that the Huns with universal spo●l passed as far as the River Oenus again: where Arnulphus having selected the ablest Soldiers, The Germans arm against them. and secured the rest in the City, set upon them in their careless jollity, and encompassing them by surprise, made a great slaughter of some, and drove others into the River, and brought a general Fear, greater than any before upon their whole Army, which was freed thereof by the egregious Virtue and Valour of Dursach, who in the very instant of the danger, compelled the Bohemian weakened by so ●ierce a War, to strike a League and Agreement with him. But the present Disaster was expiated with great Victories, Their second Expedition into Italy. the Huns still hankered after Italy the Lady of so many Pleasures: The Dissensions between Leo the Fifth, Sergius the Third, and Christopher the Antipope, adding to their Hopes as if designed for Avengers of their Pride and Ambition; hereupon passing Friuli with spoiling and burning, they came as far as Pavia, and by the river Brenna, with a horrible Carnage overthrew Berengarius, who had amassed an innumerable Host of the Tuscans, Volscans, and other Nations of Italy. Which Defeat was occasioned merely by their Contempt of the Enemy, who having in vain after many Prayers and entreaties voluntarily offered there delivery of their spoil, and a Covenant or Article of never invading Italy again, upon condition of Life and Departure on horseback, took advantage of the negligence of the Italians, and punished this their Arrogance: for with three parties they surprised the secure Bodies of the Enemy, who stayed expecting the return of their Commissioners, sent with their denial to the Huns, and killed a great many with their drink in their Throats: The Italians under Berengrius Vanquished. so those that could not be appeased with submission and Gifts were now destroyed with fury & cruelty. All places now opened to their victorious Arms, which are reported to have been so po●ent at this time, that they overran likewise the Boiarij (contrary to their Agreement) Franconia and Saxony, with vast depopulations: nor did their rage stop here, for within two years they pierced as far as Basil, They Master all places. which having razed they wasted Alsatia and Lorraine, with so much celerity, that Conrade who purchased his peace with money, seemed conquered before any Enemy was at hand. And such was the horror of this Defeat abovesaid, that the Huns en●aged, abstained not from the Flesh of the ●●ain, The Cause of which being asked of Le●el (a Hungarian Captain taken prisoner at Auspurg by Conrade) was thus declared. 〈◊〉 are the Avengers of the sins of Mankind, appointed by God for your punishment; when we ●●sist from persecuting you, by the angry God, we are taken by you and destroyed. Italy although so often chastised, The Divisions in Italy and Rome. yet nothing the wi●er, was distracted with various factions, Lewis the Son of ●oson relying upon the Papal right, assumed to himself the Imperial Dignity, being assisted and encouraged by the Lumbards', who would have Berengarius devested of the Dignity; he being thu● between the Hammer and the Anvil, called in the Huns, the sworn Enemies of the Faith: they under pretence of Aid, undertake the Expedition, and range through Italy, killing and bringing to obedience Lambert the Archbishop of Milan, Heydelbert the Captain of the Guard or Pretorium, with other Rebels. Berengarius not long surviving this Victory, his Son the second of that name succeeded him, against whom ro●e up Rodolph, Duke of Burgundy his Rival, to the Dominion of Italy, Berengarius therefore diffiding in his own forces, as the Heir of his Father's Kingdom and manners, trod in the same Track of an Hungarian Expedition, who in his cause wasting Italy, soon after overthrew Odelricus, the Count of the Place, or Major Domo, with his numerous Army, as afterwards they took the Marquis Adelbert & Giselbert Prisoners, but they were no sooner departed, then Berengarius was overcome, The Huns third and fourth Expedition into Italy. and perfidiously slain, though justly in respect of his cruelties to his own blood; This Murder of the King, gave good occasion to the Huns to return into Italy, where they again burned Ticinum, exercising cruelty as a virtue: and having plundered & undone the Provinces laded themselves home with a most rich spoil. A Germane War followed this, The Germans under Henry the Emperor, refuse the Tribute. Henry surnamed the Fowler, Son of Conrade deceased, denied to pay the tribute now insolently and imperiously redemanded by the Huns, who thereupon keeping their faith religiously with the Boii, (Arnulph their King having fled to them in avoidance of the designs and snares of Conrade but was afterwards brought back by the Prudence of Henry) wasted Transylvania, Swevia, but chiefly Saxony, the Hereditary Country of the Emperor, who unable to endure this their haughty & presumptuous behaviour, with a well composed Army surprised them at Meersburgh, Defeat the Huns at Meersburgh. in the Confines of the Thuringian Saxons; having given Order to his Men to receive their first flight of Arrows upon their Shields, discreetly and conveniently placed, and while they were fitting and preparing for another volley, to rush in upon them; by which Military Policy the Huns were driven foul upon one another and slain with a terrible slaughter, and Germany thereby freed from a shameful and ignominious slavery. The remains and relics of those Hungarians which survived the Battle, were slain by one another's Treachery and Discovery; the feigned and pretended reward whereof was impunity and pardon offered to such of them as should reveal their Comrades and Countrymen; so that no more than Seven escaped to carry the news of this miserable Defeat and disaster to Pannonia and Dacia; the Horror whereof so stupefied this Nation, that during the Reign of Henry, they totally abstained from meddling with Germany. Until the time of Otho the Great, The Hungarians stunned & stupefied withthe loss. the Hungarians therefore continued at home within their own walls; but than it appeared what power and prevalence Shame hath over Fear, although things be never so hazardous or desperate; for having recruited themselves by a long quiet and cessation from War, with their former Courage and Force they Invaded the Limits of Bavaria, while other Parties of them wasted the Trani, Norici, and Charini; for which Depredations they were to satisfy soon after to the utmost; for Berchtoldus' Duke of Bohemia, overcame them near Valence, and with the Sword and the River Tranus, to which they fled, made an end of them all: with the same fortune they fought with the Charini, Their Fortune changeth. where having lost their Leaders and General they were forced to fly. To revenge these Discom●itures Taxis (not yet advanced to the Regal Dignity) undertook two other Expeditions the one into Austria, and the other against the said Charini or Carinthi, in the Confines of Italy, which he miserably havocked, but him Berholdus his Son so worsted and routed, that he was forced to sculk and sneak for shelter; the cause of which Calamity was his fierce and brutish Valour ungovernable by any Art or policy; Being beaten here he turned his Fury upon Italy, Huns Invade Italy again. where he was appeased by ●erengarius the third, Protector to Lotharius, with Ten Bushels of Money, which Tribute was imposed upon the heads of those that gave suck, being as much as ●ugo had formerly paid. The Cruelty of the Huns was not yet quite allayed, when Gerard the Bohemian, and Duke Conrade, not long before banished by Otho, fell a spoiling the Churches, and robbing the Monasteries, and distributed the Ecclesiastical Treasure among the Hungarians, as yet Pagans, now intending an Irruption into Hungary; for Bulczko the Successor of Dursach, having considered the past Calamities, and the small ability of his present Condition, dispatched away Ambassadors to Otho under pretence of Civility and good friendship; but indeed to inquire of his present state, whether or no, it offered any advantage to his necessitous Arms. These returned with an answer rather fitted to the flattery of the occasion, which Bulzko sought, than any thing of truth. So that in the 50. year after Lewis was slain at Rhodanum; with a 100000 Men, Commanded by himself and the Tetrarches, Laetius, Sura, Taxus, and Schaba; such a number of mere Hungarians being never seen before in those parts, As Germany also. he set upon Germany; when through fear of them as they passed, the whole Country was abandoned, the Cities either strongly Fortified or deserted, the People betaking themselves to the inaccessible places of Mountains and Rocks for the safety of their lives. The Huns in the mean while clambering over Hills and piercing through Woods, most horribly burnt and wasted all the Country, and having desolated Bavaria, passed beyond the Rhine and under the Conduct of Conrade, subverted Lorraine, wherein they violated all Humane and Divine things. Otho almost stupisfied with the danger, with eight Legions passed into Switzerland, having made Peace with the Venetians, at the same time as the Hungarians had defeated the Bohemians in a sore Battle, who guarded the passes. It was now observed, that the first onset of these Barbarians was the most forcible and vehement, and that they raged because their time was short. The Huns totally and finally overcome by Otho the Great●● The Germans therefore beset them on every side, cutting off their stragglers and Foragers, and carried their Success to the Camp, where the Huns tired with fight and plunder were wretchedly Vanquished, and the River Lycus filled with their slain; their General being taken was hanged upon a Gibbet at Ratisbone with some of his Captains, the rest being dismayed, secured themselves in their entrenchments. By this Battle the strength of the Hu●s was wholly broken; yet being made more tractble by this great slaughter, they were in a manner saved by this their Ruin. The Second BOOK. AS the precedent necessary requisite to conversion to Christianity, divine Providence was pleased by these frequent and ruinous losses and slaughters, upon the neck of one another, to bring these barbarous Huns to an humble sense of their calamitous and ruinous condition, Sense of misery the way to Christianity. and by that prepare and soften their minds to the Reception of the great Evangelicall truth, against whose Innocent Doctrine, the applauses of their Triumphs and the noising loud Fame of their puissance and success had out-dinned the Trumpets of the Prince of Peace, so that ●he still voice of the Redeemer could not be heard in the Thunder of their impetuous, prosperous violences. Taxis one of the Tetrarches dying valiantly in this last unfortunate encounter, the Huns chose GEYSA his Son, either for his Fathers or ●his own Piety's sake, Geysa the first King of Hungary. for their King and Governor. For as there are, as in Time, so in all other things a kind of vicissitude; the 980th year from the Incarnation was not yet ended, when Geysa washed in the saving fount by Adelbert, began to propagate the worship of the true ●od and renouncing his Idols to abolish all superstition, studying to take off that fierce and barbarous Nation from the desire of War, and by Christian marsuetude and sweetness to attemperate their minds and senses. To this he was the more encouraged by Constantine the 7th. of that name Emperor of the East, and the Germans who mainly promoted it, as being highly affected with such glad tidings; Next he appointed Priests and Bishops, the untamed ●●ture of his people in vain resisting, and so reduced them, that abandoning Barbarism, and the worship of Mars and Hercules, His zeal to Christianity. they embraced the Christian Faith. The Captives, (of which in such a long tract of time there could be no small multitude carried away by them) industriously builded their Churches and brought their Children to be baptised. To the better effect of all which, Geysa used the help 〈◊〉 a Pilgrim a very holy man who being invited by him into Hungary, chose to himself other Colleagues; Geysa also by the aid and Arms o● the Saxons and Bavarians kept his Enemies within their limits, so that the people of Hungary found themselves obliged to him for their preservation, who like an auspicious star shined upon them in a night whose gloominess portended it for the last of their Existence, when sheathing their Swords he dispelled such an angry Tempest with a sudden Serenity. He waged War in Austria against his will which unjustly taken away by Rodeger he restored to Leopold, whose ●on being shortly after expelled, the Hungarians under the conduct of Abas recovered and held it until Albert the Son of Henry the Emperor restored it to Germany. There were also other occasions of this Difference, Henry surnamed the Holy, ●isseised his Brother Bruno of his Dominions in ●amburg, who avoiding the danger fled to the Hungarians, by whom meeting with the Emperor then engaged in an expedition designed to the expulsion of Hardwick out of Lombardy, ●runo was reconciled and re-invested in his Estate. And having thus settled this Hungarian Realm as part of Christendom, I shall not be obliged to so prolix a narrative of their future Actions as being better regulated and Marshaled to History, His Actions. which hath registered them with that of their Neighbours: the rise and the fall of all powerful things being that object which most men consider, because of most concern to the world, for all middle things the means of extremes are indifferent, and do not engage ordinary and common observation. STEPHEN his Son succeeded him both in dignity and virtue, Stephen the second King. at the same time when both the English, Danes, Polonians and Hungarians had forsaken their false Religions, Pope Boniface the 7th. was then also expelled by Pope Penedict, from Rome, whence Stephen was honoured with many presents, and a privilege of conferring ecclesiastical preferments: His courageous zeal broke the many designs and attempts of his Pagan Subjects and Relations, as his fortune gained him Transylvania, then abounding with ancient wealth, and now subdued to a constant obedience and subjection to the Hungarian Sceptre. He over came likewise the Bulgarians a warlike and successful people in the East, His Achievements to whose Emperor Basilius, after this glorious defeat, they were forced to submit themselves. He had issue by his Wife Gisala the Sister of the Emperor, a Son called Emerick, who died in his Minority, and to the great grief of his Father, and the perpetual disgust of his Mother; in his room Vazules Stephen's Uncle's Son, was appointed and raised to the hopes of the Throne. Stephen died in the year of our Lord 1034. having reigned happily and prudently 37. years, a man of great humility and piety even unto Superstition, in a very great and ample fortune, which is subject to presumption and pride, for which his Widow was much hated and abominated. PETER notwithstanding succeeded him, Peter the 3d. King. the Son of his Sister, who managed his power no better than he gained it, by the Murder of Vazules; scandalising the Government by base Covetousness and Arrogance, from which Crimes it had hitherto been inviolate: not knowing that things lifted up on high are more conveniently raised for a fall; nor to be of more pernicious Consequence to any Fortune than the jest and supremest. He first banished Gisala, then took away her Dower, (reputed a just judgement on her) pillaged his people, and murdered his Nobles; whereupon ensued a Conspiracy against him, which prevailed so, that the Kingdom was transferred to Abas, and the Counsellors and Partakers of Peter's exorbitances, Peter deposed. slain by the popular rage. Peter escaped to Henry the Emperor, who knowing him guilty of the defection of the Bohemians, forbade him his Presence, and cast him into Chains, but by the intercession of Albertus' General of the Eastern limits, and Caesar's own generous Sentiments for a person descended of a Royal Family, He was soon after taken into favour. ABAS was substituted in his place, by whom all Peter's Acts were rescinded, Abas the 4th. King. and the Kingdom seemed to have recovered its former dignity, except that Peter claimed it as Hereditary, and Abas that would command others, was a Vassal to his own passions. The first thing he did, was by an Embassy to explore the mind of the Emperor concerning Peter, but receiving dilatory answers, he made 2 invasions, the one into Bavaria where his Army and General were defeated, the other into Styria and Carniola, whence he carried away a great many Captives. This gave occasion to the Princes of Germany to assemble at Colen, and by unanimous Resolution there taken to invade Abas, which enterprise so succeeded, that Abas beaten in two Battles, and having lost all his Country, as far as the River Gran beyond Pre burgh, was forced to a submission, by which he was bound to receive Gisala the banished Queen, to restore Austria, and other places, with the late Captives: which Articles he stood not to, but spiting his Nobles, as the occasion of his Misfortunes, under the pretence of convening them for Advice, most treacherously flew them and their Children: but this the more incensed others just indignation, so that the remains of them escaping to the Emperor, engaged him and Peter against Abas. At Raab a signal Battel was commenced, where by the revolt of Abas his Army, by which they satisfied for their former Defection from Peter, Abas slain at Sh●ba. Abas was forced to fly and in the pursuit slain at Sheba, as a Victim and Sacrifice to the Ghosts of his murdered Nobility. PETER was again restored by the Emperor, Peter restored. who in triumphal progress rounded all Hungary, and having received the Royal Dignity, by the election of the Bishops assembled at Alba, transferred it to Peter, who returning to the same vicious and cruel Excesses, neither mindful of his past, nor provident of his future fortunes, provoked the Hungarians under two Captains Visca and Brunna, to another Combination and Rebellion against him, but the design being timely discovered, the chief Complices were most miserably tortured. Yet the Sedition abated not, for by another Conspiracy inflamed by a general hatred against Christian Religion, scandalised by their King's enormous lives, the Hungarians privily sent for Andrew and Leventa, according to the advice of King Stephen, out of Poland, whither they had been banished; These lurking for a while at Newhausel, (now so called) by the river Nitre, and assisted by the inhabitants, wreaked their revenge designed against the King upon the Religion, massacring a great number of Bishops then assembled at Pesth. Peter presently thereupon being forsaken of his own, Deposed by Andre● & his eyes put out, etc. was drawn out of his hiding place in the Mossonian Grounds, and after his eyes were put out, had his privities cut off, which disgraceful maims he survived three years. So when prudence is wanting to the first fortune, the future is always most dangerous. ANDREW succeeded in the year of Christ 1047, Andrew the 5th. K. He repressed the innovated superstition, and punished with the sword or banishment such as had assisted him to Victory in his irreligious Cruelty. Henry the Third, Emperor, then engaged in a Papal War in Italy, (between Benedict the 9, and Sylvester the third, and Clement the Second, whom he placed at last in St. Peter's Chair) being no way at Leisure to attend Hungary; but that at last by his power determined, he resolved to revenge the injury done to Peter, invading first the Southern parts of Hungary, but was forced to retreat by the overflowings of the Lakes and Rivers; the next expedition was by water, where he was worsted by a Stratagem, the last by water and land, His War with Germany. but with as had success, having advanced so far, and straightened for provisions, that he was forced to desire licence and leave to return. A peace ensued this kindness, and as a pledge thereof, the Emperor gave his Daughter in marriage to Solomon (the Son of Andrew) now confirmed in the succession to the Crown. BELA (the brother of Andrew) by whom he was made Duke of Pomerania, Bela the 6th. King. and had hitherto lived in great Concord with him to the aggrandizing the Hungarian Felicity; and a little before appointed by him to the Kingly Government, could not brook this his Nephew's advancement over his head: assisted therefore by many of the Hungarians, and aided by the Poles, as Solomon by Germany and ●ohemia by the Interest of Andrew, besides his standing Legions, an engagement ended at the River Tibiscus, with various fortune, until the Hungarians in detestation of the Christian Religion, and in revenge of the suppression of Paganism by Andrew, revolted to Bela, who thereby became Master of the Field; Andrew flying was trod down in the pursuit. Bela used his victory with great clemency, freely giving life to the Rebels, and dismissing the Germane Prisoners Ransom free; and applying himself to the Government, appointed Markets and rates of things, lessened the Taxes and Impositions; Money being not as yet known. He repaired and new built several places, suppressed the Peasants and Boors, tumulting against the profession of the Christian Religion, by sudden force; and though he gained the Kingdom by violence and injury, His virtues yet he governed it with piety and justice; and in the year 1065. the Third year of his Reign, by a kind of Earthquake at the Town of Demes which disjointed every part and Member of him, he died. SOLOMON within a month after his Death was seated in his Throne by the power of the Emperor; Solomon the 7th. K. Geysa and Ladislaus the Sons of Bela, despairing of equal resistance, flying for refuge into Poland; but the Germane Forces returning home, they resumed courage, prevailing with Boleslaus the King of Poland to derive the friendship contracted between their Father and himself to them his Sons; Boleslaus owing so much to the merit of the Father, entered Hungary with them, but by the Mediation of the Archbishop of Strigonium, Bela's sons pacified. a Peace was happily concluded between them, on condition that Geysa and Ladislaus should with the Title of two Dukes enjoy a third part of the Kingdom, but the Sovereignty should abide in Solomon; This agreement with some grudging suspicions lasted till Solomon, by the Assistance of the Dukes, took Belgrade, the rich spoils whereof, a fourth part being only allowed the Dukes by the advice of one Vidus, caused such a Rupture, that both had present recourse to Arms. The first Encounter proved disastrous, but the second fortunate to the Brothers, who had to their assistance Twenty thousand Bohemians; this Battle was fought by the Vaccian Forest, and with great resolution on both sides; Vidus was here slain, and Solomon thereby driven out of his Kingdom. GEYSA, Geysa the 8th. King. now swayed the Hungarian Sceptre, being busied in prosecuting his late victory, for that Solomon appeared in the confines towards Presburgh, endeavouring the restitution of his Fortune by the aid of the Germans, and other adjacent people; and in this Martial angry mood he lighted upon the Bessi, who had undertaken for their Liberty his final discomfiture, and severely chastised this their preingaged arrogance; yet he advantaged not his own Affairs, till Henry the Emperor appeared in his quarrel, & first took Newhausel and advanced as far as Vacia, and seemed to threaten Geysa's Claim; but what he wanted in strength to oppose, he was supplied with in Craft and Policy, to impose upon the Germans, by a round sum of money sent them, upon which the Emperor retired, intent upon a revengeful design against Pope Hildebrand. And here an end was put to the Tragedies of so many Kings, The Emperors of Germany no right in Hungary. wherein we may observe by the way, that the Emperors though superior by power and victory, could never make good their pretended Title to Hungaria, nor those Kings who adhered to, or made use of their Arms to pass unpunished. Geysa dieth. Geysa died by a natural death, the third year of his Reign; on whose Affections Desiderive the Metrapolitan Bishop is said to have had so much influence that he was once thinking to have rendered the Sceptre to Solomon; But bethinking himself that his privacy could not be without danger, and that it would be rashness to trust the will and pleasure of an enemy, he resolved to retain the Government. LADISLAUS having gloriously passed the Ducal Dignity conferred on him by his Brother, Ladislaus 9th. King his brother succeeds. had the Regal Honour unanimously bestowed on him, as reputed a Prince of very great Virtue and Piety, and though he refused the Crown because Solomon was yet alive, yet the pertinacious importunity of the Hungarians overcame his modesty. He first restored the true worship of God, & the good laws of his Ancestors then obliterated and disused. He was assisted by an opinion of the divine favour accompanying him in all his Actions, than which there is not a better Instrument and Engine to govern the multitude, who conceived that the Crown of Hungary, * The reason why the Hungarians have such a veneration for that sacred Symbol of Majesty. with which the Princes are to this day inaugurated, came down from Heaven upon the head of this Ladislaus. He agreed with Solomon, for a certain yearly revenue, but he musing on his ambition, designed on pretence of a friendly conference to betray him, but that being discovered, He seized on him and imprisoned him at Visigrade, where being condemned, at the intercession of a Nun admonished by Heaven, as she boasted, he gave him Life and Liberty; which courtesy he straight abused, by engaging Cuteschus the King of the Cumani to take his part, but unprosperously, his Army being overpowered and discomfited, The strange forlorn condition of Solomon. so that despairing of recovering the Kingdom, and weary of the World, he put on Sackcloth, and betook himself to the woods and Caverns, living upon Acorns and Berries, and drinking the water of the Lakes for his thirst, teaching the world the uncertainty of all worldly things, and that felicity can be placed no where but in death. It is reported he was seen once in the time of Coloman the succeeding King, in whose Reign he also ended his Life, in the Woods of Istria. In the mean while, Ladislaus reduced Dalmatia, and made it a perpetual Appendix to the Hungarian Dominion, together with Croatia; There after followed a war with the Emperor of Byzantium, or Constantinople, but it eveened with loss to the Hungarians, for which the Bulgarian Victory and Conquest soon after made amends. The Fury of the Cumani could nevertheless not be restrained, till after three overthrows, the last whereof was most courageously descended, Ladislaus his valour. at the banks of Ister, till Ladislaus with his own hands very difficultly slew Achus their General, whose death stroke and broke the Constancy of this valiant enemy, whose Confederates and Auxiliaries the Roxolani fell under the same Fate, Russes. and precariously obtained their Peace. Poland was the next Scene of his Success, the cause of which Expedition was their Expulsion of Boleslaus his great Friend and Familiar, who flying into Hungary, tormented with an evil Conscience for the ills he had done, being become of a good, a very bad man, died there. The Armies joined in the Confines of Sauromatia, His Successes. where he vigorously routed the Poles; nor desisted from his pursuit till he had Sacked Cracovia the Metropolis of that Nation, when Vladislaus the Brother of Boleslaus, besought him Peace, which he obtained upon Condition that Miesco, Boleslaus his Son, should have the Second Dignity. The Sword being now sheathed, he built his Royal Seat of Varadin by the River Chrysus. This City in our Times was the Chief and principal of the County of Bihor, famous of old for the Sepulture of Kings, and the Sanctity of the place; on the North are Hills planted with fruitful Vines, and watered with ever-running Rivulets; the East aspects the Baths and Medicinal Springs; the other part the plain and the woods encompass. These great things effected, this zealous Religious Captain even to the report of certain miracles wrought at his Grave afterwards, received at Bodrogh, Ladislaus invited to the Holy Land war Ambassadors from the Kings of England, France, and Spain, desiring his assistance in the Sarazen War, which he denied not, but the Embassy took not its effect, for he died in a new Expedition against Suatopologus of Moravia, leaving by so much, a greater Name, by how much his Successors came behind him in prowess and martial Achievements. COLOMANNUS, Coloman the tenth King. Ladislaus dying without Issue; succeeded his Uncle in the Throne, though otherwise designed by him, for he preferred Almus his younger Nephew Son of Geysa, as abler in body and mind, to Coloman the elder, whom he praedicted for a Bloody man; But the Nobles sending for Coloman out of Poland, whither he had fled (for fear of his Uncle's words) Crowned him their King, his Brother Almus being Tituladed with a Dukedom, and invested in a fourth part of the Kingdom. Being thus advanced, as prosperous things do search the mind with sharper pricks, he did not consider himself as a Governor and his People as Citizens, but as an absolute Lord, and they his Slaves and vassals. About the same time Peter the Hermit brought the Crusado into Hungary, The Crusado brought into Hungary. when Famine and the Plague throughout Christendom seemed to prevent his most Religious Negotiation. Nevertheless in the Year 1096. Gualterus Sensavir was entertained by him, and passage given him, he paying such a certain rate for his provision, some of whose Soldiers straggling and committing some little spoil about Belgrade, were seized and most basely and ignominiously handled, which Gualther thought good to dissemble, intent upon his Expedition; Peter the Hermit marching the same way upon the s●me Conditions, understanding at Malevill, what had happened to his fellows, flew presently to his Arms, and breaking open the Gates of the City, Peter the Hermit's overthrew entered and slew 4000 Hungarians; but being pursued by Coloman, to avoid him, fell into the hands of the Sultan of Nicia, who had an Army of Forty thousand men, and lost more by his rashness and incogitance, than ever he could have gained with his greatest moderation. Nor did Godschalk the Priest fare any better, for entering Hungary upon the former terms, his Soldiers from the affluence of provisions began to riot, & forgetting the Laws of Hospitality, to abuse their Entertainers. To repress this Insolence, Godscalk● like Fortune by Coloman▪ Coloman made after them to Belgrade with a great Army, where ensued a Battle, but with such equal Fortune, that Coloman having recourse to Policy, prevailed upon them under pretences of civility and reconciliation, (desiring only the Plunderers to be punished) that they confiding in his words disarmed themselves, and were instantly when they no way suspected such usage, horribly destroyed, not one of them being left alive to carry the news of this Massacre. The Rear of those Forces arriving at Meersburgh a place encamped with the Danow, Lynx, and Morasses; and ignorant of what had happened to their follows, and knowing the agreement made for their passage, did wonder to see the straits shut to them, which, the King dreading the punishment of his perfidy had so commanded; whereupon after a vain message to Coloman, they besieged M●ersburgh, slew 700. of the Hungarians; but just as the Town was brought to the utmost Extremity, a Panick-fear seized on them, whereafter ensued a great slaughter of them, the rest saved themselves by ●light. But Godfrey of Bo●●ign anxious of the loss of those Legions, Godfrey of Bollign his safe passage through Hungary. succeeded better; for having debated the business and received an account of the late slaughter by Godfrey of Ascha, he easily persuaded the Hungarians to consent to another passage, at an interview between them, to such a firm understanding, that Coloman while yet Godfrey was at the said Malevill on the Banks of Savi●● having furnished him also with all manner of Provisions, delivered to him his Brother Baldwin, whom he had left as Hostage for the performance of the Agreement; though Bonfinus reports that the Duke having taken Zemlin, opened his way by the Sword, and compelled Coloman being too weak to oppose him, to consent at last to Passage through his Dominions. There followed this Feud a Quarrel between Coloman and his Brother Almus. One part of the Kingdom adhered to the King, the other to Almus; both Armies met at the River Tybiscus by a Town called Varkon, where a Truce being concluded on, it was further proposed, that the two Princes, to save the lives of others, should determine their own Quarrel by Duel, ● Custom then much in use in that Warlike Nation, which Coloman refusing, the difference was for a while respited and both parties laid down Arms, which presently were employed against the Russes, but with ill Success; He makes Peace thereupon with the Venetians, and in the mean time debaucheth the Fidelity of the jadrenses their Subjects, whom to reduce, Ordephalus was Commissioned, who recovered jadra with a bloody slaughter, and advanced his Successful Arms as far as Croatia, but was at last by Coloman, assisted by the Styrians in the saccage of the Coast of Dalmatia, engaged and overcome; and so all the places returned with jadra again to his obedience. Hungary was now again divided by the Factions of the Brethren: Feud betwixt the royal Brethren. Almas twice suspected, and twice assisted by Foreigners, was once more restored by the Arms of Hen. 5. Emp. but such was the arrogance of Colomans' fortune that seizing upon him, he caused his, and his Son Bela's Eyes to be put out, without any trial or compearance afore Judges; whence several grudges and Conspiracies of the Nobles & secret seditious practices were occasioned & fomented against him; the effect whereof he prevented by sudden Death, which happened in the twenty fifth year of his Reign. STEPHEN, Stephen the 10th. King. for his Sanguinous nature, as delighted in often seeing the punishments of the Condemned) by his Father nicknamed Thunder, was therefore placed under the Government and Tuition of the most Eminent Persons for Nobility and Virtue, under whom what he gained in Fame and Estimation, so freed from them, he lost it as fast; notwithstanding the first and longest part of his Reign was very prosperous. His first Enterprise was against the Russes, to restore jarislaus to that Government, who fearing his Uncle Uladomirs designs against him, had fled into Poland; but he dying, the war ended as soon as it was begun; The next Expedition was against the Bohemians, where worsted at the first Encounter, he recruited his Army and overthrew them. Thrice he turned his Arms upon Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Greece; and taking Belgrade razed Zengminum; afterwards he fought with various successes against Calo johannes Emperor of Constantinople, Calo Johannes defeated. but finally had the better of it, forcing him to sneak home by by ways from his progression as far as Ister, and that not without a signal defeat given him in his retreat, at a Town called Mala Scala: though Bonfinius reports Stephen to have been beaten at the River of Carassus, and to have besought his peace. A Polish War ensued this in favour of the Russes against another jarislaus Duke of Halicia, whom Boleslaus King of Poland had resettled in his Estate, wherein the Pole, otherwise a very Fortunate Prince, was Defeated by a Stratagem of Stephens, joining himself to the Rear of the Polish Army upon pretence of Friendship. And so when he had wearied his Cruelty abroad, he began to exercise it at home, vailing his sloth with severity, murdering his Nobles, and ravishing their Ladies: but in the twenty second year of his Reign, Stephen puts himself into a Monastery, and resigns troubled in Conscience with the flagitiousnesse of his Facts, he put himself into a Monastery; though others write he only designed such a retirement. BELA, Bela the 11th. King his Cousin German, who had his Eyes put out as before, and flying was entertained at Constantinople (which was the cause of the Quarrel between Stephen and Calo johannes) was by the wonderful inconstance of Fortune called to a Crown, from his banishment; he had gained to his Wife, Helena Daughter of Vr●● Count of Augusta, by whom he had four Sons, Geysa, Ladislaus, Stephen, and Almus: His adverse Condition had so sweetened his Felicity to him, that he wholly intended his Repose, wherein he gave many signs of great abstinence and Equity, notwithstanding he was not altogether faultless, for at an Assembly or Convention of the Estates at Arad, though he seemed to be averse to any Execution, yet he so wrought upon the affections of others, that most cruel punishments were inflicted on the Authors of his Father's occaecation. Hereupon the Sons of the oppressed solicit Borichus, the Bastard Son of Coloman, Borichus the Bastard Son of Coloman solicited to invade the Government. to assume the Government, who with the assistance of some Poles and Russes, came as far as Sajus, a River dividing both the Armies, where by the Discovery of the Extraction of Borichus, the Poles deserted him, who was constrained to fly for his Protection to Emanuel; Bela freed from this danger, by advice of his Courtiers, took away the lives of two of the Chiefest Noblemen of his Kingdom; and being given to drunkenness, in which he was full of promises, soon after died. GEYSA presently took upon him the Kingdom, Geysa the 12. King. and managed his first Arms for the good of his Subjects: for Henry Duke of Austria, aided by the Saxons and Stirians, to whom were added the Forces of the Emperor Conrade, by the means and endeavour of Count julian took Presburg: All their Power he very gallantly first sustained, and then overcame in the desperation of the Event, killing Seven thousand of the Germans, and taking their Camp and Baggage. His next War was for his Confederates, for Lodomirus aided by the Cumani, attempted to dethrone Minoslaus, whose Sister Geysa had married; whom though with great loss by the Russes and the Cumani, he reinstated. The Dalmatian War attended this, one in name but many in the atrocity and fortune of the War; Manuel the Eastern Emperor invaded Dalmatia as his Dominion, Manuel the Greek Emperors Exploits. took the Castle of Rasus, and laid waste the circumjacent Country, and upon the news of the advance of the Hungarians, came as far as the River Drina, which parts Bosnia and Servia, and devasted both the Provinces, and in a set Field overcame the joint Forces of the Confederates, who encouraged by fresh and choice supplies, with the additions of the Bessi, by the Valour and presence of the Emperor, were foiled again, and the Despot (or as the Language terms him) the Archi-Zupan of the Country, was forced to submit to a Tribute, which Success emboldened Manuel to a further attempt upon part of Hungary, where he retook Zeugmi●●● repaired, after a most gallant resistance, and Captivated a great number of the People, while Geysa was waging Wat with the Russians. For Lodomir ●enewing his Designs against Minoslaus, was ripe for the Revenge of Geysa, when this diversion brought the Hungarians back upon john Cantacuzenus, whom they Furiously and desperately set upon and overcame; but another Army being dispatched by Manuel (retreating) under the Command of Boricza, dis-peopled a great Tract of ground, and slew three Brigades of Hungarians. This quarrel continued between them upon punctilio of Revenge, and maintenance of acquist, after three several Treaties concluded and violated, till Andronicus Duke of Naessa and Braniczobe, by treaty yielded him those places, whereafter followed many bicker, concluded in a League. The Holy War resumed. The Holy War was now recommenced by Conrade, and continued by Lewis of France, both of which passed through Hungary, but by the perfidiousness of Manuci suffered excceedingly. In whose Camp Borichus the Bastard, concealing himself, was taken and killed: Geysa Died soon after in the Year 1160. and in the 20th. of his Reign. STEPHEN the Eldest Son of Geysa possessed a peaceful Sceptre, Stephen the 13th. King. which he indulged the rather for his Subject's sake, and to conciliate the wavering affections of the Kingdoms His first Effort was against Pope Adrian, quarrelling about the Churches and Bishoprics of Istria and Liburnia. In this War Manu●● assisted him, which sorted not very luckily by reason of the Hungarians intestine Divisions for the Uncles of Stephen insinuating themselves into Manuel's favour, Ladislaus the elder Uncle, by sundry artifices and collusions with that Emperor possessed himself of the Throne, vouchsafeing Stephen the Title of a Dukedom who wisely absenting himself, the common Fate of Usurpation befell Ladislaus, & restored Stephen again, after 5 months unjust detainer from the Regality, by Ladislaus and not much longer; after Stephen his second Uncle, substituted to his Brother by the same Faction, when the People weary of them both, willingly received their Exile King. But this was not done without much damage and danger to the Kingdom by the Arms and Designs of Manuel, who now pretended to Hungary, so that after many Conflicts and Depopulations, Stephen was Invested in Syrmia, without any Claim to be made by him to Hungary, which Articles being broken on Stephen, the Uncle's part, and he afresh invading the Dominions of his Nephew, assisted again by the said Emperor, was wholly outed of his Principality, as his Confederate Manuel from his part of Dalmatia. The Uncle Survived not long, being poisoned by one of his Complices, who feared the Revenge of their practices & conspiration against their Sovereign. Stephen being therefore fully Established, the Peace was Confirmed at home, but disquieted instantly from abroad; for Manuel the Emperor with the old pretence of assisting Stephen, Arrived at the Banks of Ister, and from Belgrade marched to the Siege of Zeugminum which at last was yielded to him, and with that also Dalmatia and Syrmia, assigned by the Agreement for the Inheritance of Bela his youngest Uncle, who had Married a Kinswoman of the Emperors. But neither this dured long, for Stephen impatient of this Bargain sent an Army under Dionysius, to revenge the injury, who was prosperous in one Encounter, but was fatally defeated in the next by the Emperor. BELA by the Decease of Stephen possessed himself of the Kingdom, Bela the 14 King. which by his alliance with the Greek Emperor was composed and secured; In his person Dalmatia and Syrmia, were united to the Crown of Hungary, and made members thereof as of the same body. His Converse in Greece made him most excellent in the Arts of Government, he first divided the Kingdom into Provinces, Cities, and Boroughs, and made that institution in reverence of Royal Dignity, that complaints should not be obtruded orally to them, but by way of humble Supplication and Petition. He warred with Casimirus King of Poland, upon a quarrel supported by both of them, in reference to the Duchy of Halicia, but being but an auxiliary feud it was soon ended: As he did compose those affairs of his Son in Law Isaac Angelus, the Constantinopolitan Emperor, a weak yet Sacrilegious person. He reigned 17. years, and left a most flourishing Kingdom to his Son Emerick. EMERICK was wholly indisposed to War, Emerick the 15. K. which the rather pursued him; for the Venetians vexed at, and disdaining the loss of Dalmatia, making use of the Land forces of Baldwin Earl of Flanders, and Boniface Marquis of Montferrat, passing for the Holy Land in their shipping, as Leagued with them in the expedition, (notwithstanding the Thunderbolt of Pope Innocents' Excommunication at the instance of Stephen, who would have transferred the War to its proper place) took jadra and reduced all the Maritime part of Dalmatia. But Emerick was more fortunate at home, having defeated a Conspiracy made against him by Andrew and most of the Nobility by a most innocent but Majestic device, coming of a sudden into their armed Company, with the Crown on his head, which the Hungarians do naturally reverence, whereupon they all sheathed their Swords and craved pardon, and were most magnificently and freely remitted. He deceased in the eighth year of his Reign, and was succeeded by Ladislaus the Third, who applying himself to the Reformation of the Government, and the Laws, unhappily died in the 6 month after his Inauguration. ANDREW the second, Andrew the 16 K. for his virtue, was next advanced to the Regal Dignity. He sadly affected with the discomfitures of the Christians, went himself Generalissimo into the Holy Land, and passing into Asia overthrew the Sultan Abubeker, surnamed Seyseddine, and the Successor of Saladine. He took also Damiata, and forced the Sultan to retreat, to Cairo, where he breathed out his unhappy Soul: Nor was it doubted but that his victories would entitle him to the Holy Land the Christians being both in the field, and in the Siege far superior, until the Nile overcame them; for the Sultan breaking down the banks on both sides, the River swelling to its usual heigh, overflowed into their Camp, whereupon pressed with hunger, also & overwhelmed with misery, they capitulated for their permission of departure, with the surrender of Damiata; Andrew bringing thence instead of Victory the heads of St. Stephen and Margaret, His Expedition into the Holy Land. the right hands of benedict, Thomas, Bartholomew, part of the rod of Aaron, and one of the Water-pots wherein Christ wrought his miracle of Wine. These things the Hungarian Writers with intrusive Piety mainly defend. Others say that he passed no further than jordan, and having washed himself thrice therein, as accounting himself disobliged from his vow, returned home. His Justice was very remarkable, in that he justified Bancbanus (his Deputy in his absence) who had slain his Queen, for that she had prostituted his Wife to her vicious Brother, who came to visit her. He forgave the Venetian injuries, made excellent Laws, and vested a negative power in the Nobles, to what should be enacted without their Consent; By Gertrude he had three Sons, Bela, Coloman, and Andrew, and Elizabeth his Daughter, not to be passed, for her eminent Piety, without honourable mention, she was married to the Landgrave of Hesse, who dying in the Holy Land, she betook herself to a Monastery, and was five years after her death canonised by Pope Gregory the Ninth, at which Consecration was present at Marpurg, Frederick the Emperor with divers other Princes, with a Conflux of 12 nundred thousand persons. BELA the 4th. of that name was saluted King, Bela the 17. King. while his Brother Coloman having expelled Daniel seized the Government of Halicia and Lodomiria, himself being wholly addicted to Peace and quiet, but herein fortune failed him, for the Tartars, (whose original described something largely by my Author, but not to our present purpose we must here omit) with whom joined the Cumani expelled by the same Tartars from their seats a●d habitations in 1238. (by humble entreaties and profession of Christian Religion, after they had been denied entrance or entertainment in Russia) having been admitted into Hungary by the King's single consent, proved the first part of the ruin of that Kingdom: for the Hungarians offended with their peremptory carriage and finding little redress are Court, fell ●pon them of a sudden and killed their King Kuthenes, who being thus provoked, kill slay and burn whatever they came near, and at last joined themselves to the Tartars, whose Invasion being rumoured before, was imputed to some design of the Kings, to keep the Hungarians in peace with the Cumani. Now whilst Peta one of the Tartarian Generals ravaged Poland, The Tartars Invade Hungary. Moravia, and Silesia, as Cadon another of their Captains did Russia, the Emperor Bathuy Chan overthrew the Palatine of Hungary deserted of his people at Russe-Port, and utterly crushed the Archbishop of Colozza in a moorish ground, and laid waste all the Country as far as Vacia, and passing f●rther totally defeated and vanquished Bela, striving in vain with the discords, negligence and hatred of his Subjects. Nothing remained to him in all Hungary, but Alba Regalis, Strigonium and the Monastery of St. Martin's, nor was the multitude of the slain by weapons, smoke and clouds raised by Magic Art to be computed: Three years the Tartars continued this ruin, searching in the Woods and Caves for the miserable Inhabitants, others with feigned letters they alured from their hiding places, The Tartar r●vage the Country all which they slew, so that the stench of the dead Carcases caused a Plague and mortality, as a Famine was occasioned by the devastation of the Country. By which means the Tartars were forced to abandon that Kingdom, carrying away with them an innumerable Company into intolerable slavery. The Pope endeavoured to Christianize this savage Nation, and Bathuy Chan did grant a Truce and Protection to the Monks, as Mango was converted, yet the other Leaders seeing the vices of the Christians chose rather the Mahometan Infidelity. The Tartars thus departed, Bela by the aid of the Knights of St. john of jerusalem who from the Faction of Rome had retired themselves into Illyria, where he had weathered this storm, & others of the Crusado, who were frequent in those parts of Croatia and Dalmatia, and the like assistance of the Frangipans received again his desolate Kingdom, with his four Sons whom he had deposited in the Fortress of Clissa. But no sooner was he seated, than a just occasion led him against Frederick the Emperor, who under pretence of sheltering him, had robbed him of his Treasure, but expiated that fraud by a just force which vanquished him at Nova a City of Austria whereby Bela gained all his enemy's wealth & began to revive the drooping spirits of the Hungarians; which while he intended by other alleviaments, the Bohemian War recalled him, for Primislaus that King the great friend of the Emperor Otho, so that he was called Ottho Ca●rus having married the Widow of frederick attempted the recovery of Styria and Austria, not long possessed. A fierce and cruel Battle was thereupon joined in Moravia, where the Hungarians inferior in number and exhausted with the late War, were overthrown and a peace made upon these conditions that the Bohemians should enjoy Austria and the Hungarian stand seized of Styria. STEPHEN the fifth swayed the Hungarian Sceptre, Stephen the 18 K. though not long, yet very gloriously, for he Revenged his Father's discomfiture upon Ottocarus, though at first he was worsted, afterwards he made an expedition against the Bulgarians, people of the Dacia Aureliana, (so called, for that Emperor's Transplanting them in Maesia from the new Dacia) & made them willing to pay that Tribute which was due to his Predecessors. He reigned but 2 years, leaving Hungary in a thriving condition. LADISLAUS the fourth, Ladislaus the 19th. King. the Son of Stephen succeeded, and was scarce 3 moneth● old in the Government, when a new War succeeded the former, as if Fortune had so ordered it, that the Bohemian having ill used the 2. Kings Bela and Stephens, should satisfy for his Injuries to the third King Ladislaus. Moravia was the Cause of the War, wherein Ottocarus outstretched his bounds very immoderately. It was long consulted hereupon by the Hungarians, how they should counterplot or oppose these encroachments, when the Fates of themselves opened a Way. The Princes of the Empire while they soveraigned it themselves without any Chief or Head, The Original of the House of Austria. were variously oppressed with the Factions of the Guelphs and Gibellines, by which means it came to pass that the Name of the Counts of Haspurge, then obscure, igno●e, and unregarded, now exerted itself; and afterwards augmented by riches and power in Germany, and chiefly by the Marriage of Mary of Burgundy, was thereby propagated far and wide, and became formidable to the whole World. Rudolphus the Major Domo or Mayor of the Palace to Ottocarus, was by the persuasion of Venerus of Ments, declared and appointed Emperor, Ottocarus could not brook a superior, Rudolphus Emperor. nor Rudolphus endure a peace, Ladislaus is therefore by him adopted and engaged as his Confederate in the War, by which Ottocarus was wholly routed and vanquished; and beaten out of Austria, shut up in the Fiefs of Bohemia and Moravia. At the same time Lascus Niger the King of Poland, had for protection & assistance addressed himself to Ladislaus, being expelled his Kingdom by Conrade Duke of Massovia, which Ladislaus readily granted, and in his aid forthwith subdued his rebellious Subjects, This war was taken up by the revival of another by Ottocarus, who no way enduring the Dominion of Rudolphus formerly his Servant, stirred up Oldamir the Duke of the Cumani, to invade Hungary the Emperor's Confederate, and for the better ligament of their new Friendship, took to Wife that Duke's Danghter Kunigunda, unlawfully repudiating his former Wife Margareta; The Cumani aided by some Tartars, came as far as the Lake of Hood, burning and spoiling all the Country about. Against these Ladislaus fought successively, Ottocarus himself after a total rout being slain in the Battle. Peace thereupon was granted to the Queen of Bohemia, on condition that her Son Wenceslaus should marry the Daughter of Caesar, and to hold Bohemia from the Emperor as his Beneficiary. But though this last Battle was so prosperously fought, yet was it the Cause of greater Evils, for the Tartars and Cumani that escaped, implored the assistance of their Countrymen, who following their unknown and bloody Tract in the year 1280, broke into Hungary, renewing and carrying the dismal slaughter of the former time as far as the Province of Pesth: The Tartars reinvade Hungary. whosoever they met with (for the pleasure of the Tyrant) were consumed, others mancipated to perpetual slavery, very many with limbs cut off survived their punishment; such as were left in the Highways, sometimes by sight, often by their groans and howl, knew their Wives, Husbands, Children or Parents; by which barbarity the Kingdom was so oppressed, that there were not cattle enough to draw the Wains, and those the men drew, in contempt of the King, were called Ladislaus Chariots: For he having married the Daughter of Charles King of Sicily, grew so outrageous in his lust, and void of all fear and shame, that he stuprated the Wives of the Cumani, and most libidinously vitiated them; the which Cumani (as the friendship of Princes not conciliated by virtue is very temporary) at a large Treatment given him at Keretzegum, there slew him, and put an end to his flagitious Practices. ANDREW the third, Andrew the 20 K. enjoyed the Kingdom after Ladislaus the Nephew of Andrew the second, by the Daughter of the marquis of Este and Son of Stephen. Boniface the eighth, obtruded Charles Robert, a Youth of twelve years of age, the Great Grandchild of Charles Duke of Anjo●, who at the solicitation of Pope Clement the fourth, after many fruitless Wars managed by the Papacy, deprived Manfred the Bastard of Conrade the Emperor, of the Kingdom of Sici●ia, and suffered the same Fortune by Peter of Arragon. This Andrew, as he gained the Kingdom by the love and affection of his Subjects, so he maintained it by his own worth and Virtue. He was in the beginning of his Reign taken Prisoner by Albert of Austria, Adolphus of Nassau then Emperor, and after his enlargement at Vienna, Andrew established in the Government. contracted with Agnes the Daughter of the said Albert, which said Contract upon his return was annulled by the States of Hungary, as done in his Restraint, which occasioned a War with various Successes in Austria, until intestine Troubles forced Albert to make Peace, that he might bend his Arms against Adolph, whom he slew, and advanced himself (though not unpunished for his disloyalty) into the Imperial Throne. Andrew in the mean while gently reduced the favourers of Charles and the Pontifical Authority, by which he was invested; but that len●i●y of his was abused to his Contempt and avilement; for the seditious practices of the same men, brought Charles, Andrew yet living, into Hungary, but the danger rendering King Andrew's Authority more acceptable to his other Subjects, restrained Charles his Advance. In the conclusion of his Reign the Venetians being Excommunicated by the Pope, for the seizure of Ferrara, the jadrenses revolted to the Hungarians, to reduce whom, Belletus justinianus was sent with a power; but by the Stratagems of the Vaivod of Dalmatia, was presently repulsed. Andrew Deceasing, Wencess●us chosen King by the Nobility. the Hungarians being divided among themselves, one part of them acknowledged Charles for King, others blamed the Pope for meddling with a matter no way belonging to him, under pretence of Religion: The Generality therefore being of that opinion; the Archbishop of Colozza, the Bishop of Varadin, and other their Complices, invited Wenceslaus (Son of Wenceslaus the King of Bohemia who refused) to accept and entertain the Crown; wherein the strangeness of Fortune is observable, that the Issue of Ottocar●● (so odious to the Hungarians) should now be spontaneously desired of them. But that ardent and sudden affection soon cooling, and Charles his Partisans, with the assistance of Albert of Austria▪ infesting Moravia with frequent incursions, Wenceslaus the Father mistrusting the levity of the Hungarians, made an Expedition into the Kingdom, where finding his Son near Pesth (who came to meet him with his Crown on his head, ●i●hly adorned) he carried him away presently with him, together with his Crown, into Bohemia; giving this reason to the Demands of the Hungarians, that he did it to avoid an imminent storm: hence a Quarrel and hidden War: for Uladislaus L●ctius being removed from the Polonian Sceptre, flying to Amadeus or Es●●s, the Palatine of Hungary, watched an opportunity of recovering his Kingdom from Wenceslaus: whose Government, being too heavy for the Poles, the Palatine levying an Army soon re-settled his Guest, and Wenceslaus shortly after Deceased, so that this was a kind of Interregnum or Vacancy. Boniface the eighth, Charles named for King, and imposed upon the Hungarians by the Pope. yet furiously persisting in Execution of his purpose and designation of Charles, by Nicholas Cardinal of Ostia, with the usual Anathema Excommunicated the Hungarians, who on the contrary declared the Pope guilty of disturbing the Peace, and interdicted his Bishops in the same manner (who at present seemed to acquiesce, awaiting a fitter opportunity the adverse party being too prevalent, for their Revenge) and the rather provoked by this Papal thunder, proceeded to the Election of Otho the third Duke of Bavaria, to the Kingdom, in the Year of Christ 1305. He received the Crown gratis from Wenceslaus for which great sums had been offered by the Hungarians, Otho Duke of Bavaria chosen K. by the Nobility. and was inaugured at Alba Re●alis; and the better to win and insinuate himself into the favour of the Nobles and People, he wore the Crown (which is had as before in the greatest veneration) constantly in his Progresses and public appearances. Once as he entered Transylvania he lost the Crown, being put up in a Case and tied to his Horse's Saddle, which was not found till next day, and this was taken for an unlucky Omen of his Expulsion first into Russia, by which people he was for a while again restored, and his last final deprivation by Ladislaus Vaivod of the Kingdom, who sided with Charles and the Papal pretences, though he had been one of the advancers of Otho before. By this means much Blood was spilt by those intestine Divisions; the Cardinal Gentilis being sent again with new Curses and Bans against the Adversaries of Charles, which brought innumerable mischief's both upon Clergy, Nobility, and People, most unnaturally divided one against another. These Factions having so long oppressed this Nation, it was unanimously agreed to confer the Supreme Power upon a single person they chose thereupon in the Fields of 〈◊〉 Charles the Nephew of 〈◊〉 ●laudus King of▪ Sicily, Charles the 21 K. of Hungary. by Mary the Daughter of Stephen the fourth, and Son of Charles Martell; in whom the Discords and Feuds of the Nobility were by his Virtues reconciled. He was encircled in the presence of his Father, with that Crown which Ladist●us had surrendered▪ His first Exploit and Enterprise was against Matthew Trinesiniensis; who had refused Allegiance, whom he overcame in a bloody Battle at Cassovia; but with great hazard and dubious Event; his numerous Troops of Horse, among whom was a veterane tried Band of the Knights of the Order of St. john, turning their backs to a Brigade of 1700 Curassiers. Nor did the Conspiration cease here, for a bloody and ●nefarious Design was laid at Visigrade, where Felicianus Sakanus a special Servant of the Kings with a drawn Sword, struck at him, who inclining his body, the blow cut off the Fingers of the Queen; nor had the King escaped, had not the Soldiers of the Guard freed him (being mounted) from imminent Death. The Assassinate for terror, was quartered, and his four quarters sent as a spectacle, through the Kingdom, and his Family and Posterity utterly extinguished. Intending now an Expedition against the Saracens, a revolt of the Null withheld him, he advanced therefore against Bo●aradine the Vayvod thereof, and Compelled him with the Expense of the War, to pay the yearly Tribute; but returning he was set upon by that perfidious Nation in the abrupt and least passable places, and Defeated, he himself changing his Habit for his easier Escape. Others say he undertook this War upon no ground, and therefore they ascribe the Event to his wickedness; Burying the Noble memorable Acts of this man in this Overthrow, The Virtues of Charles who was so Potent and Prudent a Prince, that most of the Kings of his Time were by his Force or Prudence obliged to him. He had to his Wives, Mary the Daughter of Casimir Duke of Poland; Beatrice Daughter of the Emperor, and Elizabeth the Daughter of Uladislaus of Poland; by the last he had Issue Charles, who died at the years, as Ladislaus at four months, end. His surviving Son Andrew had Apulia; Lewis, Hungaria for his Patrimony. Under this Charles the Realm recovered its former Puissance, for he Ruled over Rama, Servia, Gallicia, Saler●a, L●d●miria, Cumania, and Naples; far Famed, had he not begotten his Son Lewis, although that also, be attributed to his Glory. The Third BOOK. LEWIS not inferior to so great a Father, Lewis the 22. King. and skilled in martial Affairs, exercised his first Arms against the insolence of the Null and Servians, who contemning his youth recoiled from the obedience they owed and performed to his Father, but were reduced to the same Conditions. Those being subjugated he solemnly dismissed his mother, whose Sanctity had procured her a veneration even unto Superstition, to Apulia, and thence to Rome, requesting of his brother Andrew the Loane of 44 thousand Marks of gold, (as the Covetousness of the Times then required) for the price of his Confirmation in the Kingdom of Naples: which Affair concluded, he aided his adoptive Father Casimir (who before had designed Charles his Natural Son, but he survived not long after) against john of Bohemia and the Lithuanians, whom he attempted to force to the belief of the Christian Religion, but found the difference betwixt Words and Swords. The Bohemian advanced as far as Cracovia, he again expelled out of that Dominion, from whence he was not yet retired, but the Tartars made another invasion into Hungary, but nevertheless were so well received by Andrew the Vaivod, The Tart●rs beaten and expelled out of Hungary. Son of Ladislaus aforesaid, (who avoiding their Arrows, came to handy blows with them, and the dint of Sword) that they were utterly overthrown, and their General Atlamus taken prisoner, and the name of the Tartar after this defeat not heard of in Hungary for many years. With the same fortune he prevailed against the Croats, in which expedition he was personally present, accompanied with Stephen Neman Prince of Bosnia, whose Daughter he had married, for while as yet he stayed in the Confines of Croatia, they submitted themselves, and took the Oath of Fidelity and Allegiance: but the Venetian War was bloody, who in spite of Lewis, reduced Schodra to their subjection, after he had lost many men in the attempt of relieving it. While these things were doing; joan the Wife of Andrew new-invested in Apulia, for the love and lust of her Adulterer the Prince of Tarentum, The History of J●an the v●ulter●us Cue▪ of Naples. designed to transfer that Kingdom with herself to his Embraces, by the death of her husband, whom she hung with a silken halter. This Fact obliged Lewis to a just revenge, which to prosecute (having in vain received Letters from joan in Excuse thereof and by his answer declared her guilty of that and other precedent and subsequent Crimes) he marched into Italy, where he was assisted by Philip of M●ntua, Malatesta of Ariminum, and other Princes, whose Governments by the sloth of Charles the Emperor were become absolute Tyrannies. By these Arms he drove Lewis Prince of Tarente the Adulterer, Lewis success against her. and joan his Wife out of Italy, to Marseilles and Avignion, and possessed himself of all the Dominion of Apulia, on that side the Sea, & taking the Duke of Dyrrachium beheaded him by the common Executioner, as he sent the brothers of the said Lewis (with the Son of Andrew as his Ward) bound in Chains into Hungary, whether, the Pest raging in Italy and depopulating many places, and whole Provinces, he soon after followed, and placed Stephen Laskus his Vaivod in Transylvania. But the Neapolitans rebelling, as not enduring a foreign Government, the Hungarians left in that Kingdom, twice defeated them, once by a Salley made by Stephen the Governor of Naples, whom they had blocked up, and the next time by Volphordus in plain Battle, though he lost his life as the price of the victory; when joan having solicited and obtained new Supplies, at the instances of the Pope, to whom as a Gratuity she consigned Avignion, Avignion how invested in the Pope. and to whose Arbitrement she submitted her Cause, attempted again the recovery of the Kingdom, whereupon Lewis returning with wonderful fortune, took Barletum, Carnesium, where his life was near endangered, Luceria and Salernum, (with most of all the Towns) and placing Garrisons therein in the year of Jubilee came to Rome. The Papal seat was then at Avignion, wherefore the Perfect of Rome, Nicolaus Rentius, a man of eminent worth and virtue, meeting the King with the Estates of the City, proffered him the absolute supreme power thereof, but he refusing, it was tendered to Charles the fourth, out of fear of Clement the Pope, to whom, Charles being of an abject spirit, delivered the said Rentius Captive. joan in the mean while never left urging of Clement to take her part, promising great advantages to satisfy his Covetousness, if he would effect her Restitution, which in fine, by much entreaty to Lewis, who was religiously given, and could not be wrought upon any other way, was obtained at his hands. The Venetians fell by his next Arms, for Lewis confederated with Leopold of Austria, and the Cr●atians invaded the Maritine part of Dalmatia, in two inroads by Friuli and Istria, Lewis' success against the Venetians Tarvisia frustrated his Conquest, but Spalatra, and other places opened their gates to the experience and Courage of his veterane Army, securing and confirming some places, and reducing others, among whom were the inconstant Schodrians. The Total of this expedition amounted to the Acquists of that part of the Venetian Territory which extends itself from the Bay of Phanaticia, to Dyrrachium, and all Dalmatia, in lieu of those places taken in this War which by an agreement he surrendered. But this agreement lasted not long, both parties taxing each other, as the manner is, for the breach of it, though the fault was in the Venetians, who engaging Charles the Emperor, invaded the Dalmatians and Croats, put by this Treaty under the protection of Lewis; These Invaders were encountered first successfully by Paul, the Son of Ladislaus the Vaivod, but unprosperously by Stephen of Transylvania, whose rashness and fury overthrew him, and made him a Prisoner to the Victor. Thereafter many were the vicissitudes of fortune. Lewis by this Defeat, was persuaded by the Croats to a two years' truce, which expired, Leopold growing insolent, was beaten by the Venetians and recruiting himself for another Encounter, The Genoese and Venetian Quarrel. was induced by Lewis to another two years' Cessation, but he having underhand held intelligence with the Genoese, privily prepared for a War, by the dread whereof the Venetians with Restitution of what they had got, were glad to descend and Consent to a Peace. The Genoese nevertheless proceeding in their Enterprise, reduced the Venetians under the Conduct of Peter Auria to Extremity, but themselves afterwards puffed up with success, were subjected to the wheel of Fortune by the invention of Guns, Invention of Guns. and Engine found out then by Bertholdus Niger; in fine, Lewis by Land, and the Genoese by Sea, besieged and took Clodia, when all parties wearied with the many miseries of the War, referred themselves to the arbitrement of the Duke of Savoy, who first of all ordered the razing of the Castle of Tened, as the occasion and continual foment of the quarrel, awarding also the Decennial payment of 7 thousand Crowns, by the Venetians to Lewis, who content with the glory of his Actions, and this incompetent sum in respect of his Expenses, ceased the War. While these things were acting in Venice, Pope Urban excited Lewis against joan, because she took part with Clement the seventh the Antipope, who forthwith dispatched away Charles his Son (as some say) others his Nephew by Andrew, who with 8000 men passed into Italy, and was welcomed there with the Acclamations of Victory. He subdued several Towns, and mulcted the Florentines in the sum of 40. thousand Crowns. At Rome, he was adorned with all the Regal Habiliments; joan placing her sole hope in the Duke of Anjou. She had intermarried for her fourth husband, Otho of Brundisium, the Tarentine during in Custody, and the King of Sardinia her next husband dead in Spain. Otho though he took part with Urban against the inclination of joan, yet was constant to her against the Hungarians, who took in several other Town's. Charles being arrived and introduced into Naples, Joan taken in castle Novo ●n Naples. besieged joan, who had shut up herself in castle Novo. Otho comes and besieges the City and the Besiegers, till Charles sallying out, he was after a gallant opposition by reason of a fall off his Horse taken Prisoner, and joan hereupon despairing of any relief forced to surrender. But Lewis of Anjou, Uncle and Regent of Charles the sixth of France, Lewis of Anjou invested in Naples. whom Clement had invested and feoffed in the Realms of Apulia and Sicilia (as purchased from joan) with 30 thousand Horse (the number of the Foot uncertain) passed into Italy, whom Charles inferior in Strength, so baffled with delays, that his great numbers proving burdensome to him, and Lewis dying thereupon, either by disease or poison, the Frenchmen two or three in Company were glad to beg their way and departure home. Lewis in his return out of Italy to Hungary, enterprised by Nicholas the Palatine upon Bosnia, which had revolted from him, but he wearied out with the Siege of Sebenico, was easily overcome. Better Fortune attended him in his Expedition against Stratomirius, the Prince of the Bulgarians, who vanquished was taken Captive at Gemleick, but soon after by the good will of the King, and the liking of the Kingdom restored to his Principality. The Family of the Piasti failing in Casimir, Lewis chosen King of Poland. Lewis was now crowned King of Poland, the first of foreign Princes that was chosen by them: the Administration of this Government he committed to his mother Elizabeth, the Customary delights of his native Country inviting his return. Nor did she continue long there, having by her levity and flexibility gained the love of some, but not the reverence of all persons; wearied therefore with new Commotions, she departed rather frighted then feared into Hungary, but preferring the privilege of absoluteness before the humours of another, she was soon induced to retire back again. In the mean while the Nobles of the greater Polonia created Vladislaus the Duke of Cusavia, of a Monk, to their King, whom Sabinius though chief of the same Counsel and Combination with other of the Nobility on the part of Lewis overcame, and sent him Captive to Lewis, who by his extraordinary Clemency, in which he was not superable, gave him an Abbey as satisfied in having reduced him to his former Condition; the same Fate pursued the Rebellious Russes, who were now annexed to the Crown of Hungary, and several Lords or Vaivods set over them. Hence Jealousies and suspicions, and ill rumours among the Polanders, which Uladislaus Prince of Oppelon late Governor of white Russia fomented; the reason of the Kings erecting this new Authority, was partly his propensity to his own blood & kindred, and partly because he believed that that Country under the name of Hallicia and Lodomiria did belong to Hungary. This indisposition of Affairs, and the weariness of those frequent journeus the King made into Poland, who loved his ease and was delighted with Home, caused him to appoint a Triumvirate of Polonian Noble men to the Administration of that Kingdom. He himself intending the Chastisement of the Vayvod of Valachia who had Revolted from him, received an overthrow by his Lieutenant Ladislaus of Transylvania, being shamefully beaten between the Rocks and abruptnesses of Novigrade, which loss he repaid to effect; meeting the same Enemy secure by reason of their late Victory in the Plains of Bulgaria, & making them thereby to submit to their former Tribute. His Exploits aainst his Rebels. About this Time the Cumani received the Christian Faith, and Lewis upon the same Religious account marched against the Lithuanians (who depredated Russia) and restrained, and upon their Submission pardoned them, and restored to them their Duke. Lewis had Daughters Catharina, Mary, and Hedwiga; Catharine died young, Marry with the Succession to the Crown, was Married to Sigismond, whose Father was Charles the 4th Emperor; Hedwiga by the Consent of the Nobles of Poland was chosen Queen thereof, whom jagello Great Duke of Lithuania afterwards Married, and converted his Kingdom to Christianity, and by the Name of Uladislaus was worthily Registered among the Kings of Polonia. LEWIS died at Tyrnaw, His Death. to the great loss and detriment of Hungaria, a man of a Courageous and courteous mind, bountiful to Learned men, and very skilful in Astrology, for which he was styled Ordongos Lajos by his People. He used in Disguises to visit the Towns and places near his Residence, enquiring into the lives and manners of his Magistrates and himself, by which he might better correct what was amiss, and if report pleased him enjoy the Happiness and Felicity thereof. Marry the second Daughter of Lewis (her Sister Hedwiga being Married to the King of Poland and settled there, Marry notwithstanding her sex styled the 23. King. by which means a strict League and union was begun between both Nations) was saluted with the Title of King of Hungaria; she was betrothed to Sigismond of Brandenburg, but their minority hindered the present consummation of the Match. She Governed happily by the prudence of her ministers, and the beloved memory of her Father, but as soon as she entrusted the whole menage of the State into the hands of Nicholas Gara the then Palatine (who by his insolence was unsufferable to the Nobles) a Civil dissension, inflamed by the envy and hatred against him, arose in the Kingdom, the secret Design whereof was, the deposition of her from the Throne. Some of the Grandees thereupon consulted to call in Charles Surnamed the Little Son, or as others, Nephew of Lewis (who had relieved and afterwards distressed Pope Vrban) and was now gloriously invested in the Kingdom of Naples (out of Italy,) delegating to him upon this Errand, the Bishop of Zagrabia, who effected the business notwithstanding the dissuasion of Charles his Wife. His passage into Hungary, was by the way of Sipontus and Zagrabia, where unexpectedly Arrived, he pretended for his rapinous seizure of the Sceptre, the Composure of those Tumults and Factions in the State. This caused Sigismond (whom his Father in his Life time had sent into Hungary to be educated and fashioned according to the Hungarian manners) to fly into Bohemia, while Charles being honourably received every where, surprised the Castle of Buda, and in presence of the Queen and her Grandmother (who wisely tempered and dissembled their resentments) caused himself to be Crowned at Alba Regalis; and not long after, was so inveagled and blinded by his Parasites (with whom he most delighted) that he could not foresee the danger of his unjust Usurpation. For the Generality and the Nobles being estranged in their affections, Elizabeth the Queen-mother, and the abovenamed Palatine, under Colour of a private Conference at the House of Blasius Forgatz, there by a private hand Assassinated him, upon the rumour whereof, Charles assassinated the Italians that came with him, Covenanting for their safety, obtained a dismission into their own Country. The Queens were now in hopes of a plenary Restitution, when the Banus or Prince of Croatia took upon him the Revenge of Charles his Death, assisted therein by some of his Favourers, by whom Elizabeth was Drowned in the River of Bruszula, and Mary with somewhat better fortune preserved in Custody; The Palatine and Forgatz were both cruelly slain. Sigismond having notice of Charles his Fate, and sensible likewise of the danger the Queens were in, levied a great Army, for the Expense whereof he pawned the Marquisate of Brandenburg to jodocus and Procopius, his Cousin Germane. His Fortune in this Expedition was answerable to his strength; Sigismond Husband of Mary undertakes and effects her Restitutio●s. for intent against the Croatian, (who frighted with the danger had Articled for his Indemnity with Mary, whom he had set at liberty) he possessed himself of that Country with Bosnia, and at Quinque Ecclesiae, put him to Death with thirty of his partakers and Conspirators against the Queens. The Bishop of Zagrabia, in respect to his quality, had his goods only Confiscated. Thus Charles expiated his prodigious Lust by the Queens, as the Queens for the ungovernance and breach of Faith by the Banus, and he for his Cruelty by Sigismond, whom Hungary now acknowledged as their new and rightful Sovereign, as the Kingdom of Naples did Lewis the Son of Charles. Sigismond maintaining his Kingdom by the same Prudence with which he recovered it, Sigismond his 〈…〉. made an Expedition against the Null and Moldavians, and slew their Vaivod, Stephen; and annexed them by Oath of Subjection to the Crown of Hungary. But War ceased not here, for Alexander endeavoured to restore the Null to their Liberty; and being too weak and inferior in force, called in the Turks to his assistance, whom also Sigismond put to a most shameful flight, and pursuing them as far as Thrace, Mary dies, the Title to the Succession disputed. took in Nicopolis. But the Death of Mary sowered the sweetness of this Victory; for Uladislaus of Poland now pretended a Right to the Kingdom, by virtue of the Agreement made betwixt Mary and his Wife Hedwiga. But john Canysa the Archbishop of Strigonium, possessing the abrupt passages and difficulries of the Mountains, kept out Uladislaus, though the Turks, far more dangerous, could not be repressed. Their Design was the recovery of Nicopolis, in order whereunto they laid waste the adjoining Dominions of Hungary, (whither their Arms in the minority of their Empire had not yet reached) but Bajazet the fourth King, Bajazet's great Successes. having vanquished Mark the Prince of Bulgaria and Lazarus the Despot of Servia, as on the Asian side he had Conquered the Kingdom of Armenia; thereafter infested Phocis and Thessaly, and now threatened with the Siege of Nicopolis, a further progress of his Victories. To avert this storm, Sigismond dealt with him by Ambassadors, but words not availing, he prepared with force to Encounter this Enemy, levying to that end a very select Army of Hungarians, Germans, and French, resolving to crush and suppress the rising greatness of the Turk, before he grew too potent with so many additions, which his successful Scymitar had annexed to his first mean and inconsiderable Patrimony. In this Expedition he was accompanied with john the Hardy, Son of Philip Duke of Burgundy, who jointly retook in many Towns seized by the Turks in Bulgaria, and in one great Battle carried away the Victory, when the Frenchmen according to the light humour of their Nation, were so dissolved by Lust and Luxury, and became so arrogant withal, that they boasted they could sustain and support the falling Heaven with their Spears. Bajazet having failed of his design upon Constantinople, and risen from the Siege thereof, was now in person before Nicopolis, whither Sigismond being also come, The Battle of Nicopolis most fatal to the Christians. he put his Army into Battalia, giving the Van to his Hungarians, as best skilled in the Turkish manner of fight, and placing the French as his Rearguard; who taking this for a disgrace, before Sigismond had opened his Battle, fell suriously open the Turk, whose Arrows so galled and terrified their Horses, that their Riders being forced to alight, they ran soul upon the Hungarians, who misgiving this for a rout; fell into a present dismay, & thence to flight, wherein numbers of them perished in the Danow, john of Burgundy with abundance of other Nobles, was taken Prisoner and was ransomed with the sum of 200 thousand Crowns. Sigismond doubtful of his life in a light Galley escaped to Constantinople, whence by Rhodes, and so to Daimatia, and by the help of the Archbishop of Serigonium, he recovered his Kingdom. Bajazet fortunated with this Victory, not long after became far more miserable than the vanquished, (so deceitful is the greatest assurance of humane things) being overcome by Tamerlane (by my Author called Temir) the great Cham of Tartary, Bajaze● a sad Spectacle of humane Frailty. and enclosed in an Iron Cage, made his Footstool when he took Horse, and wherein betwixt rage and impatient indignation he brained himself against the Grates. The misfortune of this Field, opened a way to the revenge of those persons who were related to the 30. Noblemen, put to death by him at Quinque Ecclesiae, for by a potent Conspiracy, in which Ladislaus the King of Poland was concerned (by their invitation of him to assume the Sceptre) Sigismond was seized on a sudden, Sigismond seized and made a Prisoner. and put into the Custody of the sons of Nicholas the late Palatine in the Castle of Soklos (Buda and the places confining with Germany adhering to him notwithstanding) which gave opportunity to Ladislaus, to pursue his design upon the Kingdom of Naples, (newly transferred by Pope Alexander from Lewis the Son of Charles aforesaid for his encroachment upon the Church Territory, to Lewis of Anjou) which he reovered in his own right. He was now besieging the often mentioned * The City of Z●ra. jadra, and had forced it from the Venetians, when news was brought him that Sigismond having over-persuaded, and by promises prevailed on the Mother of the Sons of Nicholas the Palatine, Sigismond ●reed. had obtained his liberty, and having privily passed into Moravia and Bohemia, had openly resumed His Title and the Government, and had put to Death Stephen the Vaivod of Transylvania, with some few others as the Authors of the late Treason against him. Hereupon Ladislaus thought best for the preservation of his own (for another defection of the Neapolitans was likewise suspected) to part with jadra and his pretences upon the Venetians for a sum of money, and to return: But Sigismond had settled himself sure in the Government, and was now engaged in a War against the people of Bosnia, who had during these late Troubles, renounced their Allegiance to the Crown of Hungary. Nor did he engage with better fortune against the Turks, although weakened by a civil War between the Five Sons of Bajazet, his Lieutenant Stephen● Lossontius, The Hungarians ●●orsted by the Turks. aiding Mark the Vaivod of Mold●via, who had shaken off the Turkish yoke, being discomfited, and the said Vaivod deposed by Mahomet the fifth King of Turkey. Who to prosecute this quarrel commanded Isaac the Bassa of Bosnia, to invade Hungary; where notwithstanding he was defeated twice by Nicholas Pe●ri, yet by the negligence and divisions among the Hungarians, he had at last the better of it, destroying by fire many Towns and Villages. Rupert the Emperor being deceased, Pope john the 22. dealt with the Germane Princes to elect Sigismond in his place, as a person whose regal Majesty, Magnificence, and Virtue, the skill and readiness of many Languages, did excellently adorn and prefer before all the Princes, his Cotemporaries, as inferior likewise to none of his Predecessors, if success in Battle, and chastity in Bed had not been wanting. Soon after his Assumption to this Dignity, he threatened a War against Uladislaus of Poland, but it was superseded by a Truce, Belgrad●● put into the possession of Sigismond. which a Peace ensued. The Turks busy encroachments disturbing and disseising his Neighbours, he had Belgrade consigned him by George Bulchus the Despot of Servia, who had other places in Hungary in exchange thereof: by which means the Turks being put to a stand, he had leisure to employ his Army against the Venetians, aided by the Florentines, who had seized several places, but after some bicker this difference was also composed, for that Sigismond was now engaged in a Bohemian War in maintenance of his new Title to that Crown: About this time the Council of Constance was held, and Pope john convicted of 40. Crimes, committed to the Custody of Lewis Count Palatine of the Rhine, and Otho Colonn● by the name of Martin the Fifth, placed in the Papal Chair. At this same Council john Hus and Hierome of Prague were Condemned and Burnt for Heretics, whose death was revenged by john Zisca and Procopius, to the great loss and detriment of Sigismond, the great and professed Enemy of the Reformation. And that it might appear there was more than humane direction in the infliction of the Defeats given him by Zisca, 15000. Hungarians that followed Sigismond perished by the breaking of the Ice in one Expedition. His Reign was concluded with a rebellious Insurrection of the Boors and Peasants, resolving to assert their Liberty or perish rather than endure slavery; and in this mood they raged with Fire and Sword, but their ungoverned and undisciplined Multitude rendered them an easy Conquest to a small Party of Experienced Soldiers. Sigismond departing from Prague commended his Son in law Albertus to the Nobles, The Death of Sigismond. and at his arrival at Znoyma in Moravia, departed this life, aged 70. years. He was a very active person, but little beholding to Fortune, and by her means deceived in the Constancy of his Friends. He was a great favourer of Learned men, affirming that Precedency was justly due to them; for that Riches and Regal Pomp happen merely by Fate. He connived at and forgave Barbara his Wife, taken often in the act of Uncleanness, being himself a most infamous Adulterer. ALBERT, from Duke of Austria in a few months was made Duke of Luxenburg, Albert of Austria succeeds. the 25. K. Marquis of Moravia, King of Bohemia, and Hungary (though the latter complaining of the Spoil and havoc made by the Turks in that Kingdom during the absence of Sigismond busied in the Affairs of Germany and Italy, did with much reluctancy consent to his Election) as also of the Romans. He swayed the Sceptre but two years, and was a notable Evidence of the inconstancy of the World in his sudden Advancement and as speedy Fall. He was Crowned at Alba, whence coming to Buda, the Germans took upon them the Civil administration of the City, together with the placing of Officers, as more allied to him than the Hungarians; and in maintenance of this their Intrusion, caused a Chief Noble man that stoutly opposed them to be put to Death. This so enraged the Hungarians that they flew to their Arms, and killed all the Germans they met or could tell where to find them, which Bloody Fury lasted till a certain Monk prevailed them to surcease it. At this time the Turks wasting Rassia, and having subdued Synderovia, George Bulch●s the Despot of the Province, commiting the Guard of the Castle which was the Chief Residence of his Government, to his two Sons, betook himself with his third Son Lazarus for succour and aid into Hungary, but Albert intent upon his Covetousness suffered the two Princes to be taken, when although Amurath (as the Turkish Annals have it) had Married their Sister some three years before, Rascia subdued by the Turks. he caused their privities to be cut off, and their Eyes to be put out, upon pretence that they assisted their Father as then Designing War against him. Albert was upon his March when he understood of the taking of the Castle; which dismaying him, he encamped betwixt the River Tybiscus and the Danow, suffering Amurath after the attainment of his Design to retire unmolested. Albert Dies. During which idling his Soldiers got the Flux, by inordinate eating of Fruit, which same disease at the Town of Nesmel, took him also away at his return to Hungary. ELIZABETH his Wife, being left big with Child, was urgent with the Nobles that they would regard the Issue of the King her Husband she then went with; and in the mean time to her delivery to create an Interrex or Protector; to which motion those that were present agreed; but others would have the Sceptre translated to Uladislaus the third, King of Poland, Son of jagello aforesaid, by Hedwyga a Daughter of Hungary, to whom the Queen should be intermarried, and the Posthume Child to be instated in Austria and Bohemia. This counsel, the Infancy of the Prince and the Noise of the Turkish Arms did then advise; whereupon a hasty Embassy was dispatched to Cracovia, Divisions in Hungary about a new King but as speedily followed with the news of her being delivered of a Son. The Nobles at home now repent of their forwardness, but the Ambassadors conscious to themselves how far they had gone, persisted in their Errand, and notwithstanding the Turks instances to the Contrary, prevailed upon Uladislaus to accept the Crown. Upon his approach into Hungary, Elizabeth, who had newly brought out the Crown she had secretly purloined from its place, and Crowned her Son Ladislaus therewith (for whose good and just Government she and Zecchius, with the Count of Cillia had pledged their Oaths) foreseeing the danger, conveyed the Crown and herself and Son, to Frederick the third, Emperor. Soon after Uladislaus arrived at Buda, Uladislaus of Poland Innaugurated. and having modestly declined the Government, gently taxing the Hungarians of their Dissensions as the cause of so many Changes, was the more unanimously Complemented with the Regal Title; Zecchius and Ladislaus Gara, the friends of the Orphan Prince, being set at liberty performing their Offices at his Coronation, solemnised with the Diadem taken from off the Image of St. Stephen. His great friends to this Advancement were Nicholas Vylach Governor of Chroatia, and john Huniades, who appeared like an auspicious star amidst the many Factions in Hungary: For the Queen assisted by some Castellanes and Governors of strong Holds, did cause great Troubles to the King, especially Ladislaus Gara her former Partaker, waged War and tried the Fortune of Battle in her Son's Cause, Albert's Relict wages war in right of her Son. but was Defeated with great loss by Huniades and Vylach, as were afterwards Zechi and Gisera; but to the common and great loss and diminution of the Strength of the Kingdom, notwithstanding that, julian the Pope's Legate interposed the Papal Authority, by which no more than a Cessation for a time, could be obtained. The Death of the Queen which now happened, serving rather as an incentive then allay to the passions of those who studied her deprived Orphans right and Interest. By this opportunity Amurath the second, Belgrade in vain Besieged by Amurath. had enlarged his Conquests in the extremest parts of Hungary, and was now in person before Belgrade, Defended by john Aurane Brother of the Prince, or Lord of Croatia, and so resolutely maintained by him, that after a Siege of seven months in which all manner of Force by assault and mines were tried (but by the Valour and vigilance of the besieged repulsed and Countermined to the loss of Thirty thousand Men) the proud Turk was constrained to dislodge, when Invading the other parts of Hungary, he took in Novigrod in the Confines of Servia, abandoned upon his coming by the Defendants, from whence also he dispatched Isaac Bassa of Semendria to make a further Incursion; the Hungarians by their Discords being in no condition to withstand him, till at his return loaden with Booty and innumerable Christian Captives, Huniades having privily Collected an Army and passed the Danow, met with him in the Province of Alba, Huniades his Exploits and Achievements. near to Synderovia, and there vanquished him. To redress this Discomfiture Mesithes Bassa was employed to open a Passage into Transylvania by Valachia, which at the instance of Huniades had newly Revolted, which he effected, havocking and laying wast the Country, and having worsted Huniades at the first Encounter, was again by him engaged with a sudden raised Army, and totally routed, Himself, and his Son, with Twenty thousand Turks being slain upon the place. A Treaty was now with very unequal terms propounded; which Vladisla●s rejecting, Abedin Beg was sent by Amurath to prosecute the same Design upon Transylvania and Hungary, with an Army of Fourscore thousand Men, at whose approach the Null being in no capacity to resist him, by the advice of Huniades, secured themselves in the inaccessible Mountains and Hills of the Country, while the Turk raged with all extremity upon what ever he found, till suddenly set upon by Huniades with no more than Fifteen thousand Men at Vaskapa, he was miserably overthrown, with the loss of Thirty thousand Men, and his own life. For this Victory a three days Thanksgivins was appointed, and the Ensigns and Spoils of the Enemy hung up in Churches, and Huniades Proclaimed and extolled as the Bulwark and Defence of Christendom. Hereby also the King was encouraged to make an Invasion into the Turkish Territory, Uladislaus his Successful Invasion of the Turkish Territory. accompanied by julian the Pope's Legate, and a multitude of Crusadoes. At Buda he passed the Danow, Huniades and George the Despot, advancing before him, who by light skirmishes drove the Enemy back, until the whole Army was arrived to the very tops of Mount Haemus, where there are two passes into Macedon and Thrace, the one made by Trajan, the other by the River Saltiza, called by the Turks, Clissira Isladina to this day; other parties of the Hungarians reducing most of the Towns in Bulgaria. Against them Amurath dispatched Casa●n Bassa or Caram Beg, with Turchan Beg, with all the Forces of Romania and the Achanzes, (Soldiers serving without stipend) who were by the desperate Valour of the Hungarians utterly Defeated, His Victory over the Turks. and Casan himself taken Prisoner. The Report of this disaster reaching Amurath he summoned and amassed the whole Force of his Empire; but Winter being far in, and the Earth bound up with Ice, while the King was upon his return, he retreated likewise, having effected nothing Considerable, when perceiving by the calamity of so many misadventures, that his Provinces must needs be exhausted by the Continuance of the War, he submitted to the entreaty of a Peace, Amurath begs a Cessation. using thereto the Mediation of George the Despot to Huniades, and his to the King, who being newly at Enmity with the Emperor Frederick, and his Paternal Kingdom of Poland then in Faction and Troubles, consented to a Ten years' Cessation, upon this Condition, that George the Despot should be restored to his Principality of Servia, his two Sons enlarged, and Prisoners freed on both sides, that the Turk should quit Claim to Moldavia, but should retain Bulgary. Amurath having thus avoided the danger that threatened him in those Quarters, carried it with him upon Ibrahim the Caramanian King, in Asia the less, whom he subdued and Vanquished but soon after received into favour. In the mean while Eugenius the Pope, the Venetians and Greek Emperor, by many persuasions had induced Uladislaus (a young Man not skilled in the affairs of Fortune) to break the Truce made with an Infidel: Uladislaus persuaded by the Pope to break his Truce with the Tu●k. And though Huniades protested against it, as best able to judge of what would happen, by informing the King that his Life and Sceptre might be taken away, but his Truth and plighted Faith was in his own keeping; and that the space of life was short, but a blot of Perfidiousness everlasting; Yet the King relying upon the Pope's Dispensation, (as Religion is the only Governor of our Affections) and deceived with vain Auguries, and the advantages of his Puissance, armed himself to his own Destruction. For having embodied his Polonian and Hungarian Forces he passed the Danow and Betgrade, where Dracula the Prince of Moldavia having in vain laboured his desistance from the enterprise, joined also 4000 men with him. Of this Expedition Amurath having intelligence sent him by Mahomet Beg Governor of Nicopolis, to his Residence at Magnesia, straightways crossed over into Europe, and at an obscure Village named Varna, but famous for this great overthrow, joined Battle. In the left Wing of the Christian Army Huniades, and one Michael Niger the Duke of Scylagy, and Brother of Huniades, were placed. The fatal Battle of Varna. In the right wing stood Bobricius a Polonian Knight, in the main Battle the King. The Turks first onset with great noise was upon the right wing, where they opposed Camels and Dromedaries to the Horse, who being therewith affrighted, and the Riders no less amazed, they were easily put to the rout: but in the left wing, and the main body, the King and Huniades, had better fortune, utterly discomfiting both the wings of the Infidels; only Amurath himself with his Janissaries stood yet unmoved, who seeing the presentness of the danger, call Christ to be the Avenger of this Perfidy (Mr. Knols in his Turkish History relates, that he pulled the Instrument of the Truce out of his bosom, and held it up towards heaven) with great fury pressed upon the Hungarians and made a very great slaughter, wherein Uladislaus against the Dissuasion of Huniades, rushing upon the Enemy, by the Fall of his Horse that was run through, had his Head cut off by Cheser Beg; the rest of the Army being disordered, and so hindering one another's flight were for the most part slain on the place. Huniades himself escaped by Valachia, into Transylvania, although for a while detained by Dracula. There were reckoned to be slain of the King's side 9000, and of the Turks 30▪ thousand. This was the end of Uladislaus, whom because Religion could not rule, the despiser of that Religion did destroy. The Epitaph on him was this. Romulidae Cannae, ego Varnam called not avi Discite Mortales non temerare fidem; Me nisi Pontifices jussissent rumpere foedus, Non ferret Scythicum Pannonis or a jugum. The Hungarians being thus deprived of their King, Ladislaus the 26. K. conferred the Kingdom upon LADISLAUS the Son of Albert, whom they had so long withheld from his right of Inheritance, entrusting the Government with Huniades (surnamed Corvinus) with the Administration of it, both as to War and Peace; who to be revenged of Dracula for his Detainer of him in his Flight, seized him and his two Sons. He dispatched likewise an Embassy to Caesar, concerning the Redelivery of the King and Crown which the Mother of the present King had deposited with him, but neither entreaties nor Force afterwards, by incursions into Austria, prevailed any thing. In the mean while the Turk prosecuted his Success in Hungary with a Revenge worthy of so odious a perjury, when Huniades in no Condition to oppose him, by hidden ways Rendezvouzed an Army in Servia to recall the Enemy to the preservation of his own Country. To his Assistance he invited first George the Despot; who pretending the late Agreement, he drew in the Beg of Schodra (who was the Famous George Castriot, called by the Turks, Scanderbag. Scanderbag, the Son of john King of the Epirots or Triballi & had by feigned Letters of Amurath's Hand, possessed himself of Croja the Capital City, as by his Valour and vigilance soon after, of most of the Kingdom; and maintained it in a War of 24. Years) and encamped in the Plains of Cossova, where he engaged the Turks three whole days together: the first two days he had the better of them, but their Numbers prevailed in the third: he himself flying was taken Prisoner by George the Despot, Huniades defeated in the Plains of Cossov●. as an Infringer of his Oath; but upon the Hostage of his Son Ladislaus, set at Liberty; which the Turk resenting, dispatched away Frigez Beg to Invade Servia; to whose Relief Huniades seemingly reconciled to their Despot (now abominated) but out of hatred to the name of the Turks, speedily advanced, and with a great slaughter Vanquished the Enemy, taking the Beg himself. A Bohemian Scuffle followed this, but was presently Composed by the Victorious Fortune of Huniades. At length the Emperor restored Ladislaus, whom the States of Hungary complementd thereupon at Vienna, and Huniades renounced the Administration. LADILAUS to auspiciate his Reign, came to Presburgh, but would trust himself no further within the Kingdom, for Jealousies were fomented against Huniades by Ulrick Count of Cilia, formerly Praefect of Austria; but ejected thence by the Nobles, and received into favour by this King, who to compose the business was at last induced to come to Buda. While he stayed there Amurath vexed with his repulse at Croja, had retired himself into a Monastery, and Mahomet his Son and Successor, after a Siege of 50. days, took and Sacked Constantinople, Constantinople taken by Mahomet. to the shame and terror of Christendom: and having seized Servia, with the Silvermine Towns therein, from George the Despot, bend his Force upon Belgrade; which Furiously attaquing, and thundering against the Walls with his Canons, Huniades came in haste by Water, to the Relief of it; and having made his way into the Town, by a vigorous Saley beat the Enemy out of his Entrenchments which they fired, Belgrade besieged by him, Defeated there by Huniades. and cloyed and nailed his great Guns; whereupon Mahomet retired to his main Camp, and thence next morning tormented & sick with the disappointment, fled in haste towards Macedonia, but was not pursued, because Huniades suspecting likewise some Stratagem, contented himself with the Slaughter of Forty thousand Turks. In this Conflict Huniades received a Wound whereof he Died; His●●amented Death. others say, of a Fever. He was by Birth a Valachian, and from the place of it called Corvinu; as for the national glory of his Achievements he was called Huniades: A person that with small power always worsted great Armies. Ladislaus who terrified with the Turk's approach, had fled to Vienna, came forward now to Belgrade, to see the back-steps of the Enemy: where resenting the slaughter of the Count of Cilia by Ladislaus the Son of Huniades, though often provoked thereunto, he caused him (by the Council of some ill men) to be beheaded, and his Brother Mathias to be imprisoned. But the Year after, on the very Anniversary of the said Fact, as he was Solemnising his Marriage in Bohemia, he Died there, and left another Vacancy or Interregnum in Hungaria. In the beginning whereof Michael Szylagyi the Kinsman of Huniades (supplied with good store of Money by his Sister Elizabeth) levied an Army in Title of Mathias (who was newly sent by Ladislaus, A● Interregnum in Hungaria. in Custody, to George Pogyb●ad King of Bohemia) as King of Hungary, having in Ladislaus' Life time procured many Friends that secretly favoured Huniades and his Family: Others also, for fear of his Power consented to his Election, at an Assembly of the States held at Rakos, where his Army Guarded them. Mathias saluted the King. Pogybrad certified hereof, inviting his Prisoner to Dinner, and setting him uppermost, acquainted him with the matter; and having Contracted his Daughter to him, conducted him to Moravia, where he was Saluted King; and thence in great Pomp and Magnificence conveyed to Buda, where he confirmed and restored all former Privileges; and by his Care, Felicity, Virtue, and the Majesty of his Name, united all Parties into a perfect Peace; which effected, he sent john Vitesius the Bishop of Varadin, his adopted Father, to Frederick the Emperor, to demand the Crown; which he, pretending the Kingdom due to himself, and scorning the Youth of Mathias, refused; and hereupon ensued a Germane War, enforced by the predatory eruption of john Gisera or Zisca the Bohemian, who had twice worsted Huniades himself. Frederick, Frederick the Emperor mal●s War against him. animated and incited by the Lord or Banus of Croatia, Invaded the Sabarian Province, taking the Rebels to his Assistance, and wasted the Country far and near, till Simon Magnus Commissioned and spirited by the King's early Courage, met him in the Upper Hungary, where he Discomfited him; permitting and conniving at the flight of the Rebels, who afterwards proved Caesar's worst and most dangerous Enemies. By this success Caesar was at last constrained to yield to the Demands of Mathias, who persisted in a prosecution of them by delivering the Crown, adopting also Mathias to his Son, upon Condition that if he died without Issue, the Emperor should succeed to the Crown of Hungary. The Bohemian War was ended with the same felicity, by Sebastian Rozgonius, who hunted those predatory Thiefs out of their lurking places, amidst Rocks, Lakes, and other fastnesses; yet so that some years passed before Ziscra their Chief Captain, could be engaged (several strong Holds and passes being maintained by them) till driven to the Mountains of Poland, Mathias his War with the Bandits of the Mountains whence he addressed himself by humble supplication to the King, and was received by him into favour and Preferment. Telephus his Associate had not the same hap, but prolonged a wretched life, in a Begging starving Condition. This is the larger mentioned for that it lasted almost Five years before it was finished, and obliged the utmost endeavours of the King, to the extirpation of so villainous a race of Men, that disturbed the Peace and security of his Subjects. The Turk during these Wars, had put in for his share by Invading the Eastermost parts, The Turks make war against Mathias. in Revenge of his Belgrade Defeat; but was so well received by Michael Szylagy (somewhile before in disgrace with his Beneficiary the King his Nephew, by usual Court detraction and Envy, and newly restored to all his Honours and Commands) near to the Banks of Savus, by a Town called Tutach, that it was a question whether there was more blood or water in that reach of the River. Haly Beg who was then Bassa of Mysia and commanded that Army, flying to Synderovia endeavoured to repair his loss by a re-inforcement of his enterprise upon Transylvania, but was overthrown again by Pancratius near Temeswar. Mathias in pursuit of this Victory, seized Dracula Prince of Valachia, the Tributary of the Turk: for by the Articles between Amurath the second, An Expedition into Bosnia. and Uladislaus, that investiture was to be sole right of the Kings of Hungary; and detained him 10. years a Prisoner. From thence he marched to Bosnia, the King whereof, Stephen, being also Despot of Servia, in right of his Wife the Daughter of Lazarus deceased, Mahomet had caused as perfidiously as inhumanely to be flayed alive, the just reward however of his base and prodigious lust, which divided his Sons against Him. Mathias proceeded as far as the Superior ●osnia, and those parts which stretch themselves towards Zara and Epidaurus, and by the taking of jaycia, reduced the whole Kingdom to his Hungarian Sceptre; Mahomet with thirty thousand men came to relieve it, but hearing of Mathias his Approach sneaked cowardly home. Hereupon the Venetians (with other Princes, by their Ambassadors) were instant, for the prosecution of the War offering 50000. Crowns yearly, for the maintenance of it; which being accordingly recommenced; Mathias frighted in the same manner at Mahomet's appearance, repassed the Savus out of R●scia, where he had taken Streverich by Emerick Sepusius, and turned his Army upon the Frangepanes, who being fortified in the Alps of Croatia, refused obedience, but assoon as the King was arrived at Zagrabia, they thought best to comply. He tamed also the revolting Transylvanians, as he quieted the Seditious in Moldavia and Valachia, by the slaughter of 7000 of them: But his Lieutenant Michael Scylagii, fought unprosperously with the Turk, after a most bloody Battle, himself being captivated, and although a Prisoner of War, yet put to death by those savage Infidels. A Bohemian War ensued, Mathias ●●alous for the Pope. fomented and inflamed by Pope Paul the second, who instigated Mathias against George Pogybrad his Father in Law, as an Heretic, for owning the Doctrines of john Husse, etc. while an excellent opportunity against the Turk engaged in a Syrian & Egyptian War, was by this means pretermitted. Mathias in this war had the better of it, zealously executing the Edicts & anathemas of the Pope, against the Bohemians, Silesians, and Moravians; Nor would a Treaty of Peace be harkened to, the Papists giving out, that no Faith or Communion was to be held with such Heretics. Whereupon Victorinus the Son of Pogybrade made new Levies, but was unhappily worsted and imprisoned at Vissigrade, while Mathias having subdued Spilberg and Olmitz was Master of Moravia, and Silesia at his devotion, and was solemnly also declared King of Bohemia. Pogybrad soon after dying, and by his misfortunes induced to favour Mathias his succession to that Crown (his Son having been gratis set at liberty a little before, upon the Composure of the troubles in Moravia) he transacted with the States of Bohemia for his investiture in that Kingdom, but they had disposed of it to Uladislaus Son of Casimir King of Poland. In revenge whereof he issued like a Tempest out of Moravia into Bohemia: but the Pope being neutral in the Concernments of two Catholic Princes, and the Turks upon the banks of Savus at the Siege of Sabaczium, besides (which was worst of all) a Conspiracy was hatching at home, he effected nothing. This Conjuration was so general, A Treasonable conspiracy against Mathias. by which Casimir was designed to this Crown, that but 9 of 70. Peers, or Senators, were true to their Allegiance, among these Plotters the chief were Vitesius the Archbishop, janus Pannonius, and Emericus Scepusius the former favourers of, and reciprocally favoured by, Mathias: the pretence of the defection was, that the Church Revenues, and other profits of secular Offices, were employed solely in the carrying on of War. Ladislaus at their invitation came and encamped between Nitre and Vacia, and was magnificently received by his Partakers, but Mathias upon the News of it speeding from Buda to Strigonium, prepared for an Encounter, where by Scepusius, whom he reclaimed, Ladislaus Defeated. he so wrought upon Vitesius the Life of the Faction, that upon his reconciliation, and indemnity promised to those that should return to their Allegiance within three days, his Competitor was presently abandoned, and left to reflect, and inveigh against the Levity of the Hungarians: nor was that all, but being circumvented at Nitra, he hardly escaped with 700. of all his number, the pursuit not being given over, till his Father by timely dispatches, interposed his requests for his dismission. Notwithstanding Mathias was not satisfied with this revenge, but continuing in the mountainous part of Poland, watched an opportunity of further satisfaction; as he punished Vitesius and janns, with other of the Complices in the Treason. While he stayed hereabouts Uladislaus stomaching the spoil of his Country, with a just Army opposed himself; and so the business came to open War, Mathias his War in Poland. which determined nevertheless by a private Stratagem in the most covert places and ambushes of that hilly Country, in favour of Mathias, who by his Lieutenants john Scepusius and Paul Kinifi, had also depopulated all the Provinces as far as Cracovia, and brought a miserable desolation thereabouts. By which means the Pole was glad to quit his pretences to Moravia, Silesia, and Lusatia, and to part with his Claim to the Crown of Bohemia. During this Agreement, Solyman the Beglerbeg of Romania with a Hundred thousand Men, having in vain attempted Scodra, came with an Army into Moldavia, whom Stephen the Valiant Vaivod thereof overcame with so great a slaughter, Schodra in vain besieged. that scarce a sign remained of so vast a Multitude. To requite this victory, Mathias besieged Sabarium, whereat happened divers Encounters, the besieged being Potent and Courageous, and the besiegers Resolute and adventurous; He himself for better view, passing in a common habit within the reach of their small shot, in a Boat, accompanied but with one Soldier who was killed with a Bullet; Fortune by a peculiar care of him (as is her constant respect to such persons) preserving him from the danger. In fine, by dissembling to rise from the Siege, Sabarium taken by Mathias. he lulled the Garrison into security and then surprised them; and for the better fortification of the Castle, drew the River Savus round about it; and thereafter supplied with money from the Pope for the better prosecution of the War, laid all waste as far as Synderovia; and in order to an opportune and commodious Siege thereof built three strong Castles, as a bridle to curb and repress their foraging for provisions. He was yet intent of carrying his Successes fnrther, having embarked to that purpose on the Danow (Alibeg with a plundering Party about Temeswar, having been also newly defeated, so that there appeared no rub to his Design) when the arrival of his Queen Beatrice (who by Venice, Dalmatia, and Carniola had been Honourably conveyed to Alba, and there Crowned, and the Marriage Celebrated at Buda in the presence of all the Nobles) foftned and emasculated his Spirit, and corrupted the Soldiery, by idling amidst the vanity and Luxury of the Court, now addicted to sport and pleasure. Nor could the Calamitous Condition of Moldavia (the Noble Vaivod whereof had in vain struggled against the Potent and over-bearing Force of Mahomet, and saw his Country Vassalized to that Cruel Enemy) awaken Mathias out of this sensual stupidity; Mathias war against the Emperor Frederick. the Queen proving as another Capua to Victorious Hannibal, till such time as it was almost too late to resist, being on a sudden attaqued by Frederick the Emperor from the old grudge, although most ungratefully and unhandsomely, and the Event was according. For Mathias rousing himself followed the Enemy into Austria (where the Rascians in his service most cruelly raged) and took in several Towns, and was now before Vienna, when the Emperor (of no Martial disposition) desired an accommodation, which Mathias condescended to, so Austria was again restored to Frederick. In this War the Pope and Venetians withdrew their subsidy from Mathias as engaged against a Christian Prince, whereupon ensued an averseness against that State, whose danger had linked their Concern with his for some space of time before; and by that means they lost Scodra, Croja, and the Promontory of Taenarus to the Turk upon very base Conditions, or very Calamitous Conquest; that of Schodra especially. The Peace was now to be confirmed, which was agreed upon before betwixt Uladislaus and himself; and therefore both Kings appointed an Interview at Olmitz in Moravia, where they appeared with a most Splendid and pompous Train, several Theatres and other august Temporary Edifices being Erected for the Solemnity, where they treated one another most Magnificently, and gave great Largesses to the People: Mathias not willing to be behind hand in State and Grandeur upon such an Illustrious occasion: But whilst he diverted himself here, Solyman the Beglerbeg of Greece being advantaged by a dry Summer, passed his Army over the Fords of the Rivers Savus and Dravus, and coming as far as Castle-Iron, laid waste the whole Country. The news of this made Mathias quit his Courtship, and with all Expedition to follow the Enemy, Solyman the Beglerbeg of Romania defeated by him. who making hast away, he gave order to 16000 of his readiest Troops to pursue him; the which Forces over-took him laden with Thirty thousand Captives, at Verbos in Illyria, and so routed him, that the remains of his flying Army durst not face about to Three hundred Croats, who alone pursued them; by which Victory, Illyria was in a fair way to have been wholly assigned to this Triumph, had not the Emperor by an Inroad towards Raab recalled him; which Injury so incensed Mathias that he presently laid Siege to Mariaburg, and would hardly desist from the Enterprise at the earnest entreaties of the Pope, and Frederick's Ambassadors. Mahomet the Great, having taken Scodra as aforesaid, was now returned to Constantinople, and vexed with the disgrace of Solyman's Defeat, had Commissioned Ali Beg, Isa Beg, and Balam Beg, with Sixty thousand Men for Transylvania, who proceeded with Fire and Sword as far as Alba julia; within five miles whereof Stephen Bathori, the Vayvod of Transylvania, and Paul Kinisi Count of Temeswar, wtth a new levied Army of Hungarians, Null &c. encountered them, and after a long dispute in which the River Marusus was filled with Blood of both parties, Defeats the Turks in Transylvania. by the Valour and encouragement of Kinisi totally overthrew them, Thirty thousand Turks being slain upon the place. The fame of this Achievement made the Pope (Apulia in Italy being sorely infested by the Turks) to entreat Mathias as the only competent Help against those Infidels, to undertake the Defence of those parts, when at the same time he ungratefully intermedled beyond his Authority, in the placing and preferring Bishops in Hungaria; Mathias having substituted john the Cardinal of Arragon to be Archbishop of Strigonium in place of john of Alemannia, his Enemy and Rebel. About this time Died Mahomet, leaving his two Sons Bajazet and Zemes to strive for the Empire; the latter being discomfited in two Battles, wherein he was assisted by the Sultan of Egypt, fled to the Grand Master of the Rhodes who sent him to Rome, where at the instance and great Bribes of Bajazet, he was most unworthily poisoned by Pope Alexander the sixth; Mathias purposing to make good use of this occasion, had solicited Caesar for a Confirmation and security of the late Peace, which being delayed till the opportunity was lost, and the Turks in motion this way, he Invaded Austria and possessed himself of many Towns again (while Bajazet had terribly ruined and wasted Moldavia, His success in Austria. and in requital thereof was Defeated by Lupus (the Noble and valiant Despot of what remained in those parts) in two Battles:) and after a six months regular Siege took in Vienna the Capital City thereof; as john Scepuusis his Lieutenant mastered Neustria and other Fortresses. The five years that Mathias lived afterwards he wholly employed in Reforming the manners of his Subjects, now addicted to Luxury and prone to all other Vices; and in providing for the future Glory and Magnificence of the Succeeding Kings, His Virtues and Commendations. converting his Iron into a Golden Palace; and Designing to Build the City of Buda after the Italian way. He also highly favoured Learned Men, and resolved, upon the settlement of Austria by a lasting Peace, to employ all his power against the Turks; whereto he was encouraged by many Princes, more especially by the Snltan's of Egypt, who had lately Vanquished Ferhates Bassa, the Beglerbeg of Caramania, & afterwards Cheser Beg, and Achmet the Mahumetanized Son of Stephen of Bosnia aforesaid, with such a slaughter that it was credited to have exceeded that of Tamerlane. But while he prepared for those things Death prevented him, by the increasing pains of the Gout. His Death. A person of great Authority with all Princes, and worthy to be extolled for his Military Experience, and his Acts of Peace; and so much the more Famed and desired by Posterity, by how much his Successors were inferior to him in point of Courage and vigilant Prudence. Upon the Death of the King, Corvinus his bastard claims the Crown. Corvinus the Bastard Son of Mathias, having been fed with hopes of his Succession to the Crown, endeavoured to effect it, while 3 great Competitors were transacting their interest with the States of Hungary, viz. Ladislaus King of Bohemia, Albert Prince of Poland, both Brothers and Sons of Cassimir and and Maximilian King of the Romans; but in conclusion Ladislaus carried it by the major voices, and by the instance and interest of Beatrice the Dowager Queen, who had loved him in her Husband's Life time, and hoped now to be Married to him, although she was by the Judgement of God disappointed of her Expectation. Corvinus not brooking this, although he had articled upon the Session of his claim and delivery of the Crown, which he had got into his custody, for an investiture as Lord of Bosnia, Chroatia, and Sclavonia, raised an Army by the help of the Governors of those Provinces, but opposed at Sarviza by Stephen Bathori and Kinisi, Corvinus defeated. commissioned by the States then assembled in great fear at Pesth, he was worsted after a dismal encounter (wherein brother engaged against brother) and fled to Quinque Ecclesiae, where his Soldiers broke open his Treasure and carried it away. By this means the Kingdom was settled in those parts, His submission and agreement. and (Corvinus submitting upon indemnity to his partakers, and the restoring of what had been taken from him) Uladislaus was Crowned at Alba Regalis, but presently engaged in a War against his Competitor and brother Albert, who had seized Cassovia, * Hermanstaet. Cibinium, and other places, and in fine joined battle, wherein by the prowess of Vladislaus and the defection of the Cassovians, he was overcome, and striving to renew the War, was thrice afterwards beaten out of the field. Maximilians Enterprise was more powerful and fortunate, Vienna restored to Maximilian with other places in Austria. auspicated also by the Viennians, who weary of a Foreigners Yoke, admitted his forces into the City, which Scepusius the Governor perceiving, he thought it most advisable to depart secretly out of the Castle: and thereupon the other places of Austria, returned to their former Lord, who proceeded and reduced Vesprinium and Alba Regalis in Hungary, and had finished the conquest but that his Germane not enduring the Climate and other discommodities of the Country, mutined for their pay: in the interim Uladislaus had collected his Army and was upon his march after Maximilian, recovering the Towns he had lost, and being bend upon a further revenge was diverted by a horrid Invasion of the Turks as far as the Territories of Varadin (then in division by civil broils) having endangered Belgrade by mastering two of the Bulwarks. For which reasons Vladislaus was induced to make peace with Maximilian, Uladislaus makes peace with Maximilian. though upon very dishonourable terms, by yielding Austria, Carinthia, Carniola, and Styria, seized and possessed by Mathias, and delivering some Castles of Croatia, and Sclavonia; in lieu whereof Caesar restored him unto places taken this war in Hungary, upon condition of his succession, as was accorded with Mathias. At the diet held thereafter at Buda, the King's marriage with Beatrice was debated, but because of her sterility and in submission to the Pontifical Authority, she was put by, and Ann the Daughter of the Prince of Anjou, preferred to his bed. In the mean while Bajazet made great preparations both by Land and upon the Ister, for an Invasion of Hungary, which caused double Garrisons to be put into the frontier Towns of Severinum, Sabaczia, and jaycia, and an Army of 60 Thousand men under the conduct and supreme command of Kinisius, to be instantly levied; Bajazet came first to Sophia, then to Hadrianople by leisure, but dared not enter Hungary, Bajazet dareth not enter Hungary. whither he dispatched Dandes Bassa to Uscopia, while he diverted to Maxastinum designing upon Albania, and meditating a Truce with Uladislaus, which was accorded to; nevertheless respecting more the utility than the faith of the agreement, he sent away two Bassa's, the one into Valachia, the other to beseige Severinum, the former was vanquished by that Vayvod, and the other▪ by Kinisius, who also horribly slaughtered those ravenous pillaging Bohemians, whom he had appointed for the guard of the Confines against that Enemy. His Bassa's defeated. johannes Corvinus likewise valiantly repulsed the Turk from jaycia, but wearied with the refractory pride of the Frangepanes, and other Noblemen, resigned his Government of Bosnia, Chroatia, and Dalmatia, in whose place Emericus Drencenus was substituted by the King, who repressed the insolence of those Grandees, now seeking for protection from the Turks: which occasion being welcome to jacup Aga, he presently made an Incursion into the limits of Carinthia, and Carniola, and carried away a great prey and spoil by the Confines of Germany, when Drencenus having reconciled Frangepanes, Diencenus defeated by Jacup Aga. with a sufficient Army for number encountered him, but Frangepanes again revolting, the Hungarians were totally routed, and Drencenus himself taken Prisoner. This loss as is usual in such cases, was imputed to the sloth of the King by the Nobles, when their base covetousness was the only cause of it; the King's revenue being hardly able to maintain the expense of his Family as became the Dignity of a King, which poverty proceeded merely from his honesty, and begat such a contempt of his Authority, that he could not make the Palatine desist from the siege of one of Corvinus his Castles, till the noble youth himself revenged the injury, and he was the rather thus slighted because of his ignorance in the Hungarian tongue, answering nothing but * Dobrse the same with the Russes. Well well to what ever story. In the mean while Kinisius repaired this late loss by an expedition with 10000 men into Mysia, where he took two Castles the one of them by the exemplary courage of a Chroat who alone maintained the rampire against the Enemy till his Fellows came to his assistance; as by another Irruption into Servia; Kin●sius successes. having animated the King to a more vigorous prosecution of the War, and brought him upon that account to Petri Varadin; whence Kinisi with 14000 men, wasted and harrassed all the Turks Country as far as the Suburbs of Synderovia, with such a terror that even Constantinople itself trembled for fear of his approach. This noble person survived not long after, being in reference to the present state of affairs another Huniades, His death. dying also like him of a Fever. He so abhominated and resented the Turkish barbabarities that he always retaliated upon them in a severer manner of Torture and punishment. At last the King took courage by the good advice of his friends and Councillors, and by force of Arms reduced and tamed those Seditious Grandees of Chroatia, The King punisheth his seditious Grandees. the chief of whom were Peter Archbishop of Colocza, and Laurence Duke of Syrmia, in whose Country the King's Steward had been killed, this last he dispossessed of all his Castles, and imprisoned at Buda, newly before pardoned at the diet there, by which means all those troubles were composed, and a three years' Truce confirmed by Selimus, who had wrested the Turkish Empire from his father Bajazet, which added something more to the Kingdom's Welfare. About this time died john Corvinus, (his Widow intermarrying with George marquis of Brandenburg) followed by Peter Gereb the Palatine (in whose Place came Emericus Perenyi) and Stephen Vayvod of Moldavia, a person famous next Mathias, for his services against the Turk and Tartars; in whose room succeeded Bogdanus. At Buda a consult was managed by the Faction of Zapolianus or john Scepusius the Vayvod, and the Eloquence of Verbeczius of forbidding the Crown to be ever conferred on Foreigners; as the Siculi rebelled the same time and killed the Collector of their deuce to the King, but the Authors were severely punished by Paulus Tomoraeus. Nor ever were the Hungarians more deceived then in this Truce made with Selimus, relying whereon they became defenceless, for on a sudden all the Country as far as the River Dravus where it joins with the Danow, was laid waist and desolate: To second this Calamity the Countrymen and Boors rebelled against the Nobility, Insurrections and Outrages in Hungary by the Clergy Soldiers. and for the greater enforcement of their designs joined themselves with the Forces raised by Thomas the Archbishop of Strigonium, against Bajazet's Invasion, at the instinct of the Pope, to keep the War out of Italy at the charge of Hungary. There being now upon the Peace again, no use for these religious Soldiers, they began to be burdensome to the Noblesse, and admitted of the Peasants as their Associates: by, and of, these no less than 70000 are reported to have been slain in the space of four months, by which the sanctity of these Crusado men may be guessed at. At last john the Vayvod tamed this wicked Crew by intolerable Famine, and gave them the head of their Captain one George Szekheli (notable formerly for his Valour) for food and victual. Vladislaus to make up a stricter League with the House of Austria, journyed now to Vienna, where he had conference with Sigismond of Poland, and Maximilian, by whom, Marry his Niece by Philip, was betrothed to Lewis, Ladislaus his Son, and Mary his Daughter to Charles or Ferdinand with a Condition of succession in case of no Issue; against this contract and this last clause Perinyi objected and though lame caused himself to be carried through the Streets of Presburg, where he noised his Dissent and refusal, and the Invalidity of the Match, as done without his (principally) and the Nobles Consent; but being won by the grant of the Office of Crown-keeper, just as he should have subscribed the Instrument, he Died. In the interim john the Vayvod elevated by his Success against Szekelehi, besieged Sarno a Garrison of the Turks, but was so cowardly frighted that he fled and forsook his Great Guns, at the news of the approach of Baly Beg, nevertheless by the Valour of Michael Praxius who sustained the Van of the Enemy, The death of King Ladislaus. they were recovered. King Ladislaus lived not long afterwards, fitter indeed for ease and quiet, than the Rule of the stubborn and Eff●ene Hungarians; but whether out of Grief and vexation of mind, or the Common course of Nature, is uncertain. LEWIS his Son succeeded him, Lewis succeeds his Father Ladislaus & is the 29. King. having according to the late Agreement, Married Mary the Sister of Charles the fifth, by their Father Philip the first of Spain. In this Prince all things, as his Birth, Succession, Beard, Wedlock, and Death, were praeproperous and Early. At the same time died Maximilian, to whom, chiefly by the suffrage of Frederick of Saxony, succeeded Charles the fifth, as did Solyman just after the ratification of an eight years' Truce succeed his Father Selimus: Divine Providence so ordering it that those two great Potentates should Govern the World together, and restrain each other by a mutual dread of one another's Power and Virtues. Yet Solyman was so great an esteemer of his own Glory, and so unbounded in his Conceits of it, that he demanded of Lewis the purchase of a Peace with him at a certain Tribute, which being denied, he Invaded Hungary, and wrested Moldaviae, and Valachia from that Dominion, together with the greatest part of Sclavonia. Nothing withstanding his Arms there but jaycia, Defended by the signal Valour of Peter Keglevitius. These victorious proceedings caused Lewis to levy an Army of 60000. Men; Belgrade taken by Solyman. but his Exchequer not being sufficient to bear the Expense, they were as soon dissolved. In the mean while Belgrade (so often maintained against the Turkish power) was now gained by the Fortune of Solyman, and the Treachery of the Governors, who would not admit the succour and Assistance, brought by Andrew Bathori, into the Town. Hence the Conqueror having received a loss from Stephen Bathori the Palatine, who defeated Pyrrhus' Bassa, then wasting Syrmia, and contented with his former Success, The barbarous perfidy of Lewis dispatched a Chiaux with offers of Peace to the King; but his Youthful mind swayed by evil Counsel and corrupted with the luxury of George Marquis of Brandenburg, was debauched into that perfidious baseness, that he Commanded the Envoy to be privily put to Death at Tata, and for the concealment of the murder, his body to be cast into the Fishpond. Solyman was then returned home to the Enterprise of Rhodes, and Lewis his Lieutenant had had some successes against the Turks, especially Christopher Frangepanes not only repulsed them from jaycia, but beat them out of their Trenches and took their Camp; as Tomori defeated Ferhates Begogli, while Severinum was also reduced; but the Dissensions and Divisions that arose in Hungary among the Nobility for the Title of Palatine, between Verbeczius, Zobius, and their Party of the Multitude against Bathori legally so Created; Divisions and Innovations about Religion in Hungary. Besides that, the Reformed Religion now took footing in this Kingdom, although endeavoured by fire to be suppressed, but maintained by Prynius in the County of Bodrogh and by Nadanyi at Chrysus; These concurrent mischiefs I say, brought Solyman back into Hungary, declaring his intention of revenge for the Death of his Messenger, which sudden appearance of his caused much dread and terror, for that no present remedy could be thought on. Notwithstanding Lewis, without any Aid from abroad resolved to encounter him with an Army of twenty four thousand men, Lewis his unadvised rashness. Commanded by the Archbishop of Colocza, and George Zapolianus, although dissuaded by john Scepusius and Frangepanes, who would have had him withdrawn his person at least, which however would save the Kingdom, and to have stayed till he had Collected the whole Force of his Kingdom; but such was his Heat and Temerity, and the like proud humour of the Nobility (though it proved their Common Destruction) the sign often of a great, The fatal Battle of Mohacz: Lewis killed. but now of an unhappy Resolution, that an Engagement ensued at Mohacz, where the Hungarians were vanquished and put to a total rout. The King with his Prelates and Nobles (to whom it was ignominous to fly and to survive their Prince) being killed on the place. At the news of this overthrow Buda was abandoned, the Queen with her best moveables flying to Presburg, whence she retired to Charles the fifth, her Brother; who Deputed her to the Government of the Low Countries, where she presided thirty years, and afterwards weary of the World (like him) betook herself to a Monastery, and was joined with him in Death. Buda taken by Solyman. Solyman entering Buda, abstained from the Usurpation of the Regality, guessing that a Kingdom so slightly gained, might as slightly be lost; but forbore not the plunder of the Country, as much as lies betwixt the Balaton Lake, the Danow, and Tybiscus, being miserably depopulated. As to this Tragedy, and the Death of the King, there were many things that portended it; as that he was Born without any Skin, which was supplied by the Art of the Physicians. Besides a Spectrum appeared before the Gate of the Castle of Buda demanding Conference with the King, which being not much regarded, vanished without any presage. And now when as yet the safety of the Kingdom was not dispaired of, Civil Wars subserved Fate and helped on the general Ruin. Civil Wars ensue this Calamity. The Supreme Power was unsociable, and Interest would not be joined by the presentness of the danger. Armies were presently gathered, and as soon dismissed; Fortune not admitting two to the Supremacy, & while all men stood still at gaze, the Enemy took advantage to disperse them. The Fourth BOOK. While this Battle was fought at Mohacz, john Zapolyai Scepusius the Vayvod of Transylvania, stayed at Szeged, and Cajoling the remains of the Nobility, came to Buda, where he persuaded Perenyi the keeper of the Crown, John named King by a Convention of the Hungaran Nobility at Alba Regalis. to deliver it to him (conferring upon him therefore the Praefecture of Transylvania) and thence sped with them to Alba Regalis. A Convention being here held, Verbeczius opened the present state of Affairs in favour of john, who was by the Assembly accepted and styled King, having passed by Ferdinand; who as well by the favour and good will of many, as by the Marriage of Ann the Sister of Lewis, had a good Claim and Title to the Kingdom; wherefore john was advised to begin the War against him, but he following milder then safer Counsel, and the opinion of Frangepanes, dismissed his Forces, hoping to gain the Kingdom by Largesse and Bounty. At the same, Bathori the Palatine, the perpetual Enemy of john, held a Convention at Presburgh, where he maintained the Title of Ferdinand, by whom Perenyus at the solicitation of Thurzo, and the Confirmation of his former Title was brought over, and the Crown with the other Royal Ensigns conveyed into his hands. Hereupon Ferdinand was Proclaimed and Inaugurated by Paul Vardanus, and Encouragement given by the Hungarians readiness to assist him. By which means john being forced to withdraw, Convocated his faithfullest Friends to Gubaczium; but not judging it safest to rely upon them, fled to Tockay, intending to call the Janissaries to his Aid▪ but while that was in agitation, John beaten and dispossessed by Ferdinand. Caczianerus an● Felsius Discomfited his Captains with a most cruel slaughter near the same Town, as others of his party were the second time vanquishe● at Hernad by the same Hand; where the Camp Royally stored fell into the Victor's hands, so that Tockay, Agria, Hatvanum, and all places as far as Buda acknowledged Ferdinand; which mutation of affairs made john betake himself to the Protection of john Tarnovius the Castellan of Cracovia; John flies for shelter into Poland. at whose entertainment of him, Sigismond of Poland Connived, but by no means would assist him with Men and Money although his Brother in law, as Conscientious of that League which was between Ferdinand and himself. Caczinerus carrying in the mean time all places before him. Nor was Frangepanes, John's firm Friend, much more prosperous in Illyria, although he made potent opposition and bestirred himself vigorously in his Cause, for being shot at the siege of Varasdin, which Paul Caprarius resolutely Defended, he there with grief expired, and left that Province without any further ado, in the Possession of Ferdinand. These lamentable distractions gave occasion to the neighbouring Garrisons of the Turks to Invade the same Region and besiege jaycia, which they reduced with many other places; the Proprietor whereof Carlovitius, the last of the Torquati, dying at Medvevarium greatly enriched the Family of the Noble Serini. john thus turmoiled and stripped of his Kingdom, John complyes with the Turks and joins Interests. by the mediation of Lascus the Palatine of Siradia proffered to join Interest with the Turk, having used also the diligent endeavours of Andrew Griti Son of the Duke of Venice, for the accomplishment of this Design; a person of a narrow Fortune, but vast hopes, who between Flattery and Crafty diligence, had gained favour at the Port. At his instance Solyman (ambitious of Glory) by Conferring a Crown he had won, and obliging such an Interest to his Service, Solyman undertakes his Cause and Quarrel. consented to the assertion of John's Quarrel, rather inclined thereto by the unreasonable peremptorynesse of Hoberdanschus a rash man, Ferdinand's Ambassador, who demanded restitution of all places, even Belgrade itself; to which Solyman answered, that he would reply to this haughty Demand at the Walls of Vienna. john was nevertheless not idle of himself, but having collected an Army, for the furniture of which he pawned his Jewels, appointed Simon Athinensis for his General, to whom adhered many Nobles. These Defeated Liscanus and Revayus, Ferdinand's Captains, while john progressing to Lippa, met the Grand Signior at Mohacz, who proceeded and came to Buda, yielded unto him by the Treachery of the Germans. This City the Turk put into john's possession, who now carried himself openly as King. Vienna besieged Strigonium was next yielded by Varadanus commended to john's Clemency by some friends: And now all Hungary resounded with the noise of these Victories as far as Vienna, 1529. whither Solyman was come and laid Formal siege thereunto; but by the Valour of Philip Count Palatine, and Nicholas Count of Salms, and the Policy of Ibrahim Bassa, who favoured the Christians, and therefore retarded the great Guns, The siege raised. He was forced to rise after a month, with the loss of 80000 men; and thence (having established john the Crown as it was carried up and down from its depository at Visigrade, being taken with Perenyus, who by the Hostage of his Son (Mahumetanized after) was hardly set at liberty: Solyman departed home) when Rogendorf soon besieged K. john and Griti in Buda, but they were at last relieved; Solyman also again returned into Hungary the next year and besieged Guntzium, but prevailed not against the Courage and resolution of the Governor: so that while he was engaged here, Charles' the Emperor, and Ferdinand, with an Army of 130000 men, came to fight him; but he terrified with their approach, by two ways, hasted back again, the same Ibrahim advising it for the destruction of one or both of the parties thus divided; but Charles glad to see him gone made no use of the advantage; Solyman left Casnes with 15000 Horse behind him to plunder the Confines of Germany, but Frederick Count Palatine, General of the Aids of the Empire, met him, and put every man of them to the Sword. After this inglorious Retreat, K. john, whether indeed a Christian, or awed by fear perceiving the Potency of Ferdinand, by Lascus besought his Peace, which was suspended by a present Truce. The Commissioners of the two Kings (to ascertain the Limits of their Dominions) met at Strigonium, which Town was sequestered into the hands of the King of Poland, and Frederick of Saxony. Peace concluded betwixt John & Ferdinand. This good work took its desired effect, while new storms arose in Hungary about establishing a person in the place of the Palatine Banfi newly Deceased, which Dignity under the Title of Governor by the advice of Lascus to K. john, was conferred on Griti, who with great Largesses had screwed himself into the Esteem of the People; but was so hateful to the Nobles, and he Consciously obnoxious to them, that by several Artifices he made the chief of them away. Whereupon he returned to Constantinople in haste, Griti's Designs. upon pretence of making way to a Peace there, where his practices and concealed reserved designs, pieces of which he had brokenly imparted, rendered him suspect to john for his intimacy with the Divan. In the mean while Solyman incited by his Dreams to an Expedition against the Persians, dispatched away a Chiaux with the heads of the Peace, Solyman's terms of Peace. which were, That Clement the Pope should be his Father; Charles and Ferdinand his Brothers; John shall stand to equal Conditions, Corone, Bala, and Badra, taken by the Valour of Andrew Doria, shall be recompensed to Charl●● by other places. But while the Emperor delayed to render those Towns, a most ignominious Discomfiture of the Coronenses by Cayr●dine the Turks Admiral, broke off the frustrated League; and so that agreement which might have been easily purchased, rose to the price of the ruin of Hungary. Griti was come back to Transalpina by Selistria accompanied with 3000. Men, Griti' s End. and every where proclaimed his Title of Governor, vapouring of his Virtues which from a private Person had raised him to a Prince, and that to make Peace betwixt Emperors, could be nothing less than a Divine and immortal action. As he passed the Alps at Corona, he was accosted by Lascus with additional forces out of Podolia, by whose assertion he was every where acknowledged as Governor. Invested with this force & Power he sent for Cibacus, who was one of those Nobles that had disallowed his Title, as vain and injurious while the K. was living; who being betrayed by his Servant (corrupted by one Docius an Instrument of Griti's by a silver Cup, the reward of his Treason, Cibacus murdered by him. who told him there was no danger if he went) npon his arrival the same night, as he was fast asleep in his Tent, had his Head severed from his Body, and carried to Griti to feed and satisfy his most Bloody and scelerate Revenge. But Divine Justice was not far behind, for Stephen Maylat, and other Noblemen, within eight days raising an Army of Sixty thousand Men, pursued Griti, who conscious of his Villainies and his Usurped racked Authority, was upon the first news of their Arming fled to Meggyesium, where by the defection of the Townsmen, the Turks that were with him were all put to the Sword; his Agent Docius Executed by the Axe, and Griti in his intended Escape taken by the Null, and offered by them as a Victim to the Ghost of Cibacus. King john being required by Solyman to Aid Griti, A Rupture between K. John and Ferdinand was nothing troubled when he heard of the news of this his Rival's Death; for Griti's Design and last intendment was his Substitution to the Crown of Hungary. He likewise for better security of the Peace, Imprisoned Lascus, but put in mind of his former good Offices converted his restraint into Banishment. And here followed a Rupture between john and Ferdinand, Leonard Cackei delivering Cassovia in the Upper Hungary which was assigned to Ferdinand, to King john; to requite which loss, the Germane attempted Transylvania; the Szekelii, the relics of the old Huns, and the * Siculi. Szaszii, a Colony of the Saxons, Seated in a Province of that Principality, being prone to Revolt from the Hungarian. But when the Governors Nyari and Bamfi by their plundering of Sacmar, had discovered the Conspiracy, the Design came to nothing and john soon recovered that Town, with the loss o● Gothard Kunus his fast Friend, and a Tame white Hart which (like Sertorius) he had always in his Company; the Death of whom made him so furiously revengeful, that he put all the Prisoners to the Sword: while Felsius, Ferdinand's General, successfully proceeded, and threatened Cassovia; to secure which john dispatched away George Monachus, Peter Perenes, and Francis Debecus, with equal power and Commission, whom Felsius by Delays (which begat a Discord between the Captains as is natural in Competitions) so necessitated, Felsius the Emperor's General's success. that forced to retire, he advantageously set upon them, killing some and driving other some into the River Tybiscus, and together surprised Tokay. That he gained not Cassovia, the Peace struck up at Vaccia was the only hindrance, whereby both Kings were to hold what they then had in possession; the Issue of john to enjoy Transylvania, John and Ferdinand Friends. Opulia, and Ratibor; the League to be Offensive and Defensive, the one's Enemies to be the others, and so contrarily, and to be obliged in the prosecution of one another's Designs; so that the Peace with the Turk was as good as broken, or not at all regarded. Hereupon Ferdinand to repress the incursions of Mahomet Bassa of Belgrade (who had taken Posegum, Boczo, and Beriszlone in Sclavonia, and designing the Siege of Clissia, had erected two Castles at Salonas for obstruction of relief) sent away Peter Crusitius into Dalmatia, and Cackzianerus to Posega. Peter was so fear stricken with Amurath Verbosanus, that many of his men died with mere apprehension of the danger: The lamentable Defeat of Caczianerus and Lodronius nor did Cackzianerus come off much more gloriously, being accompanied with Lodowick Pecri, Lodronius, Albert Sliccus, Lodowick Rhaetus, john Ungnadius, Bakitius, and other Commanders, with 8000 Horse, and 16000 Foot, all which he led to Destruction. He was come as far as Valpone, and had laid Siege to Essecum, not aware that he was included betwixt Posega the Enemy's Garrison, and the Danow, when Mahomet, Amurath, and Cassonus, guessing rightly that they were distressed for Victual, invented a new way of Victory without fight. For when Cackzianerus perceived that neither the Governor of Zagrabia, no● the spoil of Herman Castle could afford a competence of victual, he resolved to retreat to Valpone, in which march the way being before laid, and passes made good against him, he was set upon by the Turks; Bakitius was killed in the straits, others pined with hunger, were wholly consternated. Cackzianerus, Pecri, and Vnguadius, as a most shameful example, first flying away; The noble Valour of Lodronius. Lodronius only stood bravely to it, and fought to the last man; the rest having no Commanders, either confused or penned up in narrow places, were slain or taken Prisoners, the Camp and the King's great Guns falling likewise into the possession of the Enemy. This unhappy Encounter and a designed Revolt thereupon stood Cackzianerus at the price of his Head; for with the same success Mahomet and Amurath, took in Dubicia, jassenocium, and Soboczia, and brought a great dread upon both Kings, besides that Solyman exasperated against Peter the cruel and feral Vaivod of Moldavia, had at the same time by his arms substituted his Brother Stephen in his place, Peter being fled to Csikium in Transylvani●. Hereupon Ferdinand and john joined ●orces, the Germans amounting to 50, and the Hungarians to 30 thousand men; at the news whereof, Solyman by Letters upbraided john with his perfidy, Solyman accuseth J●hn of perfidy & Ingratitude. and Arms taken against him his Father, and so known a Benefactor; that he had aggravated his Defection by a War, and multiplied one wickedness by another; on the other side john partly by words, and partly by gifts, endeavoured to excuse the fact, conscious to himself also of the slaughter of Griti, although not yet charged to him. His Excuse He pretended that he took Arms only to assist him his patron against Peter, who● he had besieged in Csikium, and to make good this particular d●d upon the surrender send him Prisoner, to pacify Solyman, to Constantinople Yet was not Moldavia thus settled, for Stephen being a like Tyrannical was destroyed by a Conspiracy, and one Alexius the Son of Elias, formerly Prince, was inducted in his place, but he out of Fear of the Turks, intending a revolt to Ferdinand, was driven out by Peter, now restored again by Solyman to his former Dignity, who being more sanguinous then before (punishing and torturing his innocent Subjects, preventionally by the direction of this Politic, that no wise Prince afflicts his People because they have, but because they should not offend) His savage Government lasted not long, being succeeded therein by Alexander. About the same time King john married Isabel Daughter of the King of Poland, New Troubles betwixt both Kings. but while he mancipated himself to the pleasures of her bed, Stephen Maylat, and Balassi, Governors of Dacia, quitted their Allegiance, and revolted to Ferdinand, whom notwithstanding, by the sudden assistance of Valentinus Tercock, he so quickly reduced, that they seemed to be engaged in the Plot, and the defeat of it at the same instant. He dispossessed Balassius of several Castles, but at this supplication gave him his Life; for either revenge or oblivion follow punishment, and he that spares and is merciful, shows not only his Clemency, but confirms His Dominion: He besieged also Forgarasse a Castle of Maylats, The Death of John. but being taken with a pain in his head, and gtown frantic therewith, at a Town called Szar Sebessum, he died suddenly, having just before solemnised the Birthday of his only Son john Sigismond. The civil War which had been laid by the intervention of Treaties, now by the death of one of the Treating parties broke out again; Essecius and Verbeczius the Administrators, having recommended their Pupil to the Tuition and Guardianship of Solyman, Solyman invited to be Guardian to his Son. brought forth a Banner, the Staff of Honour, and Scymitar, the Ensigns of his Investiture in the Kingdom, when they were indeed the Badges of Slavery, and so counted and derided by other men. As to Ferdinand, he now thought it seasonable, while yet the Peace was observed, by his Ambassadors and Heralds to try the mind of the Turk and the Queen, willing rather to reduce the Kingdom by fair means, than by bloodshed and War. Ferdinand' s Intrigues. But understanding that Lascus his Orator with Solyman, was by him Imprisoned, and nothing to be effected there, and that the Count of Salms was merely delayed by Isabel the Queen, he proceeded to open Hostility, Leonard Felsius his General reducing Vissegrade, Vaccia, and Pesth; but his attempt upon Buda (the discord arisen between his Germans and Hungarians, and their private Conferences with their Countrymen) unluckily disappointed. More effectual was the Eloquence of Perenyus, who being brought over to Ferdinand's side by Szegessus his Ambassador at the Wedding of King john, where he set forth the Power and Fortune of Charles the Emperor, now carried with him Alba Regalis to the Germane party. Nor was the Turk less active and stirring, Mahomet, Amurath, and Usref, coming in the depth of Winter to the Assistance of George Mona●hus (who from the King's Fire-maker or ●eweller, was advanced to the highest Dignities) and Peter Petrovitius (assigned Guardians by the Testament of john to his Son Sigismond) and presently attaqued Pesth; but by the Valour of Fotiscus▪ and Speciacassius, whose vigorous Salleys the Turkish Camp could not endure, they were repelled with great Loss. This so encouraged Ferdinand that Rogendorf was sent to besiege Buda, Buda besieged by Rogendorf. which Monachus and his adherents had refortified and made good the Walls and Bulwarks with needful reparations, and now Countermined the besiegers, when Thomas Bornemisza the Provost of the Town, and Peter Palcianus proffered to deliver it to Revayus▪ the time and place appointed, none but Hungarians for the better concealing the Design to be engaged in it. All things thus fairly laid, and the General cocksure of the Town, Fortune showed him what presumption and mistrust can do in the juncture of the greatest Military Affairs▪ For he diffident of the Hungarians, and relying upon the constancy of the Germans, a● the hour and place agreed on, clapped them into the City, who being betrayed by their Tongue, were fallen upon by those who would have been their friends in Peace; Defeated there. & so numbers of them slain, and the rest repulsed. Nor did their ill fortune stay here, for Mahomet and Ulumas Bassa of ●osnia, after a Naval Encounter, while he loitered before Buda, landed upon him and overthrew his Army, when Specia●acassius from Pesth fell upon the Victors, and abated the dishonour of the Day by a like slaughter and terror brought upon the Enemy, but yet so that the fame of Solyman arrogated to itself the Victory; for that Rogendorf wounded with a Pole and flying for fear, died with grief and heartless; his Fleet made shift to escape, but his Land Forces were wholly lost. Solyman was now in person again in Hungary, Solyman in person again in Hungary. & as a token of his affection to the young King, presented his Mother with a Babylonish Garment, and Jewels of inestimable value, as he did her Son with Horses richly Trapped, desiring him to be brought into his Camp, which request was observed as a Command: whither being come, Valentinus Tercock one of his prime Councillors, a man of a various and inconstant mind, Caeesses the Q. and her Son. was secured; the Child and the rest of his retinue was returned to his Mother. Verbeczius' Author of this Counsel of Solyman's Protection, survived not long after, but troubled in Conscience with the evil thereof, gave notable proof of his hearty repentance. In conclusion, Solyman by an Instrument conferred Transylvania, Lippa, and Temeswar, to the Queen and his Pupil; when he swore by God, Mahomet, his own Head and Sword, that he would render Buda to the Young Prince; in which City he now placed Solyman Bassa for Governor in his own Right and Title. The Queen guided by the necessity of the Times, Buda put into the Turks possession. or afraid to dispute the business, accepted of the Conditions and quitted Buda, ever since remaining in the Turkish power, as the Metropolis of what they hold in Hungary, where Solyman gave Audience to the Counts of Salms, & Herbensteyn, Ferdinand's Ambassadors, of whom he insolently, demanded, that their Master should presently yield Hungary to him as his Benefactor, Solyman's insolent Demands to Ferd●nand and pay him a Tribute for Austria. It was bootless to make any reply to ●uch a formidable Neighbour, for that the Hungarians being deceived with this ostentation and Show of their King, and by their own means disabled from resistance, were not to be considered or relied upon. The Policy of Solyman being herein agreeable to that of other Potentates; who to dissolve the present State, pretend the Interest of the natural and rightful Princes, not that they should Govern or have any Authority; but themselves having once gained the People by such Arts, make not nice to retain them in subjection by the extremest rigour and Violence, as having a pretended good Right by their former voluntary Compliance and address to their auxiliary Arms. The loss of Buda put all Germany into a Trepidation as apprehending the vicinity of the danger. Aids offered Ferdinand. At Spire and Ratisbone, two Aids were readily decreed; Maurice the young Duke of Saxony, offering his Service with some volunteer Troops at his own Charge and raising: Perenyus had got together Fifteen thousand Hungarians; and Paul the third, sent Three thousand Men under the Command of Medigius afterward Pope Pius the fifth, and Alexander Vitellius. Nor were Ferdinand's Forces of his own levying fewer in number; joachim of Brandenburg being Constituted Generalissimo. This was in the Year of our Lord 1542. 1542. when Solyman by his Generals Ulumas, Amurath and others, timely opposed his Arms. Pesth was the first place of Encounter, which Vitellius, & Sforza Palavicinus having besieged by a Stratagem of a sudden flight thence, the Turks were brought by the ambuscadoes of Perenyus, into an enclosure. Here the Turks desperation showed its victorious Effect, though repressed by Maurice, and the Courage of Count Nicholas Serini's Men▪ Pesth was hereupon reattempted, & upon the point of Surrender when the Germans failed Vitellius; and through the ill Conduct, or faintheartedness of joachim were upon their retreat and departure. Perenyus was at the same time secured in Neustria, as well for his present ambition upon the Crown, as his former designs of revolting to the Enemy. This Enterprise upon Pesth, Solyman vowed to revenge; to gratify which, his Chief Commanders resolutely took in several Towns, Solyman's Su●cesses. and among other Prisoners upon Surrender, at the delivery of Nana, Moreus the great Bandit, who to save his life renounced his Religion. Other places, particularly Valpone, bravely Defended by Michael Archius against his said Generals, he in person reduced, as he did also Quinque Ecclesiae or 5 Kerchen, Socklosiae, and Strigonium; Strigonium taken. although such was the presumptuous Confidence of Lascanus, and Salamanca two Spaniards, the Governors thereof, that they defied the joint Force of both Emperor's Armies, if engaged against the Town; but their brag and vapour was well recompensed by Solyman, who kept his word of quarter for Life, no more than they did their duty and Courage. Alba Regalis yielded to him. Tata was next taken, and Alba Regalis, a very Defensible place, as standing in a Morasse, and sacred for the Sepultures of the Kings of Hungary, which should have spirited the Garrison; but by the Death of Varcocius the Governor and the firing of the Suburbs, which against his advice were left standing to the Enemy's advantage, it came by storm & the pressing of the Turks upon the Christians flying out of the said Suburbs into the City, into his hands: Most of the Soldiers escaped over the Bogs: to the Burghers he showed himself a fair and benign Conqueror:; while Ferdinand was employed among the Marcomanni in raising of new Levies, a too late remedy to the bad estate of his Affairs. And as if this had been the destined period of the Kingdom, Visigrade taken. Mahomet jahiogli the Bassa of Buda, and Ussan of Strigonium, having distressed Visigrade for want of water, took in that town with many other places, which tired out with the Calamity of the War, received the Turkish Yoke, as did several places in Illyria from Ulamas enforced by the same Bassa, and the rather for that Ferdinand had displaced Peter Keglevitius the Governor. In whose room Count Serini was deputed as Bildensteyu for Styria, both of whom at the Plain of Selnicia mee●ing with the Van of the Turks, had terms of a Truce offered them, and agreed; but Ulumas coming in the very Juncture, the Enemy took heart and treacherously Engaged them. Count Serini defeated by Ulumas. Serini fled to Conscha, Bildensteyn in danger of drowning in his flight, was preserved by the Gallantry and Valour of Stephen Balletitius. This Loss was recompensed by the Defeat of the Garrison Forces of Strigonium, under Cufates and Nasuff their Colonels, who having taken Leva (the Castle being yet notably maintained by Melchior Balassi) in the arrogance of their Victory were set upon by Nyari and put to the slaughter, a number of Captives being thereby also redeemed out of their hands. Yet by this never so unequal Balance of affairs, A Peace procured Ferdinand did Ferdinand obtain a Peace of Solyman, being intent upon a more unjust design, biased thereto by the Court of Rome: For he was now Famous for the Smalchaldick war, which he managed with great renown to his Virtues, by which he highly obliged those persons that suffered by the Council of Trent's peremptory Decrees, and had no open or avowed patron, but Maurice the Elector of Saxony. That War ended, Ferdinand held an Assembly of the States at Tyrnaw, memorable for no other thing then the prosecution of two Noble Outlaws, who had licenced to themselves a power and Authority of Mischief by fortifying of Advantageous places; their Names were Mathias Baso, who was taken at Muranum by the Count of Salms (who built the Fortress of Szolnoc) and beheaded, and Balassi his Son in law, who escaped into Transylvania. And thither the next story leads us, George Monachus his designs for George Monachus, the raised Favourite of K. john perceiving how inconsiderable the Queens and her Son's Interest was like to prove in that penned and precarious Principality, had privily ingratiated himself with Ferdinand, renouncing his Master to the Count of Salms, and abjuring the Turk before Andrew Bathori at Opulia, a greater Infidel & more perfidious himself. The Queen and Petrovitius his Colleague were not ignorant of these his practices, but could not remedy them; she therefore designed a Journey into Poland, which George put by; but hasty of his Enterprise, seized the Treasury and plundered it, and forced away the Queen from Cibinium, having Collogued the Siculi and Saxons to be of his party. To the Nobles oposing themselves against this upstart, as a person of a most sordid Extraction, Mahomet Bassa joined his Troops; but he and his Confederates were soon vanquished, and George thereby made Paramount in the Government, when by a temporary Peace he settled all things in Statu quo; but diffiding and conscious of his demerits towards his Pupil Prince, made an Agreement with Ferdinand, who thereby drew a War upon himself, greater than the advantage of his present Acquist. George was hereupon presently assisted by joh. Baptista Castaldus, Isabel the Q. resigns her right and Interest. Famous in the Germane war; Bathori the future Vaivod, Sirotinius, and Nadasdi, and took in Alba, but restored the Q. her Treasure and rich moveables, whom Szasz Sebessius advised to quit the Crown and Transylvania, and to accept of Opulia and an Hundred thousand Guilders in name of a dower; which the Queen not daring to refuse, neither having command of her Person, her mind, or her Kingdom, consented to; and so the Regal Ensigns were by her delivered to Castaldus, while Petrovitius yielded Temeswar, Lippa, and other Towns, to the same prevailing Enemy. Solyman enraged at these proceedings, Solyman's resentment of these proceedings. imprisoned Ferdinand's Ambassador at Constantinople, and sent away an Army under Mahomet, Beglerbeg of Romania, Vlumas, Achomet and Cassonus into Transylvania, with orders to reinstate the Queen and her Son, but under colour of their assistance to reduce the Kingdom and that Province to his own obedience, who without any considerable opposition took in most of the Towns between Temesus and Marusius, while George and Castaldus with other Commanders, kept their posts about Varadin and those parts, although not inferior to the enemy, by which means Lippa through the inconstancy of the Citizens, came into the Turkish possession, Vlumas being placed Governor there: Temeswar was likewise attempted but valiantly defended, for that George besieged Lippa, and St. Demetrius' day was at hand, beyond which usually the Janissaries will not continue in the field. At Lippa a Cardinal's hat procured by Ferdinand was presented to George, The fatal End of George. who by distressing Vlumas for Provision, and repressing his Salleys, had brought him to a Surrender, upon terms of free departure, which Castaldus dissented from, grudging that George should arrogate the supreme Command to himself: Nevertheless Vlumas having had some private conference with George was dismissed with those terms, whom Balassi and Horvar contrary to Articles set upon in his way, but so ineffectually that Vlamas made shift to bring his broken forces to Adrianople to the provocation of Solyman, whom George would by no means have so incensed: and hence Castaldus weary of a competitor took occasion to inject suspicions into the head of Ferdinand, that George held intelligence with the Turk, for which reason it was concluded between them that he should be removed. To effect which, Sforza Palavicinus Andreas Lopez, Marcus Ferrarus, with other Spaniards were appointed, Marcus in the morning twilight, (as George quartered at Alwinez where he was underwriting some Petitions of his Soldiers) rushing into his Chamber, ran him through, when Sforza with ten others seconded that wound, and with the points and edges of their swords made an end of him, George Monachus assassinated. crying upon the name of Christ: a deserved end for the betrayer and deserter of his Prince and Pupil, from whose Father he had received such benefits, although the Assassinates themselves came after to very untimely ends. Pope julius heard this Fact with very great indignation, although palliated with his defection, etc. nor would admit of those excuses, nor be pacified with bribes, made and issued from that estate which George had left, and of which the Assassinates were possessed, The Turk being in a readiness for a War, The attempt of the Hungarians upon Segedine. Michael Tooth imparted a design upon Segedine to Castaldus, who warned all the Governors thereabouts to be assistant to the Enterprise, which succeeded with good effect, the Town being taken, and the Castle standing upon its last defence by the resolution of Hederbeg the Governor, when the Hayducks drunk with the excellent Wines of Syrmia and Baronya with which the Town abounded, were in their drunkenness surprised by notice given to Haly Bassa of Buda, by a Pigeon sent from Heder, and all the Heyducks put to the Sword, the Chief Commanders who did all they could to prevent that excess (among whom was Aldana Governor of Lippa, 1553. and Berezus) hereby escaping, in lieu of whom the Turks light upon another party under Nagy and Ter●ock, ignorant of what had happened, and captivated them all, as they further enlarged this success by the taking of Vesprinium, Vesprinium yielded to the Tu●ks. delivered by Michael Ferreus (the chief Governor Peteone being excluded by him) after a mutiny of the Garrison caused by his covetousness. At the same time Elias (Son of Peter) Vayvod of Moldavia by these Alps, invaded Hungary, and fa●ling into the richest and luxuriant parts of the Country, was packing up a very great spoil, when Banfius and other Noblemen surprised him, and stripped him of his booty. But a greater danger was feared from Achomet, who took Temeswar, Lozoncius after a forward defence, by the discord of the Germans, being forced to yield it upon terms, which in remembrance of that perfidy used towards Vlumas were not at all regarded, Their further successes. and the Garrison put to the Sword. Twenty several other places were either taken or yielded, which had been formerly in their possession, and all the tract of ground between Temesus and Chrysus Niger, reduced to their obedience. Lippa also, although Aldana the Governor had boasted of the strength of the place, and his own resolution, was out of fear fired by himself, for which he had lost his head, but for the intercession of Mary the Empress. Dregelum was also taken, though so nobly defended by Sondius, that they gave his dead body most honourable Sepulchre. Not to mention many other places, among the rest Salgon, by a stratagem of a great Log from the next hill, which the Garrison were made believe for a great Gun, so that it was with the Turks the same thing to come and to Conquer. At length Erasmus Theuffelus and Sforza Pallavicinus newly returned out of Italy with 10000 men, Theuffelus and Pallavicinus defeated. opposed themselves to this Torrent, but by their hastiness and impatience in not staying for the Nobility at Fileek, and all the Elements conspiring their Ruin (their Powder and Ammunition being blown up at Palastus) they were beaten out of their Camp, and both Generals taken prisoners, Theuffelus denying himself was sowed in a sack and drowned afterwards in the Thracian Bosphorus, and Sforza ransomed with 15000. Crowns, the other captives being set at so cheap a rate, that a Germane was sold for a Peck of Barley. Szolnock was next attaqued by Haly and Achomet, and notwithstanding either the promises or Threats of Laurentius Nyari delivered to them by the faint hearted Garrison. Thence the Enemy with a hundred and twenty five Thousand men came before Agria, Agria nobly defended by Dobo and Neskeyus. wherein were Governors Dobo and Neskeyus, who had in vain implored aid and supplies from the Emperor, assisted by some Noblemen and 2000 Soldiers. It was a sharp and daring Siege of both sides, the Defendants in a bravery opening the Bolikian Gate and there after a fierce encounter slaying 3000. Turks, which courage of theirs so disheartened Achomet that having lost 12000. great shot against the Town he broke up from before it, Duke Maurice Ferdinand's General having spent a whole summer in his Station near Raab, without any thing of moment effected against the Enemy. The Messengers of this success at Agria were richly rewarded, and Dobo made Perfect of Transylvania, Nekessius by an untimely and ungrateful accident was killed in a rustic Tumult by an Axe. Ferdinand notwithstanding more afraid of fortune then desirous of Conquest, preferred Peace, 1555. to which purpose he commissioned Antony Veranczius, and Francis Zayus to the Port, by whose means Malvezius the former Ambassador was set at liberty, but he survived it not long, dying in his journey back again thither with a new Commission. In his place Augerius Gislenius Busbequius was substituted, Count Serini his Successes. but nothing more than a truce of six months could be obtained. The War being therefore continued, it was the good fortune as the valour of Count Nicholas Serinus (Zrynyi by the Hungarians) to defeat Vlumas and Amurath of Clissa by Toploczia, who bearing up from this discomfiture plundered and spoiled several Towns at their retreat; while Hameza the Governor of Sezeserinum by a surprise gained Filek. Busbequius was now returned re infecta from Constantinople, without that Ferdinand would relinquish Transylvania; and Alys a Chiaux being sent to Bathori the Vayvod, commanded him to expel the Germans, a new Prince of Hungary to be chosen, or the Queen restored; to which demands Bathori by the connivance of Castaldus answered by the promise of a Tribute in the name of the States, but for their wresting places out of the hands of those that had them in possession it was not in their power. Hereupon Aly Bassa formerly Governor of Buda, but now prime Vizier, besieged Sigeth most nobly even to admiration defended by Stansitius, and preserved by a diversion given the Enemy by the Palatine Nada●di who besieged some Towns of the Enemy which Toygon of Buda had taken from the Heyducks, Enemies to both parties. Aly thus necessitated to rise from Zigeth passed the Rinnia and came to meet Nadasdi, Aly the Bassa of Buda Defeated. but by the valour of Serini and Polbaylerus and the Auxiliary's of Telekessius and Ruberius, and which is the main, the prudence and conduct of the General, he was totally routed: when the Palatine suspecting reinforcement of the Enemy or contenting himself with the rescue of Zigeth, returned to Chorgond, where he joined his forces with young Ferdinand, who had obtained leave of his Father to make Trial of his first Arms in this War. The same hereof bred so great terror among the Turks, 1556. it being also rumoured that the Christians overspread the whole plain, that Aly Bassa was preparing for a flight, having with all earnestness summoned Mahomet the Beglerbeg of Romania to his assistance, but when upon Nadasdi's retreat, it was conceived that he fled, Aly returned to his Siege of Zigeth, but with worse fortune; losing 10 Thousand men in the Trenches, the fruit of his vain contempt of the Christians. His departure young Ferdinand by the advice of Nadasdi suffered without any molestation, employing his Army to the reduction of Corone, and afterwards burnt down Graeco-galla, St. martin's and many other places, in which the avarice of the Germans was so prodigious, that they searched the very entrails of their Enemy's for Gold, which they supposed they might have swallowed. But affairs went not on so prosperously in Transylvania, Dissensions ●n Tran●ylvania between the Governors. by reason of the misunderstanding between Dobo and Kendius the Governors thereof, (for Castaldus either foreseeing the mischief or being called away by Charles the fifth had quitted that Command) Dobo was constant to the King, Kendi inclined to Isabel and out of that respect and fear of the Turks power always impending, with a great party publicly rebelled, and called in the Queen (who pretended to be unsatisfied of her agreement made with Ferdinand) out of Poland, as he did likewise move Solyman for assistance who, commanded Cassonus and the Vayvod of Moldavia to that service; but such was the diligence of Dobo and his Partisans Tahy and Zaberdini that the Confederates were glad to sue for a 15. day's truce at the expiration whereof upon pardon they rendered themselves: but their Inconstancy upon the next advantage, under new pretences engaged them in the same designs; for upon the departure of the Imperial forces, Kendi and Balassi call in the Queen, and now their business was ripe for Execution: for Huztum was at last yielded to Andrew Bathory, as Varadinum at the Command of Ferdinand, being wearied out with these Troubles, with Tockay by the revolt of Francis Nemeth to Isabel, were likewise delivered; And now the rebellion was so far spread, that it was high time for Ferdinand to apply some excellent hand to the Government, but the persons he named to it, proved very insufficient by their personal evils. During this dispute it proved Dobo's hard fortune, when things were past remedy, The Emperor's ●osses in Transylvania. to be seized (at such time as he had news of his brother's captivity by, the Turks, as calamity seldom comes alone) by Perenyi, with whom he had a controversy about the Dignity of the Crown keeper, in which restraint he was hardly used, to a very just but most envious imputation upon the faith of Isabel, who had engaged for his Liberty. These losses were a little alleviated by the good conduct of Emerius Telekessius deputed in the place of Puchamus the former Governor, who reduced many places, and maintained others against Isabel standing near the Tibiscus, but all was to no other effect then by those struggle to strengthen the common Enemy against their Country. For though the Enemy's Effort in this juncture was distant as far as Illyria, yet had it the better and facile execution, and although revenged at last by Erd●edius the Successor of Serini to the Government; yet did it not any what alloy those Feuds at home, whereby Tata was gained by Hameza by stratagem, and Komora, and Austria exposed to their Arms. The Princes of Germany were therefore prayed to assist Ferdinand, who agreed to a double aid, the levying of Forty eight thousand Men, who by the Turks cunning mention of a Peace presently to be concluded, 1560. squandered away a whole Summer's time in their Quarters, at Raab to the great burden of those whom they came to relieve, and did nothing worthy the noise of the very preparation. Transylvania altogether as unhappy, now groaned under the oppression of its own Princess. Bebecus her great Friend and Councillor was now delegated to Solyman at Constantinople, The Queen's administration in Transylvania. by whom he was favourably received, and honoured with the Title of Governor; and the Moldavian, and Valachian Vayvods subjected to him; by which his Power became suspect to the Queen, as upon this account also, for that Petrovitius and others, would have the young Prince conveyed to Varadin an University (Cambray the French Ambassador urging the motion) for that it would be dangerous to breed him to the Distaff, lest Effeminacy and Luxury should corrupt his manners. Hereupon the Queen troubled, consulted with Nisovius a Polonian, to put the Noble men to death, She puts sundry Noblemen of her party to death. which was agreed on: Petrovitius escaped a violent (by hasting to a sudden and natural) end, having named the Queen and her Son, his Heirs. But Bebecus, Francis, and Antonius Kendy, who had stickled so much for her Interest and party, paid for their fondness with the loss of their lives, their Executioners being prepared by Balassius, who for this Service was invested with the Supreme Power of the Army; so sad and Calamitous was the face and State of this Principality. Soon after died Isabel, & joh. Sigism. her Son endeavoured the procuring of a Peace, The Death of Q. Isabel. but his Ambassadors taunting oration, wherein they said that the King of Hungary, meaning john, desired but the Bounds of the River Tibisous, (denoting no more than Transylvania) frustrated that impertinent solicitation; and in the mean while Balassius (who in divers Encounters had received some brushes from Telekessius, and had incurred the hatred of Transylvania) with the money received for the payment of the Army, ran away to Caesar, bringing over with him Sacmar, Rivulinum, and other Towns; with the person and Interests of Nicholas Bathori. john made Complaints of this to the Port, that Peace was pretended while War was prosecuted; but by the Sagacity and diligence of Busbequius his Address and Intrigues was dismissed without remedy. Not to mention the War in Moldavia betwixt jacob Heraclides, Alexander, Visnovecsius, and Thomsa, Competitors for that Vayvodship, wherein both john, and Ferdinand, and Solyman were Concerned, for that it would be too large a Digression. The Affairs of john grew worse and worse, for that Solyman had consented to an Eight years' Truce, after almost as many years' solicitation. Stephen Bathori yet stuck firm to his part, with Francis Nemethi, who now jointly Besieged Hadad, the Town belonging to one Sulyoccus, a Noble man designing the part of Ferdinand; John Sigismond worsted in Transylvania. Zayius and Balassi came to the relief of it, when Bathori advised against any Encounter; but Nemethi disdaining the name of a Coward would needs persuade him; though to the loss of the whole Army, 24 Great Guns, with a Camp excellently stored, and fifty three Ensigns, being taken from the Transylvanians: The subjects whereof awaiting the Event of this Battle took advice of Fortune. The whole Province was now in trepidation, and their security designed in Poland, whither john Sigismond was upon his departure, had not Christopher Bathori comforted him with the hopes of the Turks Assiastnce, by whom he might one day gain Hungary also. Accordingly Ibrahim Bassa of Buda, and Malchoczius of Temeswar, came with Forces and freed Nemethum of the siege, but not from the fire which the South Wind blew cross the water to the other part of the Town. At the same time Zajus having carried away all the spoil and what was worth any thing set fire to Zacmar which nevertheless defended itself against the Turks by the obstinacy of Balassi shut up therein; whose Brother john coming to his relief with a Thousand Men, Hasanes Beg so suddenly routed, as putting his hopes of carrying the Town in this Exploit, that of the one side it would have been judged there were no other than Beasts, as on the other side none but Men. Not to pass by the Insolence of Arslanes Governor of Posega in Illyria for the Turks, Arslanes defeated by Count Serini. who having plundered all about Monozlone, had now pitched his silk and Golden Tents under the soft murmur of the Confluents, & as if the Enemy were to be Vanquished by his pleasures, was now diverting himself in all manner of Luxury, when Serini a●d Tahi fell upon him, and without any difficulty took his Tent furnished rather for Entertainment than Fight, and divided it among their Soldiers. So that this civil Conflagration, and the intermeddling of the Turks, had already ruined the People; in the Fields was vastitude, in the Camp want and penury, The calamitous condition of Transylvania and Hungary. and the minds of men by their habitude to War, brutalized and transformed into Savage Principles. A Peace therefore as the only and last remedy to this perishing State, was procured by Busbequius, at the rate of the yearly Tribute of Thirty thousand pound: while Ferdinand caused his Son Maximilian to be Crowned King of Bohemia, and Elected Emperor, to confirm that Dignity in his Family, as he did of Hungary likewise; the vanity of which Solemnity Ibrahim Solyman's Ambassador beheld and derided, as a Prince Vassalized and engaged to his Master and deprived of so much of his Dominions, 1562. although the Pomp was no way equal to the former Triumphs on that occasion. At this Inaugauration the Hungarians were highly discontented that a Palatine was not first Created according to Custom, a●d that the Germans were not dismissed out of the Kingdom▪ but in vain: as was also the near Conclusion of a Peace by the Embassy of Stephen Bathori from john to Ferdinand, the young man being persuaded by bad Council, The death of Ferdinand. to continue the War in Transylvania, the issue whereof was very unprosperous. And now died Ferdinand of a Consumptive Fever. A Prince of a very singular Modesty, Justice, and tenderness, having rescinded all the Edicts of Charles the fifth, against the Protestants, and decreed to them Liberty of Conscience. His unhappiness in war was rather imputable to the vast Power of his Enemies and the inconstancy of his own Subjects, than his own insufficiencies, the less observable, from the virtues and Imperial Endowments of his Son and Successor Maximilian in his Kingdoms and the Germane Empire, Maximilian succeeds in the Kingdom to his Father Ferdinand which he adorned with his Justice and constant tenor of life as much as any of his Predecessors in that Dignity. Nor was he less studious of the Peace and Tranquillity of his Realms, agreeing to the continuation of it at the instance of Sabanus the Envoy of Solyman intent upon another War; but john disturbed this serenity by his Arms in Transylvania, Stephen Bathori alluring the Zacmarians to his side, while he himself recovered Hadad, Bathor, and St. Martin and forced other places to Condition for a Truce of sixty days, as Zayus and Balassius being too weak to encounter him were mustering at Cassovia, where they had been surprised and Suppressed by john, 1564. but for a storm of rain which hindered any possibility of marching, and sunk his Carriages. Maximilian being informed of his Power, Maximilians Successes in Transylvania. dispatched away Lazrus Suendius and Andrew Bathori to oppose him, Valuing the Reputation of his first Enterprise as of great moment to his future Actions: And at the same time sent Ambassadors with presents to Solyman. Suendius by the advantage of the Ice, 1565. took Toacky surrounded like a Peninsula, by the Confluence of the Tybiscus and Bodrogh; Sacmar submitted itself as Erdoedium yielded; the like did Szerenczium, and Rivulinum to Balassius, for that no relief was to be had from the Turks, Solyman being engaged by Sea at the Siege of Malta, with a Fleet of 205 Sail. In fine by the humble Instances of Bathori Somlianus and Nisovius, Suendius, was entreated to a Peace, but with very hard Conditions. john to content himself with the County of Bihor, and to quit his pretences to the Regal Title, and to yield Munkacksum and Marmorussa. In Sclavonia, A Peace concluded between John and Maximilian. Mustapha the Bassa of Bosnia, having taken Crupa in sight, and to the ignominy of Auspurgerus, who dared not to Encounter him, proceeded and stormed Novia, and was thence prosecuting his Fortune with Fifteen thousand Men, when Petrus Erdaedius but with Fifteen hundred so lustily accosted him, that he put him to the Rout, and slew the Turks like so many sheep. Nor did the Peace in Hungary stand firm and inviolable, for Hidajetes a new Envoy or Chiaux Solyman, had demanded Tockay to be restored to john, by which encouragement Bekessius and George Bebecus (the Son of him that was put to death by Isabel, New troubles in Transylvania by the Turks. who flying to Ferdinand was intercepted by the Turks, and begged of Solyman by john, whom as his Benefactor he was obliged to serve) confer Counsels and contrive a War; so that the Conclusion made between Suendius, Somlianus, and Cracsianerus of Poland (who negotiated the accommodation by his King's order) although ratified, took not its Effect: Somlianus (for his prevarication with john) in that Treaty, being committed to Custody. The War being commenced, the Bassa of Buda, and Hasan Beg of Fueleck, assisted the Transylvanian, who recovered jeneon, Desvium, Vilagosvarum, Pancota, and lastly, after a difficult siege, the strong Town of Zacmar; upon the Surrender whereof, Hasanes enraged for the loss of Curtus his Major slain during the Siege, commanded the Garrison to be put the Sword, after Articles of Life and Liberty. Swendius although equal to the Enemy yet delayed engagement, proffered by Hasanes, knowing a new Treaty was managed at Vienna, which new stated the Agreement, Composed again. viz. john to have all places taken from him restored, and to be honoured with some present from the Emperor. But Caesar forbearing the the restitution of Tockay, and linger in other points to be performed on his part, Soliman's last Expedition into Hungary. Solyman now 80 years old, undertook his last Expedition into Hungary, and when dissuaded thereto by Albert Vicius, and Hoszutothius, Maximilians Ambassadors, 1566. alleging there was no mischief intended by their Master's delay, he answered in a juvenile heat, That the End of his Life was measured out to him, not by his length of Years, but the Extent of Dominion. He was now arrived at Belgrade (where the news of the Defeat of Arslanes and his dislodgement from the Siege of Palotta by Thurn, met him) and there gave reception to john Sigismond, having fetched him from the other side of the Danow in his own Barge, and presented him with a stately Horse, richly set out, on which he was brought through his Guard of janissaries to his own person; His interview with John Sigismond. Sigismond himself had the Honour of his right hand joined with his, the rest of his Train kissed Solyman's knee or the hem of his Vest. After some discourse and thanks rendered for his many Kindnesses, and his Aid and assistance anew implored against the Germans, he drew out a Petitionary paper containing the Oath that Solyman had took concerning the redelivery of Buda, John requests Buda to be delivered to him but in vain. betwixt hope and fear of what would ensue such an Address. But such was the generous freedom and clearness of Solyman's nature, that to rid him of the anxiety he presently Commanded his Vizier Mahomet to conform in all things with the desire and request of his Beneficiary. But Mahomet taxing the Ingratitude of john, upbraiding him with his own tenderness, as having been more a Father to him than Solyman, and taking it in scorn that he should keep equal State with him before Company, so wrought upon Solyman by setting before him how many Musselmens' lives his Quarrel and that Place had cost him; and that it was against the Law of Mahomet to yield it to the Christians; that not only the City was not rendered to him, but he dismissed with a prohibition of any further speech or sight of the Grand Signior. At the same time Portau Bassa took Gyula which Ladislaus Kereczsenius for a while resolutely Defended; but being corrupted by the Enemy against the advice and intimation given him of the necessity of the Turks departure, Gyula betrayed to the Turks by the Governor Kerecsenius. by Stephen Bathori, delivered it upon terms, which the perfidious Enemy observed not, how ever by the favour of the Night, and the Reeds growing thereabouts, some few escaped. He himself, as a just reward for his Treason, was by the Command of the Sultan, rolled down a Hill in a Barrel stuck full with Nails. Whose first attaque was upon the Town of Sigeth, Count Nicholas Serini besieged in Sigeth. wherein was Governor Count Nicholas Serini, with Two thousand five hundred Men; an incompetent number to the Defence of the place, which diverted the storm from Agria (at a Town near to which called Soklos the Bassa of Bosnia had been slain) upon itself. All Military Experiments were practised in this Siege, the continual discharge of the Cannons so rarefying the Air, 1566. that the noise of the Leaguer was heard as far as Canisa. Aly Portau the General of the Ordinance doing the part of a valorous and skilful Commander, as well by diverting the Course of the River, as bringing his Men in person to the breaches. Nor was Serini less active and Courageous filling the Grafts with the slaughtered Carcases of the Enemy; from the shame whereof arose Indignation and resentment of their loss, Solyman in the 47. year of his Reign dieth at Quinque Ecclesiae three days before the surrender of Sigeth. by which both Towns the old and the new were taken and Sacked. Aly Portau surviving not that Effort, committed the prosecution of the Castle to Seysedin Bassa now destitute of provision and wanting men the few Defendants being tired out with constant duty. Three days before the Castle fell into the hands of the Turk died Solyman, labouring with an anxious Expectation of its reduction, and wearied with old Age, made more irksome by a pain in his Leg and accelerated by the Flux. His Death was concealed by the Policy of Mah●met, until Selym his Son should be seated in the Imperial Throne, and several menacing Edicts feignedly given out to make the Turks desperate in the next Assault; when Serini being disabled to hold out longer, opening the Gates and encouraging his Soldiers to die with him (having put on a rich Suit with a Hundred pieces of Gold in his Pocket, the reward of him that should kill him) sallied out with fury upon the Enemy, Zigeth taken. and died nobly revenged in the midst of them, The Death of the Noble Count Serini. having slain during the Siege no less than Twenty some say Thirty thousand men. The Head of this Famous person, was made a public spectacle one whole day; and the next by Mustapha Bassa of Buda sent to the Count of Salms, and interred at Csaktornya, but by the Imperial Army in veneration of his great and admirable Actions solemnly attended to Abdua, and there deposited. The said Army, consisting with the aids of the Empire, of 25 Thousand Horse, and 80 Thousand Foot, paid chiefly with the money of Pope Pius the 5th. lay encamped about Raab (where a sad Fire happened about this time) not offering to stir to the relief of Sigeth, John Sigismond aided with an Army of Tartars. nor to the suppression of john Sigismond who aided with a great body of Tartars (his own Army amounting to 15000 men) had ruined the Territories of Patach Munkacks, and Bereckshez, sparing neither age nor Sex. Tockay was defended against him by the valour of jacob Ranuger, and Mathias Calvasius; the same Tartars continued this their ravage of both sides the Tibiscus to the County of Bodroch and Samosch, intending the like upon mihor, to such a desolation of the Country, Their cruel rapine makes him engage and vanquish them. that john afflicted with the sight of it, when he could neither regain the Captives nor persuade them to desist their cruelty, near to Debreczinum gave them battle, and victoriously freed his people of these Locusts and Destroyer's; as, while Maximilian retired to Vienna having fortified Canisa, and thereafter disbanded his Army, Mahomet took in Babozza, and with the honour of the Campania retired to Belgrade, having met Selimus, in his return, at Valkovar, who followed his Father's Corpse (meanly attended in sign of humane frailty) to Constantinople, where it was interred in a most magnificent Mosque built by himself in his life time. The War in Transylvania was yet maintained betwixt Maximilian and john by their Generals Swendius, and Bebecus, who being inferior in strength to Swendius thought by pretences of his Revolt to the Emperor to gain time, but the sagacity of Swendius disappointed his Plot, several Towns being taken from john by Siege during this Intrigue which we may not here enumerate; john therefore joined his Army with Hasan Bassa of Temeswar, who turned the Scale of fortune and retook as many places, but in the midst of this successful progesse he was violently afflicted with an arthritical distemper, Various success●s in Tran●ylvania. which like a Civil war in his Microcosm imperseded his bent to the prosecution of his Quarrel: nor did Hasan at his departure meet with better luck at his arrival at Dedesla, in the plunder whereof, his powder took fire and blew up 400 Turks into the Air: by this means all parties were willing to a composure, which Caesar (the equalest esteemer of fortune, as preferring the commendation of his humanity, before the pleasure of revenge) had by his Ambassadors Veranczius and Tieffenbach effected at the Port, Selym being intent upon the Conquest of Cyprus. It was now the year 1567. when this outward peace was blemished with a foul and most nefarious design against the life of Max●milian, Sig●smunds soul Practices. with the seizure of Hungary, by Dobo and Balassius (men highly obliged to him, and who had done him also many signal services) at the instigation of john Sigismond but motioned to them by George Boscay. 1567. It was discovered by George Rakoczi, and Ruberus by the divine peculiar protection of Kings: of this Treason they were both by a public Solemn Trial convicted and left to the disposal of Caesar, who (although Bal●ssius broke prison and incited the Turks to new troubles, adding wickedness to wickedness) pardoned them both with admirable clemency. So that neither way of open War, nor close Treachery advantaging john, he ran into an extreme hardly supposable, clapping up an offensive and defensive league against the Turk, and to be managed as Caesar should upon occasion direct, thereby renouncing to the friendship protection and favour he had received all along from the Ottoman Family, 1570. which caused divers discourses and reflections upon him, (but to be a Christian or not a Christian is of no concernment to the Law of Nations) although Maximilian at the same time being urged by the Venetians and the Pope to join with them in their league a while before the battle of Lepanto (when the Turk lost 250 Sail of Ships and Galleys, and 25000 men, Vluzales dexterously escaping with 30, and afterwards by his Fabian delays, restored their naval power) most religiously refused. By this Peace it was concluded that john should enjoy with the Title of most Serene Prince of Transylvania, The Peace betwixt Maximilian and Sigismond. the Provinces of Bihor, Carasna, Marmarosse, and the exterior Szolnoc, to have the same friends and enemies with Caesar, Selimus to be held in amity, and this Treaty to be concealed; but if it should happen that john should be expelled by the Turks out of Transylvania, he should then be invested in Opulia; all former differences to be put in Oblivion and himself to be under the Clientele of Maximilian. With the confirmation hereof Bekessius was sent to the Emperor, where understanding by Blaudrata that john could not live long, he designed the Government to himself, delaying the ratification by pretences of his indisposition and grief (and thereby his incapacity) for the languishing condition of his Prince; who being a Bachelor, and disappointed of the marriage of joan Daughter of Albert of Bavaria, added that grief to his other distempers; which having horribly tortured him 54 days together brought him to his death at Georgyen, The death of Sigismond. and was the last accumulation of the ruins of this Family. A man of a sharp and quick spirit, but infected with the Company of sordid and base people of both Sexes, 1571. and thereby prone to all vices, but of all those his contempt of Religion, was the greatest and most notorious. By his death Bekessius took courage to pursue his ambitious designs, Bekessius his ambitious designs upon the succession, but conferred on Stephen Bathori. relying on the Turk, and his interest in the Soldiery, but Selimus with the good liking of Caesar also, having preferred Stephen Bathori, a man famous both for war and peace to that Principality; Bekessius mad with rage and shame, that he should be deceived in the opinion he cherished of the Soldiery (which he had boasted abroad) who concurred with Fortune against him, posted to Fogarasse and there laid up and secured John's Treasure, endeavouring all ways and means to raise Enemies against Stephen; but the troubles of Mollavia by another change of their Vayvods deferred the public eruption of the intended hostility in which interval happened this Fanatic Story. One Gregory Carachondius of Rivulinum, 1572. Surnamed Black from the event of his exploit, under the specious vail of sanctity and pretence of revelations had inveigled the vulgar in the head that God would by him expel the Turk out of Hungary, A Fanatic story in Hungary. hereupon having collected a rabble of 5000 men, (who admired him not only for his spirit of Prophecy, but his strength of Arm, by which he would straighten a Horse-shoe) he marched to the Siege of Miklosum, where he said it was revealed him that either the Walls would fall down of themselves, or the Turks be b●rnt by Fire from heaven, which the Turks counterfeiting by setting Fire to bundles of straw and reeds about the Castle, these mad Fellows took it for fulfilling of his predication, but when they perceived near at hand, that the Walls and Castle stood, they drew off very melancholy, and were in that mood set upon by Sazvares Governor of Szolnoc and miserably slaughtered: notwithstanding their Captain would not desist, but pretending this loss to have happened for their sins, he laid Siege to Zolnoc, where he was disappointed in the same manner; from thence to Debreczinum where for contempt of his authority, he commanded the Mayor to be hanged, but a Tumult preventing the Execution, he was taken by the multitude and his Head chopped off, and showed for a spectacle of whimsical ambition. Yet was even this wild fellow's death (such the madness of the infected herd) endeavoured to be revenged though after a short politic connivance suppressed by Nicholas Bathori. The like Scene almost was acted in Illyria by the Boors there, 1574. who rebelled against the Nobility and Gentry, The same acted in Illyria. who had held them indeed in very hard servitude; their number was Ten Thousand, who proclaimed one Matthew Geubecz for the King, and unmercifully handled their former Masters, tearing like Dogs those that resisted them. But 800 men easily routed them. And their K. being taken, had his flesh pulled off with burning Pincers, and a red hot Iron Crown put upon his head, expiating by that regal emblem his affront to the Regal Dignity. Maximilian was now intent upon gaining the good will and favour of the Estates towards the settling his Family in the Supreme Power, The seeds of new troubles in Hungary. having in his own sight caused his Son Rudolph to be crowned King at Presburgh, notwithstanding that the Burghers generally grudged that the Germans were not removed out of the Kingdom, nor a Palatine created according to custom, besides that their liberties were infringed, etc. which inflamed at last into Tumults and uproars. Nor was Stephen Bathori's Government quiet or composed, As also in Transylvania. for Bekessius neither reducible by his menacing edicts, nor the entreaties and persuasions of the Nobility, was now besieged in Fogarasse, which being ill manned, he privately upon a swift Asian horse escaped to Caesar, the Castle was after delivered by Paul Giula afterwards Secretary to Stephen, and with it all the Treasure Bekessius had hoarded, Bekessius ruined. Fortune and Prudence deserting him together, for while he coveted Titles beyond his reach, he lost an ample estate, in his power to have preserved it. Amurath the 3d. Succeeded Selimus in the Ottoman Throne, having seen five of his Brothers strangled in his presence, but more humanely inclined to a Peace with Christendom, as being by Dream admonished to a War against the Heretic Persians. This Tranquillity stirs in Poland succeeded; for Charles the ninth of France, dying, his Brother Henry newly made King of Poland, Affairs of Poland relating to Hungary. withdrew suddenly thence, and left the Poles in an Interregnum and vacancy, as after they decreed at Warsaw, but could not agree about the Successor. The Competitors were Caesar, john of Sweden, and Ivan Vasilowich Duke of Moscow, for as yet Stephen Bathori minded not the matter, thinking it above his reach; but Samuel Sborovius then in Exile in Transylvania, for the slaughter of Vapovius Castellan of Primislaw, having every where proclaimed the worth of the person, drew Peter Sborovius then Palatine of Cracovia, to his opinion; Stephen by their Counsel therefore put in his Name and stood for the Election, by an unusual felicity being in a short time a Baron, Prince, and King. Nor was he unworthy of his Advancement. To detain him in Transylvania, Caesar Commissioned Bekessius to attempt it, who came with such sudden secrecy as far as Radnot, that Bathori knew not of an Enemy, although in the middle of his Principality, and had been easily Conquered if Bekessius had not lost by delays what he had gained by his good speed; for while he argued with Bathori about Articles of a new Agreement, the form where of Bathori, Bathor●'s Successes. thus surprised, desired to be mended and mitigated only, he called in Mahomet the Governor of Lippa with his Forces to his Assistance, with which Courageously he Vanquished Bekessius. The Hungarian Prisoners he released freely, but his Transylvanian Rebels were thralled to the Turks. 1575. Such the Calamity of Victory, even when it favours good men, whose natural Clemency it perverts by its Revenge. Bathori departing for Poland, quitted Transylvania to his Brother Christopher, Elected K. of Poland His Generosity to Bekessius. having Married near this time with Anne the Daughter of Sigismond Augustus his late Predecessor in that Kingdom, whither Bekessius (fled from his Discomfiture to Scepusium) with an admired Confidence soon after followed, and in a prostrate manner addressed himself to the King, whose Generosity not only forgave him, the most implacable of all his Enemies, but preferred him to the Command of the Hungarian Forces then serving him against the Dantzickers quarrelling for their Privileges, and the Muscovites, against both whom he was very successful, driving the last of the two out of Livonia. In the mean time a Quarrel and rupture happened betwixt the Turks and the Emperor about certain Prisoners taken by a Stratagem of Balassi, in revenge whereof, Aly Beg of Alba, A new Rupture with the Turks. seized several Towns belonging to Balassi; and though Istuanfi the Emperor's Agent would have persuaded the Bassa of Buda that the League was still in force and those particular actions not to be construed as a breach thereof, yet the Turks prone to a new War, Invaded Illyria and brought a great Calamity upon it, Defeating Auspergerus the emperor's General with all his Army near Radonia, and after took in and burnt Businium Czasium, Suacicium, and Szrinyum, as he had before seized Topusca, Bonitium, and all the places between the Rivers of Colapis, Dobra, and Meresnicia. This Year 1576. Died Maximilian the Emperor, The Death of Maximilian. worthily renowned to Posterity for his Moderation and Justice, to whose Supreme Greatness, nothing was wanting but Fortune. Although he was very constant to the Religion of his Ancestors, yet was he not therefore severe to the Protestants, as requiring Piety only: That Speech of his to the Bishop of Olomucza leing very memorable, That Christian Religion teacheth rather to suffer killing, than to kill; and that it is a grievous Impiety to lord it over men's Consciences, which is the same insolence as to Invade Heaven. RUDOLPHUS the second of that Name Emperor, Rudolphus the second succeeds his Father Maximilian. Succeeded his Father to a troublesome and more unquiet Government; for the Turks playing fast and loose with the late Treaty of Peace, had made an Irruption into Sclavonia, and taken Gonsdansc in Sclavonia, and spoilt their silver Mines, and had opened a way for their Excursions into Carniola. To stop which danger lest his patience might embolden the Enemy, Rudolphus dispatched away his Uncle Charles to that Government (as he did delegate his Brother Ernestus to the Care of Hungary) while he intended some respite from business in Bohemia. 1579. This Viceroyship the Hungarians highly stomached, requiring their Election of a Palatine, and their Laws, and inveighing against the intrusion of this new Example. Charles being arrived in Illyria, quietly reduced all the places taken three years before by Ferhates of Bosnia, and founded Carolostad in memory of his Victories; the like Success had Battyani against Aly Beg of Sygeth, who designing to disturb his Fortifications at Barcai in the very nick of the Achievement of his Design, was by the Policy of Battyani encouraging his flying Soldiers with the shout of The Enemy runs, wrested out of a complete Triumph and made a Sacrifice to the Vindictive Sword. The same Event attended Scanderbag the Son of the Famous Ulumas Governor of Posega, by whose overthrow Illyria was reduced in a manner to Rudolphus. And as if Fate had treasured up her wrath against the Turk for this time, Sasvares the Sanjack of Szolnoc, thinking to have trapped Colonitz and Bathori, was caught himself; for having surrounded the Christians and oppressed them with Multitudes, even to desperation of any escape, just as they were yielding to the Sword of the Enemy, came in to their rescue Rajbicius sent from Andrew Barbelius the Governor of Agria, who flanking the Turks with his Musqueteers hemmed in Three hundred of them and slew them, The Turks vanquished and took Prisoners Four hundred more, with thirteen Ensigns; which indignity Sasvares proudly resenting as Dishonourable for a Musselman to be beaten by a Christian, revengefully burnt and leveled several Towns, 1583. and with a full prey was returning home when Serinus and Raibicius gave him the second Course of the same Entertainment, He himself stripped of his Vainglorious humour disguised in a Horse-rubbers habit hardly escaping to Tybiscus. The news of this overthrow was soon carried to Constantinople, whereat Sinan Bassa the Prime Vizier, was transported into a most violent rage, increased by another defeat given to Ferhates Bassa of Bosnia, who with Nine thousand Men Invading Carniola, had been pitifully overthrown by the Count of Thurn & Erdoedius falling on his Rear, and with the loss of Four men, 1584. killing Four thousand: But these objections at the Port (as being done by way of Reprisal and Defence, the Tucks being taken out of their bounds w●th Christian Booty) Paulus Eyzingarus and Henry Lichtensteyn the Emperor's Ambassadors so solved and satisfied, that Amurath declared that they suffered in their own wrong, nor would he support them therein, to the disturbance of the Peace. Soon after died Christopher Bathori Prince of Transylvania, who had enjoyed his Government the quiettest of all his Predecessors, leaving his young Son Sigismond to his Brother Stephen, who committed him to the Tuition of three Noblemen, but they rivalling the power thereof to the detriment of the public good, the Governance of the Prince was conferred upon john Geczi the Provost of Varadin, 1585. a person eminent for his wisdom and integrity of life: at which time an Epidemical Disease raged gradually through all the Parts of Europe, and in the month of September infested Germany and Hungary, Prodigies in Hungary. it was called the Morbus Vervecinus, for that like sheep, the diseased were seized with a Cold and a Cough, there were also several Earthquakes at Presburgh, Vienna, and Zagrabia. At Bihigium in Chroatia in the middle of the night, a multitude of Ducks and Geese fought in the air, 1586. and next morning some Thousands of them were found slain with mutual wounds upon the grounds, affording plenty of good cheer to the Inhabitants. These portents signified the frequency of military actions; Hasan Governor of Sigeth depopulated all that hitherto untouched plat of Territory, Frequent Military actions in Hungary. lying between the river Mura and Dravus, and through the easy pursuit of Count Serinus escaped with a great Booty over the Arrhabon to his Garrison. Palfi requited this by counter-designing against Isaac of Alba, whom missing in the dark, by day break he found and put to the rout. Nadasdi, Speciacassus, Hussarus, and others took Coppanum from the Turks, and puffed up with the fortune of the achievement would needs beseige Bnda, driving the cattle away from about the Town, but Ferhates now Bassa of Buda, so repaid their arrogance, that with the Loss of 22 Ensigns, they fled for their lives. But a greater war impended out of Poland, 1586. Stephen Bathori being deceased, Affairs in Poland. Decemb. 2. Anno Regni 10. equally lamented by the Poles and Transylvanians; for the Sborovian Faction, whom Stephen for their Crimes had depressed, (although his Raiser's) had deprived john Samoiscius (who had married Grisel the Kinswoman of Stephen) of his Chancellorship in that Kingdom. At the next diet there appeared these Competitors, Piestas, one of the Nobles, Theodor Duke of Musco, Maximilian the Brother of Caesar, Sigismond Son of john the third King of Sweden, and the son of the Tartar Cham, who pretended his power and sufficiency of Defending Poland, his frugality and Continence; as to Religion, their Pope should be his Pope, their Luther his Luther. In fine, Sigismond by the endeavour and Interest of Samoyscius carried it from them all, the Sborovians labouring for Maximilian, the Lithuanians contrarily proposing the decision might be by Lot; but the Sborovians would by no means consent to it. In the mean while Zamoyschus aided by john Geczi out of Transylvania took Cracovia and therein the Regalia; Maximilian, Rudolph's Brother taken prisoner and civilly treated by Samoyscius the Chancellor of Poland. and lighting upon Maximilian at Clepardia, with the slaughter of a Thousand, and three hundred prisoners, made him run to Bicini, where being in vain persuaded to a safer refuge he was besieged and taken and Custoded in Rodlone; his Brother a most unactive Prince regarding neither his Honour nor the danger. The Pope was therefore entreated to take the Cause into his hands by his Nuncio Aldobrandinus afterwards Clement the eighth, who so managed the business, that Maximilian for his Liberty with the further ransom of forty thousand Dollars, quitted his pretences to that Crown, to which by the vanity of Sborovius and Stanislans, he had been a year so fond wedded. To return to Sazvares the busy Governor of Zigeth, 1587. now upon another Excursion between the River's Mur and Cernicia, where he ravaged with such insolence, that his Officers suspecting his Interception by some Ambush or Engagement, advised him to some private way of retreat, which he resecting and vapouring that he would Face Serini before his Garrison of Canysa, was encompassed at Paulinum by the conjoined Forces of Nadasdi Trautmansdorff, Battyani, and Serini, and there with the slaughter of Two thousand, and as many Prisoners put to flight, he himself difficulty escaping, and respiting a Death by the honour of the Sword to a glass of Poison, S●svares defeated, poisons himself. which to prevent Strangling at Constantinople, he took in his way thither, as he was Commanded by the Grand Signior. The same Fate besel Ferhates Bassa of Buda, who having raised the Contribution of the County to excessive rates, thereby to satisfy his Rapine, and over and above to bribe out his oppression, which the poor Peasants were unable to pay, was in his forcible levying of it (though accompanied with Twelve thousand men) totally routed by Two thousand five hundred Hungarians, under the Command of Sigismond Racockzi, Stephen Homonai and other, Fe●hates Bassa Defeated by Racockzi. between Hernad and Barsonyos, Two thousand killed and Four hundred taken, with the loss of Six hundred. This Defeat cost Ferhates his Life, the just price of his too eager Covetousness, as the Victory ascribed to the Hungarians was particularly referred to those Liberties and Privileges they lately enjoyed by the Concession of Rudolph at a late diet sometime before held in Presburgh. But these were but pastime velitations and praeludia to the open War which ensued, ●or Sinan & Osman Bassa having after many ill successes and losses especially in the late fight at Masul in Persia, 1590. Concluded a Peace with Mahomet Hodaband the King thereof, sought to piece up in the West what was diminished from their Empire in the East, by transferring the War into Europe, on which Sinan was so resolutely bend, that to remove all opposition, he caused the Mufti zealously inclined against the Persian, to be poisoned ata Banquet; and Hasanes of Bosnia was ordered to seek an occasion of the Rupture, which he expiated with his own life. Military Actions in Illyria by the rupture begun by Bassa Hasanes. The Dance was begun by him in Illyria, where between Czisium and Ivanicia, he committed terrible spoil, and took-several Towns; but upon his retreat to Gradisca, Labohatius, and Michael Szekely, set upon a Regiment newly passed the River Colapis, and cut it off in the view of Hasanes, who durst not make to their relief. In the same havocking manner, Hasanes surnamed the Little, the Governor of Sigeth, took Kiskamaromum by a sudden scalado, while the Other mad with Revenge, and assisted by Rustan and Erdeogli, encamping near Colapis, took Ranovicia and Gara, and founded Petrinia by a River of that name, which he afterwards finished. He stormed Siscia, but was beaten off by the Valour of N●cholas Micacius, who incensed him yet further by a Stratagem, for pretending a rendition of the Town, he received by Articles Five hundred Turks who were to take possession, all of whom he put to the Sword. All these outrages did Erdoedius the Emperor's Governor, bear with till now, when taking Arms he reduced Monozlone, and hence occasion was taken by the Turks to declare a War. For Amurath being of himself sufficiently exasperated, was more inflamed by Sinan, and therefore Commands were sent away to Hasanes to provide that the Grand Seigniours Provinces received no damage, and if any were offered, to revenge it; hereupon he besieged and took * The place where the Prodigy of the Ducks and Geese lately happened. Bihigi●m, and by private ways making towards Erdoedius, surprised him, in his expectation of supply and assistance, with his Camp and Great Guns. This loss Charles the Uncle of Rudolph, the next Governor no way remedied, things growing worse and worse every day in that Province, no less than Five thousand Christians being trodden down & surcharged by numbers near Petrinia; Sciscia was the second and third time attempted by Hasanes, such his thirst of Revenge and the arrogance of his mind, with a battery of 24 Great Guns. When Fortune changed her Countenance, The Exploits of Hasanes for although the abundance of Rain that fell of a sudden saved him the first of these times from an Engagement by Palfi and Nadasdi, 1592. which was attributed to his Conduct, yet the next bout he escaped not so, for having newly passed Colapis and arrived at Selinum, Erdoedius with other of the Nobility, and 8000 Men, fell Courageously on him and shamefully Vanquished him, 12000 Turks being slain (so that Ordera and Colapis were discoloured with Blood) among whom was Mahomet the ●on of a Sister of Amurath's (whose Death at her solicitation did not a little put forward the intended Expedition) many Spahi, Hasanes rowed and drowned, 12000 Tur●s slain Officers, and men of Note. Hasan himself thinking to have escaped over the Bridge, already thronged with the flying remains, was with some of his valientest Soldiers forced off the Bridge into the River and there drowned. The Camp and rich Tents with all the Great Guns, Bag and Baggage came entirely into the Conquerors hands. So God arose in the Revenge of this perfidiousness, being most wise to know, most equal to discern, and most just to punish. Petrinia had been at the same time demolished by Erdoedius, but that his Colleague having a longing eye upon a Peace, dissuaded him. Amurath the more incensed by Sinan and his Sister, swore by God and Mahomet, he would be revenged, and thereupon denounced War against the Emperor, who first deprecated the same by his Orator Poppelius whom with Presents he dispatched to the Port, alleging that Invaders are justly punishable; but he perceiving the Turks bend, openly declared, that if the War were brought upon his Master, the Perpetual Law of Nature had directed and principled Men to resist and repel Force and injury by any manner of Defence. To which the matter being left, the money designed for the Tribute was stayed at Vienna for better uses, as on the other side the Ambassador was confined to a private house. The War thus opened; Hasan now Beglerbeg of Gree●e, dislodged Serini and Ekenperg obstinately bend upon the reduction of Petrinia, and by his peculiar fortune took the often mentioned Siscia, the besieged being in no hope of relief. Sinan being arrived in person, took Vesprinium yielded by Speciacassius for want of water, amidst so many Springs, but possessed by the Enemy: as Palotta by the fear of Ornandius was rendered to him likewise. To obviate his further progress Count Palfi, Serini, and Count Hardeck with 10000 Foot and 1000 Horse of Veterane Soldiers made up instantly to 40000. by the Confluence of Volunteers from all the Towns hastened to engage him, Sinan Bassa arrives in Hungary. but he retreating before them, and having stored his Garrisons, they set down before Alba Regalis, the outward Town whereof was taken from Isaac the Governor, by the valour of Peter Hussar, but while for want of great Guns the Siege was protracted, Mehemet and Hasanes with 20000. select men came before the Town unexpectedly, and there made a stand: Mohemet in contempt of the Enemy, as of an undisciplined and rude multitude, declaring, that they should have fair play for they Lives; but when both Armies came to be ranged in Battalia, they were so afraid of each others Aspect and Order, that they stood two hours gazing upon one another, without advancing a foot forward. At last Palfi vigorously began upon the Janissaries (to whose valour encouragement is given, Has●nes & Mehemet Bassa defeated at Alba Regalis. both by Provision in their youth, and happiness hereafter if slain in Battle the only incentive to great actions, as rewards and pensions are allowed to prolific parents according to the number of their Sons, who succeed likewise to their pay and stipend when deceased, by which means there ariseth a Love of generation, and a vehement desire of dying) who so stiffly maintained their Ground, that they covered it with their dead bodies rather than to flinch from it living Serinus and Hardeck did likewise so press upon their Horse, that in fine, 4000 of them, with 6000. of their foot were slain upon the place. The news hereof being brought to Sinan he hasted away back to Constantinople, but the reason of his sudden Departure was not to be guessed at. Nor did Christopher Teiffenbach, Bathori, and Homonnai less bestir themselves, prompted thereunto by Palfi, first reducing Sabaton by Rinia, then besieging Filek the Garrison whereof troubled with a new disease of the Vertigo, at Palsi's approach yielded themselves, as did ten strong places more, the last of which was Palanka: all of them with Ca●sar's fortune, he came, see, and overcame. Mathias being made Governor of Hungary, 1594. at which time also to the Duke of Parma succeeded Ernestus in the Government of the Low Countries; Palfi and Hardeck to hold fortune by the Forehead, resolutely and secretly attempted Novigrad, Novigrad and other places reduced by the Hungarians & the Turks defeated. the Governor Meheneth seeing as soon as hearing of them, who notwithstanding manfully defended the place, till Mathias came into the Camp, to whom it was honourably rendered the 42. year after its revulsion from the Hungarian Crown. With the same Current of success Serini recovered Bersencia, Segusdium in Illyria; and Tieffenbach forced jasbrynium, and besieged Hatvan, which Hasan of Buda attempting to relieve with ten thousand men, was there vanquished, and 25 Ensigns, with 17. great Guns left to the Victor. But so sped not Mathias, who with an Army of 50. thousand men besieged Strigonium, Strigonium in vain besieged by Mathias. for although he had intercepted their relief by the Danow, by the valour of Francis Balassius, and was by the Treason of the Thracian Soldiers, possessed of the old Town, as of the Mount of St. Thomas, by the fall of Caralibeg, and Isaac the Governors yet by a supply of 500 Janissaries, who by negligence of the guards slipped into the Town, and the news of the approach of Sinan the Vizier from Constantinople, he broke up his Siege; although Maximilian in Trial of his better fortune against the Turkish power in Illyria, had razed Petrinia, and had recovered Rastowitz, Gora, and Siscia. Sinan followed with a 100 thousand Turks, Raab besieged and taken by Sinan Bassa. and 60 thousand Tartars, having reduced Tata and St. Martin, came and beleaguered Raab, by the ancienter name called jaurinum, governed by Count Hardeck, who gloried that such a singular opportunity was afforded him, wherein he might give proof of his Virtue: but these proved but magnificent words: for Perliny's Mounts being taken by the resolute Courage of the Enemy, wherein (for that Perlini was famous for fortification) the Garrison mainly confided, and Valentinus Torus his Bulwark subverted by mine; the Defendants who had no reliance now but upon Mathias, attending the Enemy near at hand, The boldness and Courage of the Tartars grew faint-hearted. In the interim Cazy General of the Tartars, swimming the river over against St. Vitus, was bravely received by Palfius on the other shore, supplied with fresh men by Mathias, who at the same instant gave notice to Hardeck to make a brisk Salley; He himself making so vigorous an impression upon Sinan's Camp, reduced now to the number of 60 thousand, that without doubt had not Palfi received a dangerous wound, and could have been assisted with some naval power, the Turks had been overthrown; but being thus disappointed, he drew off in some disorder to Ovarum, which Sinan made advantage of, and slew a number of his men in his passing his bridge laid over the Danow. Hereupon Hardeck and Perlinius not willing to wait two days longer for relief from Mathias, Co●nt Hardeck the Governor & Perlini beheaded at Vienna. delivered Raab, for which being seized, they were both condemned and beheaded at Vienna. There were found in this well stored City 150 Guns; of the Garrison 6000 were slain, and 3000 dismissed. Thereafter Sinan forced Papa, but from Commorra he was repulsed with a vast slaughter of his men, 1595. in the opposite Isle of Czallok●es by the valour of Praunius and Starcitius, and obliged to rise thence by the fear of the approach of Mathias; notwithstanding at his return to Constantinople he boasted that he had reduced Caesar to the necessity of entreating a Peace. Indeed the Emperor sent Stanislaus Paulovius, and Wenceslaus Berca his Ambassadors to the King of Poland, requesting him to take Arms with him against the Enemy of the name of Christ; but Samoiscius the great Chancellor, and only Minister of State, put them off contemptuously, telling them that his King was in League with the Turks, and that Christ required he should observe it: nor could they be ignorant what punishment both Divine and Humane attended the breach of the Law of Nations. 1594. Novemb. Sigismond Bathori was more pliable. Geczi his Tutor was newly dead, leaving him at the age of 17. years under the protection of the Turks, (by which his Provinces had flourished in all Prosperity) and a full Exchequer, but his youthful mind transporting him to the desire of Martial Employment, restrained only by his Faith given to Infidels, His Confessors persuaded him to send to Rome to Pope Vrban the Seventh for Satisfaction of his Conscience, Young Sigismond the Prince of Transylvania headily engages against the Turks. whether he were bound to pay them Tribute or no? when by the Jesuits Oracle, who are never without a new device to perplex and interrupt the general Commerce of the World, he was easily solved and freed from all manner of Obligation. After this discharge or dispensation, to colour his taking up Arms, he objects against Sinan Bassa, his Pride, Arrogance, and several injuries sustained from him by his people, and therewith summons a Diet or Assembly at Sebessum, where he opened his purpose, but the Estates generally dissenting, and objecting the just defeat of Vladislaus at Varna, though absolved by Pope Eugenius, and that if Glory were the incentive to the War, he should remove all impiety with which Glory could not consist: but if wealth was aimed at the Enemy was more potent, nor could it advantage any man when gained by infamy; He dissolved this Convention, His Declaration thereof to the estates; & their disallowance. and called another at Thorda, where he declared that he believed in the Roman Catholic Church, by which being set at liberty, he was ignorant how he could yet be obliged to his Conditions with the Turks; but perceiving the same party to be too potent here also, he withdrew his presence, and having packed up his rich moveables, and committed the Administration to his Uncle Balthasar, withdrew out of the Principality with josica his Chancellor to Kuevara. Transylvania straight multiplied into Division, for Sigismond protested he would renounce the Government unless the Turk were abandoned by the Estates, bidding the people to follow some few factious persons, and see what would come of it; whereupon the vulgar in a rage, by a brute instinct readily complied with this Princes will, none daring so much as to mutter against it, and sent away Gabriel Kendi with two other Nobles to bring him back to Claudianopolis, where by the instigation of Stephen Bockskay Governor of Varadin, and Gasper Cornissius Governor of Marmorusse, His cruel proceedings with the refractory Nobility. he was highly incensed against the chief of the refractory Noblemen, whose blood he thirsted and liberally shed. Their Names were Stephen Lazar, and Michael Kalmandi, Captains of his Guard, Alexander one of his former Tutors, and Prince of the Senate, Gabriel Kendi, john Ifju, Gregory Barnomiza, the Son of him who was so renowned for his Service at Agria, and john Forro the heads and Ornaments of the Kingdom, all of them (such the rash fury and cruelty of Sigism●nd) of a sudden, and without any Trial or Cause shown, beheaded in the Market place of the said City. They all suffered with exemplary Constancy, rather gratulating then grudging at their fortune, not a word coming from, though reproached by Sigismond as they went to execution, in any unseemly regestion or Complaint. Not long after to satisfy his blood thirstiness, Strangles his own Uncle Balthasor with others. his own Uncle Balthasor Bathori, Lupus Kovasoczi, once his Tutor, Francis Kendi, and john Bornamisza, were strangled at Gyula, whose large and inestimable Revenues he seized to himself; Lonyas, Salanczi, Szylvasi, Gerendi, obtained pardon for the same fault. Sigismond boasted of this cruel fact as his Justice, and while all other men trembled at the sight of it, he with a dire Countenance unmoved beheld their Tragedies. This perpetration over, by Stephen Booskay, he confirmed the League with the Emperor against the Turks, having engaged Aaron and Michael the Vayvods of Moldavia and Valachia, in the same confederacy. By that conclusion betwixt the Emperor and him, it was agreed that Sigismond should hold and enjoy all Dacia without any tribute by the Title of High and Mighty Prince, His League with the Emperor. as also what he should recover and take from the Turks in Hungary, without any pretensions by the Emperor, but his Family extinguished Transylvania should be united to Hungary; He should Marry Maria Christina Daughter of Charles the Archduke; & if it should happen that he were beaten by the Turks, that he should have a retreat into Bohemia or Silesia. While this was transacting, Amurath the grand Signior died, and Mahomet his eldest Son succeeded, having solemnised his Father's Funerals with the death of 18 of his Brethren strangled by a Bow string, Mahomet the 3d. succeeds his Father Amurath. which scelerate beginning of his Reign the Christians success noted to the world: for Caesar having implored aid throughout Germany and Italy, was supplied after this large manner. The Pope sent 1000 Horse, and 12000. The large supplies given the Emperor. Foot under his General Sigismond Francis Aldobrandin, Florence 1000 Horse, and 3000. Foot, Ferrara 1500. Mantua 1000 Tyrol 4000 Bavaria 3000. Foot, Bohemia 2000 Horse, 600. Dragoons, and 6000. Foot, Sile●ia 1500. Horse, 2000 Foot, Austria 2000 Horse, 6000. Foot, Franconia 1000 Horse, Suevia 4000 Foot, the Nobility of the two last places and of the Rhine by themselves 4000 Foot, which were numerously increased by the Hungarian Army under Count Palfi. Count Mansfield General. Mathias was made by the Emperor Generalissimo, and under him Charles Count Mansfield (upon this occasion created a Prince) who had lately done the King of Spain excellent Service under Ernestus in the Low Countries; Nor was he himself unfurnished of an Army, carrying with him under his own Ensigns, by the Conduct of Adolph Swartzenburgh, etc. a 1000 Curassiers, 1000 Dragoons, and 6000. Walloon Foot out of Flanders. With this noble Army (and most strictly disciplined) sufficient to terrify the world, having traversed the County about Alba to amuse the Enemy, he came at last and clapped down before Strigonium, & presently erected Castles a futlong distant from one another on the Mount of St. Thomas for the security of his Camp. 1584. Twice by the tumultuary onset of the Hungarians and Walloons, were the Walls attempted and they repelled, but the Walloons enraged with the repulse, Strigonium besieged by Count Manfeld. The Courage of the Walloons renewed it of themselves singly, possessed the rampire and drove the Enemy into the Inner Town, while Palfius took the Fort of Parcanum, on the other side the Water opposite to Strigonium and razed it, and with the same Success defeated their relief under Hasan the Beglerbeg, and the Bassa of Buda amounting to Thirty thousand men, his own Forces making no more than the tenth part of them. He was engaged in an Ambuscade, but desperation not only saved his own Men but put the Enemy to flight, nevertheless he must have fallen by their fresh numbers but that the Walloons came readily and unexpectedly to his assistance. But the Turks through very fear, The Turks attempting the relief of the Town defeated, 14000. slain. and the consideration of the loss of the Town, came on very boldly (Mansfeld having taken the Charles Bulwark) and engaged the besiegers in a most terrible and bloody fight; but such was the cheerful readiness of the Christians, advantaged by those Castles aforesaid, which grivously annoyed the Turk with shot, that 14000 of them were slain and their Camp taken. Immediately after which glory accrued to those other felicities and accomplishme●ts of the Noble Mansfeld, he fell sick of a surfeit by too greedy eating of Melons a common Disease among the Germans in Hungary) and died before the Town, Mansfeld dies of a Surfeit. much lamented and honoured by all men. The Siege was nevertheless continued by Mathias, who had newly welcomed the Duke of Mantua to the Camp, and the water-Town gained when the same defeated Turks endeavoured again its relief (their Life and Honour being concerned in it) but were routed by the Walloons again under Oberenprucius, Turk's again defeated. who came opportunely to the Relief of Nadasdi beset with their whole Power, and too late expecting the Succour of Charles Burgrave: which being told Mahomet the Governor of Strigonium, distressed also for Water, Strigonium yielded he yielded the City the fifty second year after its Captivity by Solyman; and now Vissigrade, Vaccia, and all the Towns as far as Pesth, resounded with this Victory, which dismissed Mathias to Vienna, having placed Palfi Governor of Strigonium, and sent Maximilian with part of the Army into Upper Hungary to have an eye to the Affairs with Triffenbach in those parts. In Illyria, Serinus and Hebberstain took Babocza; Erdoedius, etc. Petrinia, restored to the Turks with Rastowitz and Gara. Greater was the Effort as greater was the Power of Sigismond, who having solemnised his Nuptials at Alba julia, with the two Vayvods had shaken off the Turkish Yoke, and had ignominiously treated his Envoy. For his General George Barbelius and his united Nobility, took in a great number of Towns; Sigismund's Enterprises and Successes conjoined with the two Vayvods of Valachia and Moldavia. Michael the Vayvod of Valachia, and Albertus Kyrali sent him as his Assistant by Sigismond carrying the War further to prevent Sinan's Design upon them at home. By them Floccium near Nicopolis was seized, Arsena burned, and Selistria plundered; Achomat the Eunuch sent by Sinan to their seizure with Twenty five thousand men, they engaged and totally routed, so that Thrace seemed to be joined to Germany, and probably enough, if there had been as much Prudence in retaining as there was Valour in getting of it. Michael returned to Bucorestum, but Kyrali sliding over the Danow now frozen, warmed his fingers with the fire of several noted ●owns in Bulgaria. Sinan like a Tempest departed from Constantinople with menaces and curses against these Revolters, Sinan Invades Hungary. took Bucor●st, and Fortified Tergowist the Metropolis of Valachia; Michael and Kyrali as unable to resist, passing over the untrodden Alps ●o Novigrad. In whose pursuit, Sinan being himself engaged, sent away Twelve thousand men to make an Invasion upon his Country, Ten thousand of whom were presently slain, and a Consternation brought upon the whole Turkish Camp; even Sinan himself was meditating of a flight, and hardly retained by the memory of his past actions, for he was so far forward, that he was crowded off the Bridge, straitened with runaways, and two▪ of his teeth beaten out; the shame whereof converted into Desperation, whereby he drove Michael into his furthest retreats amongst Rocks and Precipices: to which straits reduced, he experimented the present deliverance of Almighty God, Michael the Vayvod distressed. being rescued by the advance of Sigismond with an Army of Twenty thousand Horse and thirty thousand Foot, enforced by the Siculi, Cosacks, and Null, upon promise of Liberty. By the notable Valour of these Siculi, Tergovist was regained, it being not advisable to leave any place possessed by the Enemy in their Rear. The news of this recovery made Sinan fly to Bucorestum, which Town he burned, and destroyed all manner of Provision, thinking want and Hunger would have stopped Sigismund's pursuit, and in great haste passed the Danow, but not with such speed; for Sigismond being at his heels surprised Eight thousand Turks, Sinan Bassa defeated as he in flight passed over the Danow Sinan's Death. the Rearguard of those Christians he was carrying into Captivity, of this side the River, every man of whom were presently put to the Sword and killed in a moment. Sinan hereupon partly with Grief and old Age, and not without suspicion of poison, breathed out his unhappy Soul, obnoxious to the revenge of the Bassa's for the arrogance and insolence of his great Fortune, which is subject not only to others Envy, but men's own miscarriages and misdemeanours. Sigismond entrusting the reduction of the Army to Boczkay, arrived at Stephanopolis, where he displaced Aaron from his Vayvodship of Moldavia as suspect of Perfidy, and settled Stephen Resvan; Revolutions in Moldavia. but him, john Samoiscius provoked by the slaughter & cruel usage of some Podolians, overcame and Vanquished after two or three successful Encounters, and having taken him drove a Stake through his groins and set him aloft for a spectacle, substituting in his place jeremy Mogilla, 1594. as Tributary to the Turk, O●●ob. but Beneficiary to the Kingdom of Poland. Nothing is to be mentioned of Maximilian, but that he in vain besieged Szolnoc, being destitute of firing in a very cold and unseasonable Autumn, followed by a most rigorous Winter. This February, 1596. Sigismond disquieted with the Care of the future, as the hatred of his past affairs, journyed to Prague to the Emperor, where he was honourable received; but during his stay there was seized with a Fever which turned to the Small pox; at which time the Siculi Rebelled, pretending they were deceived of their promised Liberty, but were by Boczkay soon reduced and severely punished. Dalmatia had a share of these Troubles, Berthusius a Knight of Rhodes, having intelligence that Ibrahim Bassa Governor of Clissa, was at the Mart of Drilon, having acquainted Lencovitius with his Design, with Five hundred Segnians by a Hole in the precipice of the Rock not observed by the Turks, crept into the Fortress, and mastered the Turks, whom they slew betwixt sleeping and waking. Ibrahim mad at this loss, came and besieged it with Apardi Bassa of Bosnia, whom Lencovitius with 5000 men drawn out of the adjacent Garrisons drove with much gallantry out of their Trenches and Leaguer, with a total rout; but too secure of an unfledged victory, was by the unexpected return of Ibrahim (who had collected his scattered dispersed remnants among the Hills and Woods) himself discomfited, The Christians unsuccessful attempt on Clissia. remembering nothing of the Encounter but the Prey they had lost: Lencovitius got into Clissia, whence fearing the want of water, he escaped with 200 men, leaving the rest to the Sword or Captivity; and Clissia fainting with thirst lost to the Bargain. While Caesar was busied at his Diets held at Prague, Vienna, Presburgh, and Ratisbone, as Sigismond at Claudianopolis, * Clausenburg. the noise of Mahomet's vast preparations had terrified all those parts of Christendom. To be before hand with him therefore, Herbersteyn, and Dracovitius the Successor of Erdoedius (a man whose noble Acts had raised him beyond all Accessions of Felicity, so that he had nothing to fear but Fortune) invested Constanicia, attempted to be relieved by Apardis of Bosnia, but he was beaten and the Town taken; with the like Fate Achomet the Eunuch with 20 noised to be a 100 thousand men, coming too late to his Assistance, besieged Petrinia jointly with him; to the relief hereof Drascovitius, Lencovitius, Erdeodus, and Heberstayn, assayed to pass the Colapis, but neither Ford nor Bridge being feasible, they retreated toward the head of the River, The Turks defeated before Petrin●● in Illyria. which the Enemy mistaking for a Flight, suddenly by swimming and wading passed over in pursuit of them, but was so gauled in his passage by Musket shot, and so well received at his Landing, that happy was he could get back again, in which endeavour many of them perished. At Siscia● the Christians found passage, and the Enemy besieging it, whose Scouts they put to flight, sending with them the terror and rumour of a numerous Army, with which they advanced and besieged the besiegers, who valorously attempted to break through, or to carry the place, but were at last, what by the Bullets from the Castle, and the Sword from the Camp, reduced to the Discretion of the Victor. Only Aphus and Odaverdus, Achomet's Assistants escaped away. In Hungary the balance of ill Fortune we●● equal, The Affairs o● Hungary. Solyman Bassa of Temeswar, and En●nehan of Belgrade, besieged Lippa, whence the obstinacy of the besieged, and the fame 〈◊〉 Barbelius had repulsed them, and Sigismun● subdued Nagylachum at the same time, toge●ther with the Tartar Cham, (who in mo● savage manner destroyed the Country) in th● great plain betwixt Belgrade and Temeswar, a● pursued him almost 30. miles: Maximili● also besieged Hatvanum aided by Swartzr●●burgh, his forces amounting to 20000. Foot, and 15000. Horse: the Governor of this place was Arslanes the Son of Saralibeg●, a youth of great virtue above his Age, who by a fortunate and vigorous Salley so terrified the General of the Ordnance that he abandoned his Battery. The Siege of Harvanum, taken by M●ximilian. He was incited the more to this Gallantry, by his Mother Fatima, a Woman of a virile and noble Spirit, who set before him the reward of Victory or an Honourable glorious Death, if vanquished; but such was his fatal oversight, that while his men wearied with toil and anguished with wounds, were taking their repose by his order, and had abandoned their Stations, the Christians entered, and with Turkish Cruelty put them all to the Sword. Arslanes making a resolute opposition fell not unrevenged. This Slaughter at Ha●vanum, Agria expiated; for Sultan Mahomet with 200 thousand men, a greater number than Solyman e'er brought into Christendom, being arrived at Belgrade sent away Gyaffer Bassa an Eunuch before him to that place, the Christians as accustomed to the War, being no way daunted at his approach. Agria yielded to Sultan Mahomet in person. His first Assault was with great constancy and courage repelled, and the maintenance of the Town resolved on by Tersco, Nyari, and Kinski the Commanders, but the Germans and Walloons being afraid of their Lives, articled and delivered it, although they saved not their lives thereby, being first stripped and then put to the Sword. Nyari hiding himself in their Camp, as Barisonius and Kinnski in the Belgrade Tower, escaped away in the night. At length Maximilian came to Rimaszombathum, and at Rimaszecsum Sigismund Bathori joined his Forces with him, amounting to 32 thousand Horse, and 28 thousand foot. At Keresture both Armies engaged, and the Turks by the valour of the Fronteers of Swarzemburgh's, The Battle of Keresture betwixt Mahomet and Maximilian. Palfi's, and Kyrali's Brigades, with the loss of 8000. men, and 43. great Guns, were driven back to the Camp, which Mahomet opposed to the Christians; Maximilian seeing the presentness and heat of the Soldiers, 1596. 26. Oct. passed over the Morasse before him, and came to succour his Companions. Hereupon ensued in the Turks Camp, great lamentation and fear, Mahomet himself flying to Szolnoc, while the slaughter was continued upon his men. And now without dispute the Turk had been totally routed, when the Christians neglecting the pursuit, and disorderly rifling their Camp, were themselves put to flight. It is reported that there were not above 500 Turks that made this first resistance, by whose hardness Cicala Bassa straight collected 40. thousand more, and furiously prosecuted this turn of Fortune, slaying these Camp pillagers like sheep: of whom (by mere fear only) 10. others say 20 thousand were missing, with all the Baggage which fell to the Enemy: so that a brave victory was slot by Covetousness. Nor did the Enemy carry away an unbloodyed Conquest, leaving behind him twenty, others write, fifty thousand slain. Mahomet returns to Constantinople. Mahomet to Constantinople, and Maximilian troubled in mind (and having gathered his dispersion) to Vienna, while Serini worsted the Governor of Zigeth (puffed up with this Event) at his siege of Babocza, and Palfi confirmed the wavering Towns of Strigonium and Vacia. Sigismond to be installed and honoured with the Order of the Godlen fleece, took a journey to Prague, appearing much troubled at this unhappy issue of the War, Sigismunds' despondencies and fluctuations. and the Conscience of his Facts, being by nature more difficile to blot out the memory of them, than to commit them in his anger; and therefore now he resigned his Principality for fear of the Turk, and his own Concerns to Maximilian, although advised by Caesar that the affections of the People were more inclined to a Prince of their own Nation, and that the present exigence of affairs could not but cause some discontents in the State; notwithstanding he persisted in his Humour, and gave a Divorce to his Wife, Conditioning for the Principality of Opulia, fifty thousand pounds, and a Cardinal's Hat to be obtained for him by the Emperor; he seeming to loathe the unstable state of Greatness, being yet himself the ficklest of all. Maximilian stood more firmly to his business resolving to recompense his late loss; and suddenly (accompanied by Palfi and his other Generals) forced Tata with a Petard, and besieged Papa; the Governor whereof Semendrus had sent him word to know, whether he that had dared to fight with Mahomet would try his force upon his Castle? if so, let him but come and give him liberty to draw his sword given him by the Sultan; and to a person of such Valour and boldness as him, the Gates should be opened. This Garrison being forced at last to render, the Walloons in Revenge slew most of them, the rest were saved by the means of the abovenamed Commanders. Maximilian likewise beleaguered Raab; but such was the Confidence of Aly Bassa the Governor thereof, Vascia's suuccesses in Hungary. that he set open the Gates and drove the cattle out of the Town to graze, showing much jollity at the business; for soon after came Mahomet the Vizier, with 80000 Men, and took Vacia and Tata, after a siege of five weeks, & Maximilian being of no Competent Force to oppose, having done sufficiently by Defeating the Tartars a little while before, retreated to Csallokena, where he encamped, and built several Castles to secure his Entrenchments which Mahomet attempting, was by the Courage of Colonitzius and Nadasdi, with loss disappointed; as was Sigismond Bathori with 14 thousand before Temeswar, from whence he was dislodged by a numerous Multitude of Turks and Tartars; but yet so easily that he took Chanada in his return home. The Estates being assembled at Presburgh, Stephen Szulai, Nicholas Istua●fi, and Bartholomew Pecfi, were delegated to receive the Government from Sigismond, as being fully resolved for a Private Life, by the Examples of Dioclesian, who retired to Salonas, and Charles the fifth, to the Monastery of justus; but with greater Moderation than Constancy: passing now from Kovasockzium through Hungary into Silesia: So the Hungarians, Siculi, and Saxons, swore Allegiance to the Emperor, against whom the Turk having effected nothing by his Chiauxes, Palfis & Swarzemburgh's Successful Enterprise upon Raab. threatened an Army of Three hundred thousand Men; but Fortune had otherwise disposed a kindness for him at hand, by prompting Swarzemburg and Palfi to the recovery of Raab, by the Device of a Petard and the secret close conveyance of the Design. Swarzemburg to this purpose chose out 2050 of his most daring Soldiers, and Palfi 3000; these without Drum or Trumpet passed over the Memphon Woods in the silence of the night being guided by Felnemeth newly discharged out of the Prison of that place: but nothing contributed so much to the Success of this Enterprise as the Confidence of the Enemy, who boasted, that When the Weathercock upon one of the Towers should crow out, then Raab should be regained by the Christians. Being thus arrived unseen or unheard, to the Walls of the Town, Babacurtus to whom the lesser Petard was entrusted, found the outward Gate, and that leading to Albae (by the fatal negligence of the Enemy) not locked up, which he straightways opened, when they all took it for an Omen that the Presence of God was with them, and that he had been by Prayers interessed in the attempt. To the inward Gate the Petard was applied which shivered it in pieces, and broke the Bars and Hinges, making way for Babacurtus and Oberenpruccus, to enter and gain the Market place. Swarzemburgh stayed at the Gate careful of the Event, as to avoid Confusion among one another, and to secure them of Aid; and now the Enemy half naked ran to Arms; but as if cold water had been poured upon them, Raab surprised & taken after a sharp & bloody Dispute. were assoon stupefied and amazed; yet at the last raged with such fury in revenge of their unavoidable death, that three janissaries put five hundred to flight. In this hazardous juncture Palfius came to the succour of Swarzenburgh, and one of his Horsemen refusing to alight, dismounted first himself, and by his example animated the rest to follow him. A Bloody fight being now renewed, Haly Bassa was slain, and the opened-day discovered an entire Victory to the Christians. A very great spoil was here divided; an Hundred eighty eight Great Guns sent to the Emperor, by whom Babacurtus the messenger was rewarded with 4000 Gulders, & a 1000 anually; Swarzemburgh with a hundred thousand Gulders, and the Town of Hustopecsium and Government of Raab; Palfius because it was a service due to his Country, was very well content with a Cup worth a thousand pound. But in Transylvania Fortune showed herself partial in respect to this her indulgence at Raab. Michael the Vayvod of Valachia, a Valiant Prince, had voluntarily embraced the present state of the Emperor's Affairs, by a League ratified with his Commissioners at Tergovistium, by which the Sons of Michael were to succeed their Father in the Principality; to acknowledge the Emperor without any Tribute; his Family failing, the Estates shall have the power of Election; the League to be offensive and defensive. This affair so happily transacted in Valachia, was crossed by another in Transylvania. Sigismond resumes ●be Principolity of Transylvania by means of B●●zkay. Sigismond with his usual inconstancy (his Crimes suffering him no where to be at quiet, but hurrying him from place to place) in a disguise arrived in Transylvania, and came to Claudianopolis, pretending nonpayment of his Pension, and other dis-satisfaction; and was there by the Magistrates received as their Prince, as to whose Government they had been accustomed. The like did Stephen Bosskay Captain of the Guards, who partly with persuasions, and partly with terro●r, Awed his Colleague Cornisius and Moses Szekely Governor of the Siculi, to a Compliance with the Faction; the Force and armed Power whereof constrained the Commissioners abovenamed, who had in vain expected Sigismond Racockzi the Emperor's General, to swim with the present Current of Affairs, and to Compliment his return to the Government; which the Vulgar so madly entertained that they were ready to limb Cornisius for putting them in mind of their Oath to the Emperor. The Commissioners were soon after summoned to appear before Sigismond, which as necessity required they obeyed, to whom he (as his Custom was) excused the business, Sigismund's Excuses. complaining that the Principality of Opulia answered not the promises made concerning it: but nevertheless he would continue his faith to the Emperor; and so dismissed them to Cassovia. The Province thus in Commotion, The Turks intermeddle and besiege Varadin but repulsed. Mehemeth Satergis' Bassa with 60000 Men, came to fish in those troubled waters; and although deprecated by Sigismond, laid Siege to Varadin; the Governor whereof George Kyraly maintained it in the Right of the Emperor, who sent to him with supplies Nyari and Rederus. Thirty days the City was besieged, at the Expiration whereof the Turks incommodated with Rain and tempestuous weather were forced to rise: as did Mathias the same day, and by the same intemperance of the Wether from Buda, having besieged it just so many days together; but he lost not the whole Expedition as did the Turk, for in the beginning thereof he took Palotta, Vesprinium, and other places. Sigismond thus Established endeavoured his reconciliation with the Emperor, and received his Wife again, so that there was again a right understanding, by the Clemency and good nature of Rudolphus, established between them; insomuch that he sent Basta with an Army to aid him against the Turks. But another Freak taking him in the head, while he seemed to intend a firmer and stricter Union, having substituted his Uncle, Cardinal Andrew Bathori, and the Bishop of Varmia (by the Policy of Samoiscius, Sigismunds' new practices. who designed upon these Provinces) to the Government, he himself again repudiated his Wife, and breaking off the Treaty with Caesar, privily fled into Poland. by which means the Principality was engaged in great Troubles; for the Cardinal presently possessed himself of the whole Country, whereupon ensued Hostility betwixt him and Maximilian; Basta with his Army moving from Cassovia to the Expulsion of Bathori, having obliged Michael the Vayvod of Valachia to be constant to his late League; who the better to conceal his Design, pretended to take part with the Cardinal, buying Powder and Bullets in his Country which he intended to use against him; and first took Corona, and drew the Siculi to his party, and in a sudden encounter, (but obstinately maintained) put Andrew to flight, who hoping to escape over the Oytozian Alps into Poland, was there torn in pieces by the Siculi. This Event determined the Allegiance of the Transylvanians to Maximilian, by his Commissioners Michael the Vayvod, and Basta Mahomet the Grand Signior being deterred by his Mother and his Chief Sultana, from going any more in person to the War, having been so nearly endangered at Keresture, that in his flight for hast he lost his Turban, committed the Expedition to Ibrahim his Chief Vizier. To be ready prepared against this Invasion, Zwarzemburg, Palfi, and Nadasdi, reduced Tata, Alba Regalis attempted by Petards in vain. and attempted Alba Regalis by Petards clapped to the Gates; but their Design being discovered, the Garrison salleyed out and routed the Frenchmen that had the orders of the Engine, and seized one of the Petards, which was carried to Buda, where the Barbarians, not daring to discharge it, Bastinadoed the Frenchmen they had taken to the Experiment, when it flew into pieces and miserably mangled and killed the standers by. Ibrahim being arrived, Ibrahim the chief Viziers Expedition into Hnngary. pretended peace and gave notice thereof to Palfi, whereupon Deputies met in the Island of Vizzes, equally distant between Strigonium and Buda. The Turk demanded Fileck, Strigonium, Novigrad, Raab, with future security; the Christians stand to their just possession of them; that Peace would be welcome, but not upon such terms. Ibrahim perceiving no advantage could be expected this way, the Christians also declining Battle, made an Irruption into the Country, and most barbarously laid waste all that Tract of Ground which lies betwixt the Rivers Waegh, Nitre and Ippolus; multitudes of Sick and Diseased persons at the Pesthenian Baths, were abandoned to the Cruelty of the Enemy, and crawling in the Roads made most horrible lamentations. Nor spared he any place Sacred, or Profane, or Condition of men; of whom with Children and Infants crying after their Parents, His ravaging Crueltys he carried 3000 away into Captivity. This Desolation Swarzemburg helplessly beheld, although instigated by Palfi to set upon those ravenous Miscreants; but he was loath to hazard his Army. Palfi himself therefore impatient of the Insolence, set upon a Party of Six thousand at Palankin, and destroyed them; and upon the retreat of Ibrahim, with the highest rage burnt down, & took in several Towns, and among the rest Coppan, and Dombo. It was now the Year 1600. famous for the great Jubilee of Clement the eighth, The end of Michael the valiant Vayvod of Valachia. when Michael the Vayvod of Transylvania, elated with his prosperous Successes, ambitiously affected the Sovereignty of all Dacia, and by keeping Transylvania in his Power began to be suspected by the Emperor, as he was likewise hated by other of his Neighbours for his Invasion of Moldavia, in prosecution of his Quarrel against Sigismond; who to revenge his Uncle's Death, did now instigate Samo●schus to send Aid to jeremy of Moldavia, and to furnish him with an Army for an Expedition into Transylvania, in which he was assisted by Moses Sz●kely, Francis Vas, and Gabriel Bethlen (better known to the English by the name of Bethlehem Gabor) Michael having timely notice of their Embodying (leaving his Wife and his Son Peterschones in Transylvania) speedily passed over the Alps, and at Nester fell unexpectedly upon jeremy and Sigismond, and made a great slaughter of the Poles and Cossacks, with the Discomfiture of thirty thousand of his Enemies. By this Victory he possessed himself of Suchava and all Moldavia▪ and horribly havocked Bessarabia, Russia, and Podolia. Samoyscius impatient of this Insolence, Samoyscius his revenge against him. having Collected an Army at Bosorum, wrested the Victory out of the Victor's hands, and drove him out of Moldavia iuto the abruptnesses of the Mountains by the River Sereczinum, whither having also pursued him by the incessant diligence of the Cossacks, he thence drove him round into Transylvania from whence he first began the War; when judging it neither safe nor necessary to engage his Polish Army in an Enemy's Country, he Deputed Michael Szekhely to follow him & to seize the Principality. This Basta opposed, sending Csaka as from the Emperor, to bid them desist from Invasion of his Dominions; to which when Samoyscius answered that there was no other Design, but to prosecute Michael as the Common Enemy and only Cause of these Troubles by the Turks; Basta enough offended against Michael, offered his own Army to his suppression, upon the same account as Csaki managed his Commission to Samoyscius, Michael defeated flies to Prague. to gain the Principality to himself. The Vayvod understanding this Conjunction, sent to desire leave that he might be heard in his own defence, which being denied, he levied an Army of Twenty thousand men; but was again Defeated and forced to fly to Tergovistia, whence (being betwixt the Hammer and the Anvil, Basta & Moses Szekeheli) he escaped over the Severine Alps to Prague, where he hoped to vindicate and clear his actions, as Csaki foolishly, Csaki ' s Intrigues. yet impudently laboured, in the absence of Maximilian, for his Investiture in Transylvania; not Considering that Dignity is not hastily to be desired & prosecuted, although by a person of great Merits: Time must be attended in which it may appear that by such preferment a man hath rather given than received a benefit. As the distempers of the Great ones were monstrous, The French mutiny at Papa. so was the malign dispositions of the Soldiery. The French Garrison of Papa mutyning for their Pay, had seized and secured the Governor Michael Marochi, and slew all that opposed them, Conditioning with the Turk, for their Arrears, to deliver them the Castle; but the Turk, either mistrusting them, or too tenacious of his money, made no use of the advantage. News hereof being brought to Swarzemburg, he laid Siege to them, losing a great many men by a fierce Eruption of the French, who knew what they might trust to if taken, wherein himself also was slain by a Bullet. Rederus succeeded him in the Supreme Command, who beat the French back into the Town and there closely shut them up; but he also died of a sudden Disease before the surrender, and left the Achievement to Nadasdi; who having reduced them to a dog-hunger, and starved them to skin and bone, Their punishment. made them yield the place; at which time some few were by the pitiful Soldiers knocked on the head, the rest were tortured to death with most Exquisite Cruelties, some of them Choked to death upon the Wheels of a Water-mill, after many Descents and Ascents; some Roasted with a slow Fire; and others given to the Dogs. Transylvania is our next Stage, Sigismond resumes his Principality. troubled with a smatch of the same disloyalty to the Emperor; who delaying his answer to their Commissioners, Sigismond again stepped in and recovered the Principality, vacating those Pours and Instructions given them to treat. Next he imprisoned Cornifius, Pancratius, Senegus, and others, who favoured the Emperor's Title. This afforded an occasion to Michael's Restitution, who being dismissed from Prague with a substitutory Command and Power, and seemingly reconciled with Basta by th● mediation of Gonzaga Governor of Varadin, jointly engaged Sigismond and his Generals Barbelius (lame with the Gout and Cramp) and Moses Szekehely, as their Army (in a Confusion and without any care) was descending from the Mountain of Doroslone, Sigismond Defeated. and soon put them to flight. Here were slain Ten thousand, and a hundred and thirty Ensigns taken. This new Success so Exalted the mind of the Vayvod that he could in no wise brook Basta's Superiority (by so many prosperous accidents transported indeed from a just and moderate man, to very ungoverned and rapinous actions.) They were both at Claudiopolis where the old Grudge seemed to have been wholly forgotten, when Basta by a crew of bloody Walloons caused him to be assassinated; The Vayvods assassinated. and his Companions and followers to be dispersed and to fly for their lives; by which Artifice and impudence together, he imposed on the Emperor that he was killed in a fair manner and upon a just Quarrel, which the Emperor was glad to dissemble, while from this impune and flagitious fact he took courage to proceed to greater and more dedecorous and base practices. For now under colour of Heresy and Schism and the care of the Emperor's Revenue; whatever Silver or other moneys could be discovered was seized by him, so that the People when they looked for a protection, perceived their was no such thing meant them by this Stork, who peeled and fleeced them to their skin; Glory is cherished by industry; when there is no room for that, Virtue herself is very unpleasant, and where rewards attend the vicious, scarce any will be good gratis. Bistricia had refused to open the Gates to him, which he forced and basely plundered, seizing all their best wealth in money and attire to his own use, and then gave it a spoil to his Soldiers, who left not a Covering to the Women. Nay, so miserable was the Calamity of the Transylvanians at this time, that they were near famished, all their cattle being driven into Silesia; and one measure of Wheat sold at 25 Guilders, which money would have bought formerly two hundred. Sigismund's & the Transylvanians Breach of League with the Turks severely punished. Thus by leisurable degrees did the Divine Justice and indignation proceed to punish and revenge the breach of their League with the Turks, the heaviness of the infliction computing for the delay of it. Sigismond fled to Brassone to excite and engage the Turks, in which affair after he had fruitlessly employed Moses Szekelehy, he began to sink and despond and finally cast himself upon the Emperor, of whom after a Truce condescended to by Basta, he obtained pardon, and a yearly Revenue of 50000 Guilders, with the Principality of Lobkowitz which maintained him among the Bohemians to an old & unreverenced Age. But the stirs in Transylvania ceased not with him: for another intestine War was kindled by Moses Szekelehi and Bethlen Gabor, in pretence of asserting their Country, but really, it was a Turkish Design: these two Basta encountered between Alba julia and Varadgya, & after a Bloody dispute put them to flight: both the Captains escaped, but whither? to Bectessus the Bassa of Temeswar, as more humane than the Germane Christians; whose outrages and their General's uncontrolled power and insolence was solely imputable to the sloth and degenerous idleness of Rudolph. Basta used this Victory with all extremity of Fire▪ and Sword, to such a ruin and destruction of the Commonalty, Gentry and Nobility, that they wished for Turkish and Tartarian Slavery. The State of Styria in the Western parts of Hungary was alike Calamitous, Affairs in Illyria. groaning under the Tyranny of the Enemy and the pressures of their lawful Sovereign. Ibrahim Bassa with the Aga of the Janissaries with a body of them amounting to twenty four thousand, arrived at Mohacz intending the siege of Strigonium; but at the entreaty of Nasaff Governor of Sigeth, whose Contributaries Herbensteyn had severely handled; they first blocked up and took Babocza, and then besieged Canysa, where George Paradyser was Governor (the same who persuaded the surrender of Clissia in Illyria) who with the height of Courage maintained it against the Turks, after he had sustained great loss by the blowing up of his Powder, which was supplied to him by George Serinus; and at the same time came Mathias the Archduke, and Philip Emanuel Duke of Mercoeur, with 25, others say but Fourteen thousand to his relief. This Duke did excellent service against the Enemy's Horse, and in his last Encounter with them gave them so notable a Defeat, that it was not doubted but that the Enemy would rise & be glad to be gone; but Provision being scarce in their Camp (of which the Turks are always frugal and yet better provided) they were forced to forsake the Town, and that in such haste and disorder, that Paradyser daunted therewith (although he knew the necessity of the Turks departure) for that the Horse had nothing but a few Leaves to feed upon, and was encouraged to hold out till their return, Canysa yielded to the Turks by Paradyser for which he lost his head at Vienna. delivered the place to the Enemy, upon Condition of a free departure, which brought him to Vienna, where being publicly Convicted he lost his head upon a Scaffold, Ibrahim after this Acquist was very solicitous about a Peace, but while it was negotiated he died. Ferdinand, afterwards Emperor, the Nephew of Rudolphus by Charles his Brother, was at this time Governor of Styria, Carniola, and Carinthia; he in the Year 1660. had Married Mariana the Daughter of Will. Duke of Bavaria, which Lady being a zealous Catholic, would not enter the Limits of his Dominions until purged of Heresy, & the Liberties granted to those of the Augustan Confession were taken away; which the Archduke at the instance of the Jesuits rescinded, and by Oath obliged himself to the Pope that he would severely handle the Professors of the Protestant Religion within his Dominions, and hereupon they were either banished and forced from their Houses, Ferdinand's outrages against the Protestants or plundered and killed, with such inhumanity that the Papists blowing up their Churches with Gunpowder, raged against the bones of the dead and the graves of them, common and allowed to all men; insomuch that what the Turks had spared, was not spared by them. To these outrages, the Protestants opposed the Treaty at Passaw▪ and challenged the assurance and faith plighted by the Archduke himself, by which in 1581. he confirmed his Father's Agreement with the States, during which space of eighteen years and upwards, he had received the sum of Nine hundred thousand Florins of the Rhine, the price of their Liberty of Conscience; but notwithstanding this manifesto they were commanded to depart, and those that stayed spoilt and undone. No hopes of redress appearing, and the rumour of Bozckay's proceeding in Hungary in favour of the Religion inviting them thither, they forsook their Country and prosperously Seated themselves there. To omit the barbarity practised on the inhumed Corpse (as the demolishing of their Churches at Gratz) of William Zimmerman the Protestant and an eminent Minister of the place, which they threw into the River Mur. But Ferdinand's success was answerable to this injustice, Canysa besieged by Ferdinand he was engaged in the siege of Canysa (assisted therein by Aldobrand the Pope's Legate with his Italian Forces) wherein none but Roman Catholics by the advice of Sigismond Count of Thurn, afterwards drowned, were suffered to be listed, lest the impiety of the Protestants might cause the Enterprise to miscarry. The Governor of the Town was Hasanes, who with 800 men and as many more received from Zigeth and Buda, (by the negligence of Orphus Gallonius the General of the Ordinance) resolutely maintained it; this Orphus in filling the ditches with Wood from the adjoining Forest (which work went slowly forward) was shot with a Culverin bullet and killed. Nor did Caesar Porta his Successor make much more haste or speed, being tired out with the Enemy's salleys: no more than the relief from Mathias to animate his cousin, which consisted of 6000 men led by Christoph. Roseworm, and the Duke of Mercoeurs Leiutenant General: for by the unexperience of the General and Officers (who failing of their reinforced attempts had no mind to venture again) they protracted so long, till cold Winter with storms and frosts made them desert their stations (a thousand Horsemen being frozen stiff in one night's time) being also surcharged with snow, The siege broken up. hunger, weariness, and which is worst of all, overwatching in attending the industrious Enemy; who now by their departure gained their Ordinance; and satisfied their Cruelty upon the sick and wounded persons left behind. Thus the Protestants, who were scandalised from being present, were saved from the ruin that involved the Papists. Far more renownedly did the Duke of Mercoeur deport himself at Alba, which he besieged with twenty thousand Men; Christopher Roseworm with great labour and diligence passing a thousand men over the Bog to the Suburbs, two whereof the Insulary and the Destiacan were easily gained, others being encouraged by the adventure to follow them. Alba Regalis taken by the D. 〈◊〉 Merc●ur. The Enemy having nothing but the City to defend made a resolute resistance, but was in fine beaten off the Walls, and the Town regained in the 58 year after it had been taken by Solyman. This Victory the licentiousness of the Soldiers greatly blemished, the City being ransacked by them, where they spared not the bones of the Kings from which the Turks had Religiously abstained. The new Garrison consisting of a thousand Germane Foot, and six hundred Hungarians, was committed to the Government of Marcus Insulanus, famous for his Defence of Varadin, and Michael Vatai. The report of this loss being brought to Hasanes, he joined with the Vizier Bassa, resolving to attempt Mercoeurs Camp, to whose rescue very opportunely came Mathias; the fight was managed with equal spirit and strength till the Hungarians began to flinch, at which time Amurath Bassa of Buda, with Mahomet Beg were slain with a Bullet, which changed the fortune of the day, and put the Turks to flight. There were slain 5000. of them, but yet they gave not over their design, for the next year, the noble Duke of Mercoeur being dead at Norimberg, Hasanes returned to Alba, and before the Governors had repaired the ruins of the Fortifications, was close at the Walls, whereupon the Germans basely betrayed the Town. The Garrison was dismissed, but Insulanus and Vatai being interrogated, if the Delivery was made with their Consent, 〈◊〉 regained by the Turks. to which they answered peremptorily in the Negative, were both of them laid hold on, and made Captives, the Turks saying, That their promise was made to the willing, nor were they obliged to them with whom they had made no Contract. To maintain this violent Turkish War the Estates of Germany proffered 80 months pay to the Emperor, whose General Roseworm, to recompense the loss of Alba, besieged Buda, while Althamius who succeeded Palfi in the Government of Strigonium valiantly gained Pesth; Buda being hereby hard put to it, Hasan with 30 thousand men came to besiege it, The Sieges of Buda & Pesth. and had beaten Roseworm, who passed the Danow to encounter him, to the very walls of Pesth, when Mathias came in and rescued him: but they parted so equally that both Sieges were carried on at the same time, in which nothing was memorable but an Engagement of Craczius, the General of the Horse, with the Turks, in which he was worsted, until Hasan for want of Provision departed for Belgrade, and left Roseworm in his old leaguer. The Christians were much animated at the sight of it, taking in after him Colocza, Paxus, and other places 60. miles below Buda, by the Heyducks; and the Budenses the more spirited and quickened to a resistance, as they made appear in their Salleys and resolute Eruptions, seizing their very Cannons, and nailing up their touch holes, which was acted while Roseworm was playing at Cards, and careless of the matter; This dishonour was seconded with a greater danger, Oner and Ibrahim Beg having drained the Garrisons of Alba, Sygeth, and Canysa, came afresh to their relief, but after a sharp Conflict they were overthrown by Nadasdi, etc. While Collonicz sustained and repelled the besieged. Budas Siege broke up. Notwithstanding such was the unclemency of the weather, by showers, frost, and snow, that Mathias cursing the place where he had been so often unfortunate, was forced to draw off to Winter quarters, leaving Albert Princestayn to the defence of Pesth. The Plague and Earthquakes in H●ngary and Austria this year denoted the ensuing mutations in the Kingdom; 1603. for the Tartars and Turks by a most sudden irruption laid waste all the Country, extending Westward to Papa, the Mountain of Camenesum, and what ground lies between the rivers Dravus and the Mur to Perlatum, not without the indignation of Count George Serini, then lying on his death bed. Transylvania was in the usual variable condition, there was a general famine, with a scarcity of money, and all other mischiefs arising thence; the Soldier demanded his pay and provision, which being not to be had, a defection followed, and the Army marched to Zacmar. Upon their departure, Moses Szekhelij was constituted Prince, and did Homage to Mahomet, and aided by Bectessus the Bassa of Temeswar, and the affections of the people took in Caransebesse, Alba Inlia, Claudiapolis, * Hermanstad. Cibinium, and soon after possessed himself of all Transylvania, but this good fortune lasted not long, Radulo the Vayvods Successes against the Rebels in Transylvania. for Radulo the Successor of Michael in the Vaivodship of Valachia a friend of the Emperors, and who made good his predecessors League, surprised him by night, routed his Turks and Tartars, and sent 30. Standards to Prague. There were slain in this Fight Moses himself, with many Nobles, and 4000 others, revenged in part soon after by the defeat of the Count of Solms who was sent Prisoner to Constantinople, the reciprocation of which ill fortune, befell the aforesaid Bassa of Temeswar, and Albertus Nagii, whom Henry Duval Count of Tampyrium, and Lewis Rakoczi totally vanquished, and again recovered Transylvania to the Emperor, who by the advice of john Molard, and Nicholas ●rukhayser, appointed a Decemvirate for the Government of the Province, which continued till annulled by Boczkay. Things succeeded as prosperously in Hungary, but the Covetousness of the Governors spoilt all; Nadasdi and Collonicsius subdued Laccu●● and Bolondvarum, and cruelly wasted the Country in revenge of the late irruption, and before Amurath of Buda could join with Hasanes, forced him to fight and routed him, at last came Hasanes, and faced Roseworm encamped at Strigonium, who no way declining the Encounter, which lasted till Evening with great fury, put the Infidels to the run, (the great Guns having peppered the Janissaries) with the loss of 7000 men. The fruit of this victory was the reduction of Hatvanum, newly restored to the Turk, and the firm Munition and strengthening of Pesth. This year Sultan Mahomet, Sultan Mahomet dies. unable to go or scarce stand upon his Legs by reason of his fatness, died among his Concubines, Pathic boys, and Troops of Eunuches, 1603 leaving his Son Achmet a stripling to the Succession in the Government, who presently applied himself to Peace. In order whereto Commissioners met in the Fields near to Rakos, but the Turks insisting on the Restitution of Strigonium and Raab, and the Emperor demanding Canysa, the Treaty came to nothing. The year 1604. began with the old grievances in Transylvania concerning Religion, and the great Church of Cassovia, that had been granted by Basta to the Cannennicks of Amna, Persecution against the Protestanes in Transylvania. besides that john Barbianus the Count of Belgiocosa and the Emperor's Governor in that Town by his Jesuitical and most severe inquisition was horribly dreaded by the Protestants, an infinite number of whom he had banished out of their Country: About this time came an Ambassador from Hodabanda King of Persia, offering his assistance against the Turk, in this juncture of the minority of Achmet, and advising the Christians to Unity, which so encouraged Rodolph, that he resolved to employ all his Forces against that Enemy. Basta was therefore placed in the Command of Roseworm, thought too slow in the service, Barbianus made Governor of Transylvania, and Collonicz in the Room of Thurzo of that part of Hungaria which lies beyond the Danow to Dravus. Hasanes hearing of these preparations took the field and frighted the Governor out of Pesth and the Garrison out of Hatvanum, Strigonium was by him in vain besieged, & thereby the Turkish power had in Contempt, for that the Hungarians perceived they were more oppressed by their own Soldiers and the feuds of their Commanders, than they were by their Enemies. This, and some other Instigations and instincts concerning their privileges, the insolence of the Germans and the late Inquisitions, caused them to adhere to Stephen Bocskay, then appearing in Transylvania, to which Province the Turks had preferred Gabriel Bethlen, but he modester in prosperous then adverse fortune, had passed it to Bocskay, Bocskay appears in Transylvania. and made himself a Partisan to his Designs, having with Bectessus of Temeswar, attempted Lippa: but while he lingered there, Lewis Racokzi, and the Count of Tampirium, surprised their Camp and made a great slaughter, the Bassa and Bethlen made a shift to escape half naked and half a sleep; Bethlen leaving his clothes to be ransacked; where were found some Letters with the Heads of the Conspiracy agreed upon between Bocskay and himself, which were afterwards confirmed by some of the Prisoners. Barbianus, the matter being so full of danger, instantly hasted to the Camp at Rokomaza, and put the Soldiers in readiness, and summoned Bocskay, The imperialists worsted by Bocskay. who made many tergiversations and delays but denied the Confederacy. This increased the suspicion, and advised Barbianus to put it to a speedy decision by battle. The Heyducks were at first induced to take up arms with him, but understanding the peril of their Religion, although their Commanders had been newly ensnared by an Oath of fidelity to Caesar, they revolted to the Confederates. Thereafter ensued a fight at Adorjanyum, where Bocskay prevailed against Becsius one of the Emperor's Generals, by a casual firing of his Train of Powder, and took his Camp richly furnished, which ill success so ferretted Barbiani shut up by forces on every hand, and informed likewise that Valentine Homonnai was declared for Bocskay, Bocskay's appearance in Transylvania● assisted by the Nobility. that he departed from Tockay, as he fled before from Varadin (mistrusting the defence of both places) and came to Cassovia where john Bocacius the Mayor of the City being a Lutheran denied him entrance, whose examples Eperjessum, Cibini●m the less and other places soon after followed. Bocskay departing for Cassovia, sent before him Blasius Lippai (whom for his brute valour he raised from a sordid degree to a great Command, and afterward for his insolence beheaded him, and reduced his Wife to her former condition) who was welcomed and the Magazines and Treasures afterwards opened to Bocskay, soon after saluted and presented there with all the Princely Ensigns and Ornaments by Rako●zi, Homonnai, Nyari and other the chieif Noblemen; In the mean while Blasius Lippai besieging Barbianus in Scepusium, was repelled by the valour of Thurzo, as Blasius Nemethus the Captain of the Heyducks ranging for prey, was intercepted by Basta, defeated, and his head struck off. Basta with 15000 men shook the confidence of the confederates, whereupon they strengthened themselves with the assistance of Mahomet the Grand Vizier, and encountered the imperialists at the River Moldava, where although they stood the first shock yet were they not able to endure the firm constancy of the Germans; who thereupon recovered Szendreira and freed Ruberus besieged in Tockay: Basta being thus every day victorious admonished Bocskay, to lay down his Arms, and frame and compose his seditious mind to his Duty and Aleigeance; to which Bocskay answered, that war was better than Peace unless Transylvania were left wholly to him; and the Generals, Governors, and Castellanes of Hungary be all of that Nation, that the foreign Soldiery be put out of the Realm, and the free Exercise of Religion allowed. But this Confidence of Basta was soon blasted, for his covetousness having made him odious to his Soldiers who were without pay, Basta deserted by his Soldiery for want of Pay. they fell into a Mutiny and assaulted him in his Quarters (the Convoy of twenty nine Wagons laden with money and Cloth for the Soldiery, themselves having stolen and carried them away, part into Poland, and part to Bocskay:) nevertheless having something pacified the Soldiers he attempted Cassovia but in vain, & thence retreated to Leuchovia, his Army deserting him in the way; insomuch that Francis Redei with a small party of 2000 Heyduhks, and the bent of the People, took in twenty Towns: besides many Castles betwixt the Rivers Sayon, Ippolus, and Waegh, revolted to him. These Successes caused the Emperor to send away the Bishop of Vesprinium, and Sigismond Forgacz his Ambassadors to Bocskay, to whom (the Turk being very observant and intent upon his actions) he at the first audience publicly professed, that if they were sent from the Hungarian Nobility, their Embassy was welcome and acceptable to him; but otherwise, Bockskays ●nswer to the Emperor's Ambassadors. if they came from the Emperor it was to no purpose, for that he had engaged so far that he could not possibly recede. At a Diet held at Szerencsium soon after, he laid down the Causes of his present undertaking, namely, the Defence of Religion, the Liberty and safety of the People. At the end of which Oration he was confirmed by the Estates in the Principality, and the Roman, Lutheran, and Calvinian Doctrines received promisevously. The Chief Praefecture of Transylvania, and the Supreme Command of the Army was conferred, the first on Sigismond Rakoczi, the latter on Valentine Homonn●● From this Diet in 〈◊〉 he returned into Transylvania, where he was met with a Turkish Chiaux, who presented him with the usual Ensigns of the Investiture from the grand Signior, to whom he dispatched ●way Stephes Corlatus, and George Kikedi, his Ambassadors with the Homage and Presents, the more envious, for that some Germane Youths were added thereunto. From Cassovia, Rocskay invited Stephen Illyeshazi (fled for his Treason) out of Poland, His success●s. and by the valour of the Heyduckes took Trincinum, F●eleck, Zackmar; as Nitria by the inconstancy of the Garrison was delvered to Francis Redei by Sigismond Forgacz the Bishop of the place. Which losses with want of money so disabled Basta, besides that he was in great danger of his life, that he fled to Presburgh, where Collonitz endeavoured to relieve him, but his Soldiers turned sides; Tyrnaw hereupon yielded, and Stanislaus and Christopher Thurzo submitted to Redejus. Hence the War was carried into Moravia by Eight thousand Heyducks and a thousand Turks, Commanded by Dengelegius who brought away 4000 Captives thence; and Tockay was at the last extremity delivered by Reuberus, whose Fidelity and Valour Bocskay himself commended. The Revolt of the Isle of Csallockoes followed this rendition, Presburgh attempted and Austria invaded by Bockskay● Parties. and gave advantage to 6000 of the confederates (so were Bocskay's party called) to make an attempt upon Presburgh (burning in their way thither St. George and other Towns) whence being rejected by Basta, they turned their Invasion upon Austria, which they destroyed as far as Prinquelia. At the same time Nemethus to enlarge this Devastation passed the Da●●bius at Sabaria, to whom Nadasdi and other Noblemen for fear of their own Territories, joined themselves; and even to the wonder of the Barbarians, sacked all that Tract of ground lying betwixt Layla and Arrhabon, pretending Religion as the incentive to this immane Cruelty; although they unmercifully tortured the reformed Ministers, and sold very Infants for Slaves to the Turks, to such a detestation, that God caused Blood to drop out of Gold paid by a Turk to a Christian for one of those Captives. This Country Desolated, he fell next into Styria, The like ravage made in Styria by Nemethus and others. and barbarously used the Town, situated betwixt Arrhabon, Pingua, and Lappinicia; and had almost shook the Allegiance of Drascovitius the Governor of Illyria; but he recovering himself, and assisted by: Trautsmandorf, raised an Army of ten thousand men and drove Nemethus out of Sclavonia together with his Partakers, among whom were some Tartars, to Zigeth, Coppan, and other their respective Holds and Garrisons: by which mean● Drascovitius gained to himself great Authority and Renown. But these most horrid Divisions hastened the Common Ruin; for Mahomet the now prime Vizier, who had delivered Strigonium himself to the Christians, besieged it in person, which Bocskay quarrelled, alleging that by his League with them no City in Hungary ought to be taken by the Turks; but being not Master of himself, he sent Homonnai either at the request or Command of Mahomet with 6000 men: S●rigonium 〈◊〉 again to th● Tu●ks 1605. in the th●●d year of the reign of 〈◊〉 and not long after the Town within ten years of its reduction, was delivered by William Oetingensis and his Germans; who diffiding in the Hungarians dismissed them out of the Town, not to this only disadvantage, for they presently thereupon joined with Redejus against the Emperor, to whom Ersek●yvarum was yielded by the consent of Mathias, upon the promise of Rodejus that it should not come into the Tark● ●●ands, but be restored when ever the Wa● should be composed. Mahomet the Vizier now summoned Boczkay to Buda, to the Solemnisation of the Marriage of the Bassa of that City, who met him on his way as far as Rakos, and introducted him in State, Boczkay doth Homage to the great Vizier at Buda for Transylvania. where Boczkay did Homage for Transylvania, and submitted it under the protection of the Turks: whereupon he was presented with a Crown as King also of Hungary (supposed to have been the Constantinopolitan Emperors, or the Despots of Thrace) and a Sword embellished with Gold, Jewels, and other Ornaments; all which (except the Crown) Boczkay accepted, but that he refused, acknowledging Caesar to have been duly crowned, for which his modesty was worthily praised, however he may be justly taxed of Sedition and Rebellion. By reason of this fealty the Vizier made him Tribute free for ten years, those expired, the yearly Tribute of ten thousand Guilders to be paid at the Port for the Upper Transylvania, at which agreement the Janissaries made great acclamations of Felicity, as expecting a Donative and Gratuity. A Diet was soon after held by Boczkay at Corpona, whither came Sigismond Forgacz from Caesar, with Conditions of Peace, to which the Turk engaged by the Rebel Bassa's of Aleppo and Caramania, was inclinable also in his own behalf, having first seen Boczkays Propositions. This Overture came to a Conclusion at Vienna, managed by Illyeshazi and Mlasodo●itius, on the part of the Transylvanian Caesar consenting to whatsoever Propositions, as knowing Boczkay must ere long die without Issue. The Emperor makes Peace with Bocskay, the reason thereof. The Terms were, a general and mutual Amnesty and Oblivion, a Toleration of the Roman, Lutheran, and Calvinian Professions, a Palatine to be elected by the Votes of the Hungarians; the Chambers and new Courts to be abolished; The Treasury to be regulated by new Commissioners, the Hungarians to redeem the Castles pawned to the Germans; The Government to be administered by Hungarians; but Raab and Comorra may be governed by deserving Germans; All Transylvania, with that part of Hungary which Sigismond Bathori enjoyed, to belong to Boczkay, together with the Lordships of Tockay, Sacmar, etc. Which for want of Issue, The Articles of the Peace. shall revert to Caesar: if the Peace be not concluded with the Turk they shall join Arms; Bishops descended of the Nobility to have Voice and place in Counsel, others not. This was ratified by the Deputies of all the upper Hereditary Provinces of the Emperor and firmed by the eminentest Nobility of both sides. Varadin was herewith yielded to Bocskay, having all along been stoutly defended against him by Baptista Pecsius, as St. George and B●zinium were rendered to Illyeshazi. The Peace was also concluded with the Turk for 20. years. Peace with the Turk also. Achmet the Sultan to call Caesar Father, he Achmet Son, both to be saluted by the name of Caesar's; all differences arising to be composed by the Governors of Raa● and Buda. The Castles and Fortresses to stand, The Conditions of it. but no new ones to be built, only the Hungarians may repair Vaccia; Caesar shall pay this year 200 thousand Imperials, but nothing afterwards; every three years the Emperors shall interchange Presents, and a faithful friendship shall be consolidated between them. This Transaction was followed by the Death of Boczkay, who professed himself willing to die, so that he had had the opportunity of purging himself, before the World and the Empire, of Sedition. He declared Valentine Homonnai by his last Will, for Prince of Transylvania, which Homonnai gaped after, but the Transylvanians chose Sigismond Rakoczi, Bocskay dyeth and appointeth Homonnai for his successor but the people choose Rakoczi. and although he made great reluctancy pretending several Excuses, yet at last they compelled him to Clausenburgh, and made him assume the Principality, while Homonai mad with rage, having plundered Boczkay's treasures committed to him, retired to Ungnade; by whose Example Szecfi and Paul Nyari shared the like entrustments among themselves, the deserved and desired End of Goods got by Violence and Oppression. Just before the Confirmation of this Turkish Peace, an Ambassador from Persia, came to Prague, and there by extolling his Master's power, and his resolution of destroying the Ottoman Name and Nation, put a demur to the ratification, which passed not till somewhat after, when Mathias the Brother of the Emperor, was possessed of the Crown of Hungary; The Turk was instant to have it finished, and stormed exceedingly at the delay, for that Serdar Bassa who had possessed himself of Aleppo, Damascus, and Tripoli, with a formidable power, under smooth & dutiful pretences threatened Constantinople. In the mean while (and the licentious rapines of the Heyducks upon all such intervals) Mathias, Mathias gains to himself the Crown of Hungary. his Brother's Viceroy, prepared his way to the Crown of Hungary, urged thereunto by Illyeshazi, whose interest Rudolphus had used at the Diet at Ratisbone to prefer Ferdinand the Nephew of Charles his Brother; Hereupon Soldiers were listed by Mathias, to obviate the designs of the Spaniards, who would advance Ferdinand as more Catholic then himself: with these, under pretence of repressing the Heyducks, he came suddenly to Presburgh, and was received into the Castle by the Archbishop and Cardinal Pazman and Illyezhazi, at whose instances he possessed himself of the Crown. By him the late Articles of Vienna were confirmed (the Hungarians being obstinate to those terms) and upon that score Austria and Moravia also joined with him, and vowed to live and die in his Cause. Having from hence raised an Army of 20. thousand men, he marched to Prague, where the Emperor delaying of his Grants to the Bohemians, (who had armed themselves in vindication of their Religion, and the same Privileges with the Papists) found himself so disappointed, that he condescended to the Inauguration of Mathias, Mathias allows the Hungarians their Privileges. in the kingdom of Hungary. He arrived at Presburgh the 22. of October, where he allowed the privileges aforesaid, the Election of a Palatine within a year after the others Decease, which Dignity had been vacant 46. years, ever since Nadasdi, together with the expulsion of the Jesuits. From thence he went to Cassovia, at which Diet held there, Sigismond Racockzi, as Prince of Transylvania did him Fealty, and soon after resigned the Principality to Gabriel Bathori, having gained the Confirmation from Achmet, and an uninteressednesse from Mathias. In all things, Rakoczi' s Modesty. he showed himself a person of great Justice and Modesty, in declining his assistance of the Rebels in Poland, and transferring this Sovereignty to another, when he was so beloved and courted by the people. To pass by new commotions and discontents of the Hungarians about their Religion now invaded and infringed, but vindicated by the Elector of Saxony, and other Protestant Princes, who by arming themselves overruled Mathias; we return to matters of State: Illyezhazi the new Palatine, built a new Fabric in the Castle of Presburgh, for the Conservation of the CROWN; and Collonicsius was advanced to a higher Dignity in that Kingdom, which had hitherto been in no condition to respect his merit. As to war it had its divertisement in Transylvania; Radulo the noble Vayvod of Valachiae, refused Homage to Bathori, who incensed thereat (and designing the Seizure of all Dacia which the Turks had promised to Boczkay) raised a puissant Army such as was hardly seen there before, Prince Bathori defeated by Radulo Vayvod of Valachia. and gave him Battle at Brassovia, where he was totally routed by the valour of the said Vayvod; which opportunity Mathias in Confederacy with that gallant person, so improved, that he possessed himself of Clausenburgh, and other chief Holds by his General Forgacz, while Bathori betook himself to the Mountains. This Enterprise was the more easily carried on against him, for that his prodigious Lust made him odious to his Subjects, whose beautifullest Wives and Daughters he frequently and most openly vitiated. Notwithstanding such was his Fortune, He recovers his Losses again. His infamous lust. that he beat Forgacz out of his Dominions, and forced him to hide himself in the Woods of Bohemia, after he had suffered very great Extremities. Yet the same Vicissitudinary fortune undid Bathori, betrayed by his Ambassador Andrew Geczi to the Grand Signior, who designed the Principality to himself, and whom the Bassa of Buda would have confirmed, but that Bathori betook himself (such the Reciprocation of these Interests) to the Protection & Friendship of Mathias, now elected Emperor of Germany, by whose assistance the at instance of Thurzo the Palatine in the room of Illyeshaeci Geczi was overthrown, & at the same time Bethlen Gabor substituted by the Turks to the same Dignity, at the price which Bathori had paid for it. He enraged with this affront (besides that he was a man of a most incredible strength) ravagely fell upon his poor Subjects, who yet again bore with him while he renewed his debaucheries, whose vengeance every one of the Nobles incited. At this Juncture Bethlen made use of the Turks power and subdued Lippa, Aradum, and other places, whose rendition made Bathori, suspectful of all people, to betake himself by a speedy flight from Clausenburg to * Which he road in one day being distant 150 English miles. Varadin, where admitted into the Castle, consultation was held concerning him by the Nobles, who advised Gregory Nadanyj, and George Szylasi to assassinate him, and they after some reluctancies of Conscience animated by the mortal jealousy of Decsius a Preacher of the Calvinist Faction, Prince Bathori assassinated by some of the Nobles. whose Wife Bathori most lewdly loved, at the second resolution assaulted & slew him in the street of Varadin called Velenze, as he was going to the Baths. Bethlen was immediately acknowledged by the Transylvanians, and confirmed for his presents & acknowledgements, both by the Turk and Emperor. His first Act was the vindication of Bathori's death, by the popular fury permitted upon his Assassinates, whom he summoned to the dyet (with a salvo statu) then held at Medgysium. Achmet in preparation for War in Hungary dies 1617. At the same time Achmet was ready at Adrianople with an Army to invade Hungary, but the Emir of Sidon (who derives himself from Godfrey of Bu●loyn) gave him a diversion; as did the Cossacks plague him in the Euxine Sea, by burning 24 of his Galleys, and infesting Thracia also by Land, but the chief remora of all was His death in the year 1617. Mustapha his brother succeeded him, but was presently deposed, and Osman Achmets' Son aged 16 years was saluted Emperor, Sultan O●man strangled. who survived not long after, being strangled by Daout Bassa. Not to mention the War now commenced between the Emperor and the Venetians about Piracies committed by the Uschock● and Chroats upon their Maritine Territories, as public in a discourse by itself, which war was managed with great resolution by both parties in Dalmatia and Friuli. The event of this unkind war, redounded to a good and amicable understanding between Mathias and Ferdinand, who was now adopted to the Crown, provided that he intermeddled not during the life of the Emperor; and the next year he was Crowned King of Hungary, at which time three Suns appeared denoting the mischiefs (if they may be so construed) that befell his Dominions in the ensuing War of Bohemia, The Emperors Mathias dieth. first managed by Ernest Count Mansfeld for the reformed, and Count Bucquoy for the Emperor Mathias, who wearied with a lingering and continual distemper having lived 62 years, and governed Hungary 12, as Germany 7 years, deceased with the blessings of a Peace to his Subjects. FERDINAN the 2d. by the endeavours of Mathias being elected King, Ferdinand the 2d. K. of Hungary. administered the Government Government by many alterations, the cause of which changes was the same with the usual excesses of arbitrary Innovation, for he recalled the Jesuits in hatred of the Protestants, and very much infringed the Articles of Bocskay, which made them have recourse to the Count of Thurn then in Arms near Vienna. At the same time the Bohemian Estates prevailing no more as to Liberty of Conscience, The Bohemian War in Brief. conferred the Kingdom on Frederick Count Elector Palatine, who animated by his Wife the only Daughter of james King of England, (of whose assistance together with the Dutch, he was made confident, as assured of a nearer help from Bethlen Gabor upon the same account of Religion) accepted thereof: The Hungarians raised hereupon by Teiffenback, thrust themselves into Silesia, more intent upon the prey then studious of the cause, while Bethlen having repulsed Homonnai, who had introduced the Jesuits into Claudiopolis, either hung or banished them, publishing a Proclamation against the entertainment or reception of any of that Society. Bethlen Gobor takes part with Frederick K. of Bohemia. And now in pursuance of his Confederacy with Frederick the Count Palatine, he rushed into Hungary, with an Army of 18000 men, and 18 great Guns, where meeting with a discontented part of the Nobles by the infringement of the abovesaid Articles, and strengthened by them, he took in Cassovia by his Lieutenants Redei and Szecsi, and by fair words cajoled Andrew Docrius the General of Upper Hungary by pretence of peacemaking into a Captivity in Transylvania wherein he died. Bethlen' s successes in Hungary. This proceeding so frighted the Jesuits and Friars, that they made what haste they could out of his way, so many places rendering themselves (led by the examples of the Mine Towns, of which Rosnoboyana was the first) as Fileck, V●●zia, Tyrnaw, Nitria, Posing, etc. that they knew not where to be secure, only Comorra and Raab firmly Garrisoned by Austrians withstood his Fortune. Part of the Army therefore was employedin an irruption into Moravia, the other being joined with Thurn besieged Presburgh, wherein was the Palatine of Hungary with a small Garrison, and some Troops of Bucquoy in the Suburbs, the which he presently cut off, and thereupon the City yielded itself with the Crown & other regal Ornaments, and gave him liberty by the seizure of some interjacent places, as Viscetus and Eberstorph to carry the terror, with the sight of his Arms, to Vienna. But here the misfortune that befell George Rakoczi, whom he had left his Vicegerent in Transylvania, impeded his further Progress: George Honnonnai a firm adherer to the House of Austria, having fled from his late defeat into Poland, with a fresh supply thence, returned and encountered Rakoczi, by whom he was worsted; but recruited with present supplies engaged him again, which fight had lasted two days, when Homonnai by the counterfeit of a flight drew him into his ambushes and there discomfited him, Rakoczi his Vice Roy defeated by Homonnai. the foot were all of them slain, Rakoczi and the Horse escaped by flight. This emergency recalled Gabor from Vienna, after he had caused himself to be proclaimed King of Hungary in defiance of Ferdinand, and contracted a firmer league with the Bohemians, to the designation of higher matters. Ferdinand was absent at the diet at Franckfurt, when the Bohemians revolted, where having complained, as also to the Kings of France and England of their insolence, he appointed Maximilian of Bavaria his General the Duke of Saxony and the Catholic Elector being also made sure to his Interest, and besides a truce was concluded on with Gabor to Michaelmas. And now ready for a war in Germany, the French suspended it by their interposition at Ulms. That not proving durable, joachim Ernestus the marquis of Anspach, The marquis of Anspach his Treachery. was entrusted by Frederick with the charge of the Palatinate and the Government of Heydelberg, who being ready to engage with Maximilian, was not only diverted and recalled by Spinola's arrival, who took in Oppenheim, Baccharach, and other places, but corrupted also by his Gold, although the Prince of Aurange had engaged to his assistance. The Treachery of the Marquis of Anspuch. Maximilian freed of this Enemy, marched to Prague with an Army of 25 Thousand men, attended with Count Bucquoy, whose Troops in the night surprised the Hungarians, sent to aid the Palatine by Bethlen, that were quartered upon the White-hill and carried away 1500 Horses after a great slaughter committed on the Riders. This ominous defeat so heightened Maximilian that he dared the Enemy to an engagement, against the advice of Bethlen, who would have had the Bohemians temporize till he could personally assist them, but such was the Palatines fate, that a battle ensued, wherein at first by the rout of the young Prince of Anhalt, the Bohemians seemed to be fortunate, but the sudden flight of 8000. Hungarians altered the Case, The King of Bohemia defeated at Prague. and gave the imperialists a complete victory. Frederick with his Princess fled to Vratislavia, and Bohemia as not long after Moravia and Silesia accepted of the Emperor's Conditions. Bethlen summoned a Diet in Hungary at Ersekuyvarum, Bethlen styled King of Hungary. where partly betwixt Force and good will he was again Proclaimed King, the Majesty of which Title his Valour (as having been two and forty times present in Battle) Magnificence and Popularity very well suited, and now he began to Act as a King▪ Tampirius Generalissimo of Hungary therefore opposed his Army consisting of ten thousand men, and by Water and Land laid Siege to Presburgh, and took the Suburbs and the Fort before them; Tampiri slai●. but while he unwarily viewed the Castle he was slain with a Dart. The Fall of the General made the Soldier's desert the siege, and suffer Bethlen to Ravage Austria, where he had effected great matters, but that the overthrow of his Confederates at Prague spoiled his Designs. The Elector Palatine being yet at Uratislavia in the Marquisate of Silesia, did very much urge him to proceed and to continue his Successes, for that speedily he would bring an Army out of England and Denmark to his Assistance. And indeed Ernestus Count Mansfield, Brother of Charles that was so Famous for the Siege of Strigonium, having gained Pilsa and Taborum, was advanced into the Palatinate, and had reduced things there to some better Conditlon; Bohemia lost. but in the mean while Bohemia was quite lost, the Palatine proscribed, the Jesuits restored, and the Reformists driven out of the Kingdom. The French King endeavoured a Peace between the Emperor and Bethlen at Hamburg, 1621. but with no success; for Gabriel would neither renounce his Regal Title nor give way to the Estates of Hungary to transact with Ferdinand, but called in an Army of Turks and Tartars, by which means he drew Envy upon himself, and the Estates grew eager against his Government and returned to their former Allegiance. George Szecsi was first received into favour, who drew a great many with him; and took Francis Redei away perforce, who languished away for grief not long after. As to matter of Action, Charles ●ongaevall Count of Bucquoy, having subdued and tamed the Moravians, with an Army of 2200 men, and 22 Great Guns marched directly against Bethlen, who retreating into Transylvania, and the Germane and Hungarian Garrisons differing among themselves, recovered Presburg, with Tyrnaw, Ovarum, Schutt, and all that Tract of Ground as far as Newhausel, Newhausel besieged by Bucq●oy. which he also besieged, and brought it to extremity; when Stanislaus Thurzo salleyed out upon the Foragers, and lighting upon Bucquoy, who too rashly engaged in their assistance killed him after sixteen wounds, his Horse being shot under him; his dead body with the slaughter of many Imperialists, was brought off and redeemed from the Hungarians, Bucquoy slain. and in the beginning of july interred at Vienna. By his Death the Affairs of Caesar were shaken, 1621. for the Walloons refusing another General, gave opportunity to the Enemy of reducing many places; Gabriel having raised a new Army and overthrown the Nobles of Hungary; Ersekuyvarum was also abandoned by the Garrison: so that finding the Kingdom naked and destitute of Defence, Gab●iel's new Later prizes in Hungary. he joined with the Count of Thurn and the Marquis of I●gerendorf and forced Tyrnaw; Presburg he in vain attempted; whence by the Invitation of jagerendorf he made an Irruption into Moravia, and seized and pillaged several places; but being opposed here by the Emperor's new Generals, Esterhasius, Wallensteyn and Hannibal Donaw, who set upon him on every side, (and jagerendorf departed from Silesia, as his Transylvanians for want of Provision were privily slipped home) he bethought himself of a Peace, which at the instance of his Ambassadors was first treated of at Oedinburg, but Concluded at Szentmicklosium, A Peace betwixt Gabor & the Emperor. whereby Bethlen retaining Tockay and Cassovia, with seven other Lordships in Hungary, was to yield up and resign the Crown with all other places and Cities in that Kingdom; 1622. to forbear the Regal Title and be content with the Name of Roman Prince, should enjoy Opulia and Ratibor, the State of Religion, and the Jesuits to be restored to the places they were in before. Thus the Elector Palatine was disappointed here also, as Mansfield, and Christian Duke of Brunswick had been unsuccessful against Tilly, so that driven out of his Haereditary Countries, he fled into Holland; The Electoral Dignity was conferred on Maximilian of Bavaria; when, the Estates of the Empire perceived that the Power they had given the Emperor was used by him against themselves. jagerendorf being expelled out of Silesia, again implored Bethlen to the assistance and Support of the Churches; whereupon the flame of the but newly quenched Conflagration broke out again. Bethlen delivered Vaczia to the Turks, with whom and the Tartars to the number of eighty thousand excited by the Count of Thurn, A new Rupture on the part of Bethlen G●b●r he Invaded Hungary; pretending first Religion, than the Money not paid, nor the Conditions of the Treaty at Oedinburg performed. At Tyrnaw he defeated the Regiment of Tieffenbach, and falling into Moravia drove Swarzemburg before him and besieged him in the Metropolis, building four great Bulwarks before that part of the City where the only Egress was, and keeping strong Guards on that side where it was Fenced with the Lake and Woods: nevertheless Swarzemburg by a frugal apportioning of the Allowance of Provision, held out the place till the Winter, when the Grand Signior being rightly informed of the Quarrel by Caesar, with the menace of his Scymitar, recalled Bethlen; and the Turks and Tartars impatient of the delay and the Cold, refused to obey him, although some of them were therefore hanged up: Gabor deserted by the Turk renews the Peace with disadvantage. Besides the aids out of Germany appeared not, so that he was compelled to make a Truce, and the Garrison (almost famished) delivered from the Siege. His Title of The Roman Prince, or Prince of the Romans, was abolished; his Coadjutors the Turks, left to get home as well as they could, in which return many were stripped and slain, and satisfied for their fellows cruelty, and plunder. In the beginng of May this year the Peace was confirmed, 1624. and redintegrated: jagerendorf quite disseised of Silesia, & Thurn expelled out of Moravia, and Bethlen deprived of that part he held in Hungary, but restored to Opulia, and Ratibor taken from him in the beginning of these Troubles: And lastly, the Kingdom of Hungary acknowledged her old Sovereign, Ferdinand Ernestus Eldest Son of Ferdinand the second, Ferdinand the 3d. K. of Hungary. being Crowned at Ovarum, where were present his Father, his Queen and Children, Caraffa the Pope's Nuncio, and the Spanish and Florentine Ambassadors; Bethlen also sent his thither, being taken up with the Solemnity of his Nuptials with Catharine the Daughter of john Sigismond Marquis of Brandenburg, who was Married at Alba julia. 1626. At this Diet at Ovarum, great was the Unanimity and Concord of the Estates, by whose resolutions the Guards and Forts against Canysa were strongly fortified, the Licence of Polygamy restrained, the Road secured, and the Tribute and Tax duly settled, and other things enacted which concerned the safety of the Kingdom. Ezterhesius was substituted to the Dignity of Palatine in the room of Thurzo. Next succeeded the Coronation itself: The Regal Diadem, Robes, Sword, and Globe, with the noise of the Cannon, and the gladsome Acclamation of the People (wishing all happiness to the King and Kingdom thus restored) were conveyed from Presburg in this Order; First went the Germane Trumpeters, than th● Barons, the Masters of the Horse with their Squadrons Armed Cap a pe; next followed the Hungarian Noblemen, the Deputies or Governors of Dalmatia, The Coronation of Ferdinand the third. Sclavonia, and Croatia; then the Servants of the Palatine covered with the skins of Leopards and Tigers, than the Palatine himself in the midst between the Germane and Hungarian Barons, the Crown and the other Royal Ensigns being laid upon a Chariot. The Cardinal Peter Pazman, and Archbishop of Strigonium, put the Crown on the King's Head in the Great Church; where were present a great Confluence of Scholars to attend the Cardinal, from the Colleges of Vienna, and Tyrnaw, and elsewhere; the Hungarians being here asked if they did accept him for their King, with one Voice answered, We do; We will and require it, let the King live and Reign long, and Govern us. The King (the Divine Service performed) turned his Chair towards the People, and laying the Sword of St. Stephen upon their shoulders, Created four Knights; when mounting his Horse, in an Hungarian Habit he galloped up a little Hill, and there brandishing his Sword four times to the four Quarters of the World, thereby declared his Majesty and his Empire: Medals of Gold and Silver being at the same time thrown among the People. For Conclusion, he was Nobly treated at a most sumptuous Royal Feast by the Nobles. A new Storm overclouded this Serenity: Bethlen instigated by Count Mansfield in the Month of july, New stirs and an Invasion into Hungary by Bethlen invaded Hungary again, whither the said Count joined with the Duke of Weymar (being beaten out of Germany, the Netherlands and Bohemia) was bending his forces, but both of them although additioned by forces from Bethlen, who resented his loss of Opulia and Ratibor, were vanquished by Wallensteyn. Who being afterwards recoiled by the Turks about Nitria, fought with dubious fortune against the said Mansfeldians, still recruiting upon every Disaster, as if they had been the Sons of Antaeus. But upon the news brought to Bethlen that 40. thousand Tartars his Confederates were slain in Poland, 1627. he found it high time to bethink of Peace, by which on shameful Conditions he departed out of Hungary, & quitted his Confederates Mansfield and Weymar, renouncing also his Tartarian friendship, with an Obligation to free all Christian Captives with the Turks. Mansfield suspecting this Collusion, with his most expedite and nimble Troops hasted to the Venetians, leaving the rest of his forces to Weymar, The Death of Count Mansfeld. but taken in Bosnia with a Flux, proceeding (as some report) from poison he took into his bowels, he expired his busy and versatile Soul there. Weymar also having possessed himself of Hohenwold and jabelunca, and designing his Efforts upon Hungary, discontented with those practices of the Transylvanian, And of the Duke of Weymar. soon wasted away, aged 32. years, much beloved and lamented by his party for his moderate, yet valiant actions and deportment in Silesia. Him Bethlen followed, tortured with such an excessive pain in his feet, that he commanded the soles of them to be lanced, to give passage to the fluid humour; to this was added the Disease of the Holy Fire, Sacer Ignis which gave occasion to the Papists Invectives, that all the Elements conspired against him, being persecuted with fire, And of Bethlen Gabor. water, iron, etc. and that his end was worthy of his Actions. He bequeathed to each of the Emperors a Horse, with Jewels, Anno 1628. Trappings, and Furniture, worth 40. thousand Guilders, to his Wife a 100 thousand Guilders and as many thousand Imperials, and florence, with 3 Royalty's, to hold and enjoy for her life; having given this testimony of Caesar, that it was a very hazardous thing to war with him, as a person who was neither depressed with adverse nor lifted up with prosperous fortune. By his Death Cassovia, Tockay, and all the places granted to him for his Life, reverted to the Emperor; and his Widow, although proclaimed Prince of Transylvania, yet wanting Title and Right as being a Stranger, whether spontaneously, or against her Will, quitted the Administration, having procured Stephon Czakius whom she loved, to be named for Prince, and endeavoured at the Ottoman Port to have him invested; but the Transylvanians rejecting the Princess, were divided into two other parts, some would have Stephen Bethlen, the Brother of the deceased Gabriel; Divisions in Transylvania about Election of a new Prince others stood for George Rakoczi, whose fortune and wonderful felicity, carried it from all his Competitors, Catharius the Agent at Constantinople, prevaricating and acting for Rakoczi, as did several Castellans by the liberality of the Princess granted unto Csakius, who took fortune to their Counsellor, Csakius speeds thither; and comes to Muncacksum, given him by the same hand and desired admission, but john Balling the Governor of the Place presenting the Ordnance against him, told him he had delivered it to Rakoczi, and had received the Hereditary Government of it for his rendition. Bethlen at the same time possessed himself of most of the other places in Transylvania, 1631. but by the detestable disloyalty of his Son Stephen, and his Son in Law David Zolyomi, and the disaffection of all foreign Princes, he was forced to abandon his pretensions, for Rakoczi invited by those two persons came to Varadin, where by their Suffrage and Advancement, he wrested the Principality from Stephen, Rakoczi established Prince of Transylvania. created Prince thereof, who being of a mild and quiet disposition, and more desirous of a private Life, by his own Interest promoted Rakoczi, against Czakius, and forgave his Son and Son in Law, not forgiven by God the just Avenger of their unnatural offence, (he himself receiving the name of Governor:) for not long after his Son Stephen, Unnatural Disloyalty punished. a youth otherwise of great learning and virtue, having been bred up with his brother Peter at Leyden, died at Ecsedium, his body being horribly eaten up with Worms: David Zolyomi was committed to perpetual Imprisonment by Rakoczi, whom he had helped to prefer. Caesar likewise had dispatched Esterhasius the Palatine of Hungary, with a strong Army to possess himself of Transylvania, but before his Arrival Rakoczi had settled himself; and by Stephen Bethlen the Governor of Dacia, pro hac vice, in an Irruption into Hungary, overthrew him and took several Cities; the Sultan himself, while yet the Peace was in force betwixt him and the Emperor, of his own accord sending 10000 men to Ersekuyvarum to his assistance, in testimony of his affection to, and approbation of Rakoczi, who wasted the Country on purpose to divert Esterhasius; wherefore the Emperor not willing to bring a greater War upon himself, Rakoczi incensed against the Emperor. by designing upon others, presently acquiesced. But this provocation determined not so on the part of Rakoczi, whose offence thereat, the Swede by an Embassy to him, so aggravated (finding the Germane War like to rest upon his own single Shoulders) by other fetches of the common Cause of Religion, etc. that Rakoczi began to arm, intending at once to be revenged of Caesar, Esterhausius, and Cszakius together, and to that purpose made sure of the protection and favour of the grand Signior, who assented to his proposed Enterprise, and Commanded the Bassa of Buda and the Moldavians to assist him therein. Csakius no less vigilant in his affairs, being supplied with money by Gabor's Widow, pressed an Engagement with Rakoczi, and continued and renewed it five several times by the indifference of Fortune, Csakius forceth his peace from Rakoczi. yet so distasteful to Rak●czi, that he was willing to a Peace, whereby Csakius was to enjoy what he held in Transylvania without any molestation. This Province thus settled, arose another intestine Feud; Stephen Bethlen with Peter his Son, had killed a Kinsman of Rakoczi's, and suspecting his Revenge, had gathered an Army of Turks and Tartars, and brought them to Gyula, out of mere fear intending to take upon him the Government, which he had for quietness before resigned. Rakoczi detesting this wavering faith of the Turks submitted to the Austrians, from whom he was supplied out of Silesia with three Regiments of Foot and one of Horse; against those the Turks opposed themselves, but by the cunning and Policy of james Gyori (a person skilled in their Language who pretended to be faithful to Bethlen, Turks assist against R●koczi and are defeated. and betrayed his and their Designs to Rakoczi) and by the valour of Sigismond Cornicsius, twenty five thousand of them were slain at Szalcula. Soon after David Zolyomi having leavyed 2000 Horse to the assistance of the King of Sweden, to whose War in Germany the Transylvanians were very much affected, Rakoczi either true to the Emperor, or suspecting this as ●ome design for his Father in law, disbanded all his Troops. This injury stuck so close to Zolyomi that he resolved to kill him as he was a hunting, The vengeance that pursued David Zolyomi. but his Conscience reclaiming, he warned Rakoczi that he should forbear hunting on his prefixed day, but to send some armed men, to such places, where they should find the Assassinates prepared for the Execution, who being accordingly discovered and slain, 1633. Solyomi, bound in Chains of the weight of 50 pound was cast into a most squalid and doleful dungeon, which had one only prospect against a Wall by a Window, of a Cubits length and breadth, where he was kept from any humane converse the whole course of his life: so that in what he sinned by advancing Rakoczi before his Father in law in that he was thus severely punished, alleviated only by the honourable respects showed him by Vrbanus Reoti the Governor of the Castle, who laboured all he could for his Enlargement; but neither Caesar's entreaties could prevail in that point. Bethlen, Bethlen raiseth a new war against Rakoczi when he could neither obtain Oblivion and indemnity for his late actions, nor procure his Son in law's deliverance, invited the Turks again, who had excused their late Expedition in behalf of Bethlen, protesting their exact observation of the Peace; but the Palatine versed in those frauds of the Infidel listed the Heyducks, and watched every event. Many Encounters happened betwixt Rakoczi and bethlen, and oftentimes with loss to the Turks, which so vexed the Sultan that he Commanded the Vizier to be flayed alive. But at last the business was composed by the mediation of Friends, and Bethlen restored acknowledge Rakoczi, whom the Turk again Confirmed. Ferdinand the second, 1637. being now Deceased, his eldest Son the third of that name, succeeded him in all his Dominions, and seemed to have restored to Hungaria and Transylvania, a most blessed Peace; had it not been for the Jesuits who raised new Troubles: For the Catholic Nobleses grudged that the Protestants by the former War had extorted some things in favour of their Religion, and the Lutherans had built a very beautiful Church at Presburg, Troubles about Religion in Hungary. which Caesar resenting had sent his inhibition, and disallowed his former concessions. The Protestants hereupon addressed themselves to Rakoczi as their Sanctuary and Anchor, who had been also offended with the Emperor upon this account: There was found at Varadin in the Vault of Ladislaus and Sigismond, a Treasure, with a Crown, Sceptre, and Jewels, one of which being a Diamant (as my Author hath it) was as big as a Hen's Egg set in a locket, which glittered and shone like a lighted Torch, there being an Anathema added that no man presumed to meddle with them, while the necessity of the Castle should require it: These Ferdinand demanded, but Rakoczi refused them. Add to this a worse Evil; It happened that so ne Hungarian Nobles, as Forgaczi, Illyeshazi, Maintained and abetted by Rakoczi. and others, turned Roman Catholics, and some Catholics obtained Lordships where the Protestant Religion was before exercised, which they took upon them to restrain, 1639. and converted their Churches to Catholic uses. These innovations and the force that obtruded them, Rakoczi desired the Emperor to remove, and to observe those Immunities and Privileges which he and the Estates had confirmed to the Protestants; but the Emperor, either not valuing Rakoczi, or secure of Hungary (for that the Turk engaged in the East, 1642. had Concluded a Peace for twenty years) put him off with continual delays; Rakoczi slighted by the Emperor. and raised an Army of Hungarians against the Swede, who nevertheless would not stir out of their Country. Rakoczi on the other side held Intelligence with General Torstenson then in Silesia, and resolved to Arm, having in vain mediated but for the restitution of three hundred Protestant Churches shut up by the Emperor; besides that there was a present Pique and grudge between him and Homonnai, who had driven away all the Protestants out of his Government, and had seized the Wines of Tockay, which were to be sent as the Annual present to the Grand Signior. There was at this time at the Transylvannia Court, 1644. the Ambassadors of Poland, Sweden, France, and Austria; the last of whom being slightly dismissed, Rakoczi Proclaimed open War against Ferdinand the third, War proclaimed by Rakoczi against Ferdinand and with 70000 men Invaded Hungary; the Reasons of which, published in a Manifesto were these; That since the last nineteen years, Hungary had been reckoned among the Hereditary Provinces, That Civil and secular Offices were conferred upon Ecclesiastical Persons, and Lands of maintenance assigned them; and Protestants put by from all places, and Jesuits introduced, against their Consent and Will. His manifest and successes. His first Effort was upon the Castles of Homonnai, which he ruined and demolished, committing great slaughter and rapine, using F●re and Sword to Extremity. Next he compelled Cassovia to a surrender, in vain defended by Count Forgacz. To oppose his further progress the Emperor dispatched away Count Buchain with twenty thousand men, while the Palatine was employed in raising Eight Thousand Hungariaus; the first Encounter proved not so prosperous to the Transylvanian; but the continual revolt of the Hungarians was cheaper than Victory, which now favoured him in his repulse of Adam Forgacz, from Rimaszombathum; Buchain was advised by Nadasdi to make a diversion by the way of Agria into Transylvenia, and so him him in by getting below him; but in this he only trifled away time, while Rakoczi (most of the strong places being possessed by the Catholic party) besieged Tyrnaw, which at last opened its Gates to General Douglasse and his Son Sigismond, where the Bishops and Noblemen (now Crestfallen) humbly entreated Canysius the Protestant Preacher of the place, to mediate with the Victor that he would take them into his Clemency; which was granted at his intercession. And now Rakoczi distrusting this eager favour of Fortune, Rakoczi yields to a Peace with the Emperor. inclined to a Composure, which Caesar more desirous of, both for that the Climate agreed not with his foreign Soldiery, and the huge price of grain, the unsuccessful siege of Cassovia, 1645. with the forced retreat of Bouchain to Presburgh, readily consented to, and hastily concluded, to the great vexation and anger of the Swede. This Peace was Proclaimed on St. Bartholomew's Day, by which seven Lordships in Hungary were confirmed to the Transylvanian, 90 Churches restored to the Protestants, and the rest of their Privileges confirmed to them. Torstenson thus forsaken of his Confederate was abandoned by his Fortune, General Torstenson abandoned by Rakoczi. and forced to rise from the siege of Prunna. In the mean while died the Palatine▪ to whom Drascovitius was substituted, and the Instrument of the Transylvanian Pacification was made public, Ferdinand the 4th. K. of Hungary. notwithstanding both parties in Hungary were as embittered as ever about the Extermination of the Jesuits, and ready to draw one upon another. The next year Ferdinand the fourth, was Crowned King of Hungary, 1646. the Peace continuing with the Turks, but so fallaciously that three hundred of them were got privily into Raab, Raab designed upon by the Turks. where being discovered by a Woman, they were all of them slain and the City preserved by the Divine favour and protection. In the Year 1648 died Prince Rakoczi, to whom Succeeded his Son George; as Ferdinand the fourth, Crowned King of the Romans, Rakoczi's and Ferdinand's Death. a Prince of more Hopes than Glory, after he had lived to the age of 22 years, Deceased in the Year 1653. and Leopold Ignatius his Brother succeeded him in all his Dignities, Kingdoms, and Dominions In the Year 1656 the Swede having Invaded Poland, The Swedes invade Poland. and almost Conquered the hither part (so that the many Garrisons he was forced to Man, had almost drained his Army) by his Ambassadors invited Prince Rakoczi to the Spoil and his Assistance; and such was the evil Fate of Transylvania, and Rakoczi in particular, that alured by the great advantages the Ruin of that Kingdom promised him, he Confederated himself with the Swede, Rakoczi joins with him. maintaining Correspondencies and intrigues with all his Allies, particularly, with the pretended Protector of England, to whom he sent an Envoy to transact his Concerns of Money; to the payment whereof the King of Sweden had by pact obliged the said Usurper, the consideration and satisfaction whereof, are of no great moment to this discourse. The Transylvanians betaking themselves to their Arms, from which they had been longer disused than throughout the whole series of their History (the Turks having been sometime before engaged against the Persians, and lately against the Venetians, and labouring with their own mis-carriages and errors of Government) little imagined they should wear them so long (if ever it be their hap to put them off without parting with their Liberty and Religion) and to such a Calamitous Defence of their own Country. In fine, an Army of 16000 men was presently raised and put under the Command of Backos Gabor, which were the Van of those Forces that Rakoczi intended for this Expedition, The Transylvanians ravage Poland. himself following in person with another Army; who as soon as they were entered Poland in most horrible manner fell a ravaging and Sacking the Towns, and pillaging the Churches, and defacing the beauties thereof in hatred of the Roman Catholic Religion; so that a fearful Desolation was made as they passed. To pass by other occurrents of his proceedings in this Kingdom, Cracovia taken by the Swedes and Rakoczi. after he had joined with the Swedes, the Enterprise of Cracovia may suffice for instance of his Hostility in this Kingdom, which he besieged, and after a short Defence had it surrendered to him (the Swedes and he, demolishing almost the City of Casimir, built on the other side the Weysel) it being one of those places which was to be assigned him with the Palatinate thereof, for his share, in recompense of his Service. This place in the balance of the Swedish Fortune being besieged by Feild Marshal Lubomirsky, Rakoczi came to its relief, and gave a notable Defeat to the Pole, Rakoczi's actions in Poland. who raised his siege and fled before him. The said Prince afterwards embodying with the Swedes in Lithuania, took in the strong City of Biscia Litinsky being there personally present with the King of Sweden, and where he took his last leave of him, returning to Samoysch, to secure his footing and maintain what he had gotten; but the Danish War intervening and calling the King of Sweden away to the Defence of his own Kingdom; and the Duke of Brandenburg falling off likewise, and renouncing that King's Interest; besides that, the Pole had newly made a League with the House of Austria, who upon Caution and Articles were to supply him with an Army of 16000 men, then upon their March out of Silesia; Deserted by the Swede. Rakoczi perceived that the whole brunt of the War was like to fall upon him, now deserted and abandoned by all his Partakers. And therefore he thought it high time to apply himself to the ways of Peace (the Turk having also countermanded him sometime before at the instance of the Polish Ambassador at Constantinople, Rakoczi commanded by the Grand Signior to retire out of Poland. who it was thought, had bribed Rakoczi into that disfavour and hatred with the Grand Signior, who now peremptorily Commanded him, he having delayed to comply with his first Orders of return, so surrender his Principality to his Cousin Reada or Radus) and in tendency thereunto made offer of a surrender of all those places he had taken during this War, And to surrender his Principality. thinking thereby also to have satisfied the Tukish Emperor, provided he might have safe egress out of that Kingdom, which was now very hazardous, for that the Poles and Austrians had waylaid him in the mountainous passages by which he must needs return. But the Poles so stomached the loss & prejudice they received from him causelessly, especially his Church-robberies, that they delayed him with an answer to this effect: That being tied to such Articles with the House of Austria, and the King of Hungary, they could make no Agreement without them: which artifice being understood by Rakoczi, more Forces drawing likewise against him; besides that, another party of 12000. of them had Invaded his Dominions in Hungary, and in Revenge burnt down thirty six Villages; he resolved to make his way with his Sword while there was a possibility of effecting it, which with much difficulty and hazard, Fights his way out of Poland. being several times set upon, and forced to fight his way; by good Guides and happy Conduct he achieved, but brought a sorry Army home in Comparison of what he marched out with. This same year Died the Emperor Ferdinand the third, 1657. leaving behind him two Sons, Ignatius Leopol●us, and Charles joseph; the eldest of whom being a minor, The death of Eerdinand the 3d. Emperour● much canvasing there was about the Election of a Caesar; for that by the Custom and Golden Bull of the Empire no person under the Age of eighteen years (of which he lacked one) is Capable of being chosen to that Dignity. Notwithstanding he had been Crowned King of Hungary soon after the Death of his Brother Ferdinand (who as was mentioned before Deceased in 1653.) with the usual Solemnities, which we forbear to recite, because mentioned at large before. Prince Rakoczi being thus retreated into Transylvania, was there again by a Chiaux Commanded to resign the Principality to Radus; but he, hoping either to make his Peace at the Port with the usual Purchase, and so countermine his Enemies, or trusting at last to his Interest in the Soldiery, and his People, and his own Abilities (as indeed he was a Prince very well skilled in Military Affairs, and of personal Valour, and great Spirit) delayed any such surrender, but strengthened himself all that he could, and dispatched away Ambassadors to crave Aid of the Neighbouring Princes against this threatened Encroachment of the Turks, but the Pole and the Austrians had conceived such rancour against him, the first for his Invasion, and the other for his League with the Swede, that they abandoned him to his Fortune. Nevertheless the Princes of Moldavia, and Valachia, promised their assistance, as their Common Cause; while the Turk disturbed at home this Year 1658. by the Mutininies of the Janissaries and the Insurrections of the Bassa of Aleppo, The Vayvod of Valachia worsted in his Quarrel. permitted Rakoczi to be quiet; but the next year he thrust in an Army by way of Valachia, against whom that Vayvod making opposition was by them totally routed, and eight thousand of his men slain, and he forced by a timely submission and great Presents and promises of Hostility against Rakoczi, to purchase his Peace and Establishment in his Dignity. Soon after the Bassa of Buda being Commanded upon the same service, marched to Lippa, and thence to Arad Town and Castle, whose Suburbs the Transylvanians fired, which the Turks Officers who had the Avantgurd perceiving and supposing the Enemy had deserted the Place, in great haste and disorder marched to the quenching of the Flame; but the Transylvanian and Hungarian Forces not far distant, making advantage of this Rout, and falling upon them in the smoke, Turk's Defeated at Arad. so routed them that they were driven back to their Body with great loss, where being received in with their Wagons with which they were barricadoed, the whole Army of Rakoczi advanced, and with their Great Cuns so shivered them, that they were compelled to forsake their Camp, and to fly, in which many of them perished in the River Mor. There were here taken Prisoners, Mustapha Beg, the Bassa of Agria, the Coll. Aga of the Janissaries, the Aga of Buda, and Aga of Lippa, the Beg of Waitzen was drowned, with many other men of note. For this defeat the grand Signior threatened to flay the Bassa of Buda, if he did not presently bring him Rakoczi's head, and forthwith Imprisoned the Emperors and the French Kings Ambassadors. In 1660. the Turk sent a greater Force than before, into Transylvania. In the mean while Prince Rakoczi marched with a considerable Force before Hermanstad, and it came to a Bloody Encounter, The Turks again defeated at Hermanstadr. wherein Rakoczi deported himself valiantly, killing 17 men with his own hand; and so the Infidels for That Bout were forced to quit the Field, and leave the Victory to the Transylvanians, leaving likewise upon the Place, 6 or 7000 Turks, and Tartars. Rakoczi in the pursuit received five wounds, and five days after this Fight (june the sixth) he was brought to Great-Waradiu, The death of Rakoczi. where he departed this Life. The fall of this Prince balanced the Advantage of the Tictory, and exceedingly animated the Turks, who pressing more and more eagerly upon the Transylvanians, drove them every where to their strong Holds: Whereupon General Souches had Order from Vienna, to draw toward Transylvania, and make it good against the Turks; and he forthwith marched thither with a considerable Body, and possessed himself of several Holds. july the 14 of the same year, the Turk with 100000 Men laid close Siege to Great-Waradin, which was stoutly defended by one Colonel Gaude a Scotchman, the Governor of the Town. During the Siege, the Turk sent abroad strong Parties to subdue smaller Towns, forcing the People unto several works, as the building of Bridges, and the Like, putting them to the Sword at last for their Reward: At one time killing 150 Christians, and at another, Loading 20 Wagons with Christians Heads which they carried away. On the 6 of August, That brave Soldier and Governor Colonel Gaude was slain by a shot, Varadin yielded. and (the Besieged being left without any hope of Relief) This strong place surrendered unto the Turk upon Accord; being a passage into Transylvania, Hungary, and Poland. After the death of Rakoczi, his Cousin Radus being disliked of by the Turk as unfit for his designs, there started up one Barckay a ●reature of the Turks, making himself Prince of Transylvania, whom the Turk protected and supplied with Forces, whereby he undertook to reduce several places, siding in pretence with General Souches (who well understood this violence of the Turks, to be a design not only upon Transylvania, but also upon the Empire itself,) and making large promises under hand, that whatsoever he got by the Turkish Aid, was meant for the good of the Emperor, to whom he intended a just and Honourable Restitution, reserving only Waradin to remain under the Power of the Prince of Ttransylvania; but the matter proved otherwise in the end. Toward the end of this Year, a Blazing-Starre appeared with the Tail toward Dalmatia, and the Head toward Transylvania, which the ensuing Calamities portended sadly of the War. Soon after This, the Labolizish Peasants Rebelled against the Christians in Transylvania, whom they partly put to the sword, some they took Prisoners, and others they sold to the Turk, the right Successor of Rakoczi was Remini janos (by many Transylvanians received and entertained for such) who was bitterly persecuted by Barckay and the Turks. In 1661. janos' fought them at Thassabat, Remini Janos the successor of Rakoczi oppressed with numbers. and made a great slaughter: but at last, oppressed with Numbers, he left Transylvania, and retreated to Tockay. And now it appeared that the Turks Business was not to stop there, but to fall also upon Hungary. Whereupon his Imperial majesty granted Commissions for the raising of an Army, which was dispatched part of it into Transylvania. In the Interim; Count Nichola Serini began to look to himself, and raised a strong Fort on the Wall over against Canischa Naming it Serinswar: getting together a strong Body of Croats, and other Nations, that lay heavy upon the Quarters thereabout: which the Turks stomached not a little, however they carried it fair at present, and a while they talked of nothing but Peace, but at last they broke out into high expressions, that they would have Serinswar demolished, Count Serini punished, and Transylvania subjected to the Power of the Turk by way of Reparation. None of which followed; but the Christians looked upon it as every man's Interest to do his best to defend himself against the Ambition and Outrages of This common Enemy; A Warbegun in Hungary. and there being nothing now to be expected but a great Turkish War, which was already begun by Parties; the Christians entered upon the Borders of Turkey, drawing toward Stul-Weissenburg, and Offen: and they subdued Zamock, Warda, Erzy, and Hirr: all these being inconsiderable Houses, and Castles, which with their Defenders were blown up, and fired. While this was doing, the Turks gathered together a Mighty Army consisting of Asiatick, African, and European people. To this numerous Army, they had likewise provided an incredible proportion of Victuals, Ammunition, and Artillery. Nevertheless, several Treaties were set a foot, which the Turk so long insisted upon, till he had gained his End, and drawn a formidable Power into the Field, to break in upon the Christians, who laboured as much as in them lay, to preserve the Peace; seeming to take small notice of the Turks hostile preparations. The Army of the Christian: in Hungary consisted of 38000 Germane Soldiers, who had the Turks for their Open, and the Hungarians for their Private Enemies (the Animosity being so great, that many times it came to Blows betwixt the Germans and the Hungarians.) These Troops finding themselves under many inconveniencies, partly from the Hungarians, who denied accommodation to the Germans, and partly from Diseases arising from the disagreement of the Climate, were much weakened and diminished. Hungary is questionless a very brave Country, and abounds in Wine and other Fruits; which taken to Excess, breed dangerous Surfeits. The Hungarians in their deportment are generally Grave, and Modest, but being Affornted by the Germans, and others not of their own Religion, they are Apt to Revenge, and hard to be Reconciled. Toward the Month of October, The Germane Army moulders away. the Dutch Army was exceedingly pestered with Surfeits, so that betwixt those that died; a Number that lay sick, and others that were carried out of the Country, it fell to a low Ebb: and moreover; being then as far as Clausenburg, in Transylvania, they were put to some distress for Victuals and Forage: the Enemy increasing daily more and more against them for in those Parts the Turkish Power was strongest. About this time, the Upstart Prince Barckay fell into disgrace, and the Turk preferred one Apaffis to that dignity in his stead. Against Him, Remini janos bore up, Opposing him, and his Promoters in the head of 8000 men, and fortune so far befriended him in the first Engagement, as to deliver his great Enemy Barkay into his hands, whose Head he caused to be struck off, and then for a while the people flocked in to him, and Augmented his Army; yet neither their aid nor his valour availed him when being surrounded on all sides, and striving to clear his passage, he seemed only careful how he might fall with Honour: for his Army through many skirmishes, Diseases, and great Scarcity of Provision, was melted away, and hope of Succour there was none left; the Germane Army by the like Accidents being weakened and put to a Retreat. Upon these Terms it was, that he committed himself to places of more security, J●mes forced to desist from his Claim. and in Sakmar, He with others, expected the Issue of the Treaty. But the Turks, (as has been said already) making use of a Treaty only for their own advantage, put themselves into a stronger posture: In the mean time discharging their Choler with great indignation, as well against the Valiant Venetians, (that have held them tack so long in Candia) as against the neutral Null; and now and then against the half-conquered Transylvanians; but not a word all this while, nor so much as a look of displeasure against Hungary. This Deceit of a Treaty lasted till the Year 1663. and then the Fury of these Infidels broke out, not only upon Transylvania, and Hungaria; but upon some of the Emperor's Hereditary Countries also. Upon july the 17. the Grand Vizier came in great Pomp and Magnificence to Offen, The Turks appear with a formidable Army in Hungary. encamping himself in the Pesterfield, being four Germane miles in Compass. His Army was upward of a hundred thousand men, above one hundred great Guns, and of Wagons, and Beasts, a number not to be believed. His first work was to lay two Ship-bridges over the Danube; the one near to Gran, and the other not far from Parkham. His forces being quartered about those parts in Prodigious Multitudes, it was as yet doubtful, whether he would fall upon Newhausel, or Raab; having his eye indifferently upon both, and lying still for a good while without action. But the design had showed itself much sooner, if a continual fall of Rain, and the Overflow of the Danube had not hindered him: However at length, he passed some Thousands of his Army over the Bridge near Parkham toward the side of Newhausel; when immediately a Report was spread by some of the Peasants that were turned to the Turk, that the River had torn their Ship-bridges, and that those 4000 Turks that had passed over, were now Cut off from the Main body. This Rumour it was that inveigled the Governor of Newhausel (Count Forgatz) into a Courageous but an unhappy Resolution, which was to fall upon those 4000 Turks, upon the supposition, that the Miscarriage of the Bridge had cut off their Retreat. It is very true, that he was earnestly dissuaded form that Attempt, Count Forgatz defeated. and told, that the Body was greater than he imagined, but still persisting in his Resolve to fight them, upon the 28 of july, with his Hungarians, Hussars and Heyducks, and 11 Troops of Germans, and 500 Musquetiers (in all 6000 strong) he marched up to them, and finding the Enemy four times stronger than he expected, became sensible of the Abuse although alas! for the Infidels having gotten certain Intelligence of the Christians design, and of their coming, caused the Bridges presently to be repaired, which they had purposely disordered, and marching over with a strong power surrounded them. The Hungarians and Hussars, that were appointed to stand for a Reserve, seeing the Enemy come on so strong, betook themselves to flight; but the Germans and Heyducks that gave the Onset behaved themselves stoutly, and sold a dear Victory to the Turks. At last by Multitudes they were overcome, and those that could not get away were miserably Cut, and Mangled. Forgatz, and some few others escaped to Newhausel. This Combat lasted about three hours, and about 3000 of the Germans, and Heyducks were put to the Sword. After this Victory, the Turks being therewith encouraged, and the Christians not a little dejected, the Enemy made ready to lay a Formal Siege unto Newhausel: which after many Attempts and Approaches they Battered so furiously, The Siege of Newhausel. that Frederick and Serin-Sconces were beaten to the ground, and with incredible Labour and delving, raised a Mount of Earth so high that from thence, they could command the Town, and beat the besieged from the Walls. Whereupon the Hungarians whispered one another to Surrender, (out of a fear to dispute it any longer) which moved the Garmans' likewise to speak of an Accord, and sent to the Grand Vizier demanding honourable Conditions, whose Answer was, that they should set down their own Terms, leaving only their Great Guns in the Fort. On the 26 ' of September the Christians marched out with 2422 Sound, An Invasion into Moravia. and Armed men, and four Peice of Ordnance. At this Surrender, the Enemy got seventy Piece of Ordnance; great store of Arms, Powder, Wine, Meal, and Corn. In the mean while, some 1000 of Tartars, Moldavians, and Null, as bad Brutes as the worst of the Infidels, drawn hither in hope of plunder, made their way over the Waegh by force, putting those Christians to the Sword that Guarded the Pas●, and so crossing the Mountains, they entered into Moravia, and the parts about Olmitz, which Towns, together with a great number of the neighbouring Villages, they burned to the Ground. Their Guides and Leaders they had from among the Boors of the Country, who most unnaturally and treacherously showed them the ways and passes, and had therefore for their pains some share of the booty. This Havoc lasted in Moravia 10 days, and then they passed over the March-stream into Austria (at which time, the Country People with their best moveables were fled to Vienna.) At length, having laden themselves with all manner of Booty, they returned to the Camp at Newhausel, where they exposed the Men and Beasts, which they had taken up in several places, to common-sale in the Market: While these things were doing, the Turks busied themselves against the Fort Serinswar, and by way of Stratagem attempted Clausenburgh in Transylvania; but at both Places they were repulsed with loss and shame. At which time Count Serini with a considerable Body of Croatians, Count Serini made Generalissimo. and other neighbouring People; made a sudden Incursion into Turkey, to the great damage of the Infidels. At his Return the said Count was made Generalissimo of all the Emperor's forces, then rendezvouzed at Presburgh under their former General Montecuculi. Newhausel being reduced, which was supposed, and vainly hoped, would have disappointed the Turks progress, and success for this year (being declined so far as the depth of Winter) the Grand Vizier undertook some farther Conquest; and with his Army, leaving a sufficient Garrison, and other numbers to repair and better fortify the Fort, by bringing the River Niutre round about it, marched towards Presburgh, the Capital City or Mehropolis of Lower Hungary, and with his approach gave out ●umours of his resolution to attaque it, relying on his first Fortune, and those popular insinuations he had spread abroad of his reality, justice, and tenderness to such places as should come into his Master's Protection, with which thriving Artifice he had already gained upon the credulity of most of the Peasants and indefensible places. Besides the Honour of the place, The Ground Vizier's aspect upon Presburgh. as the Repository of the Crown of Hungary (which the Hungarians most Religiously reverence, as placing the safety and Glory of their Nation therein, and which being seized, would have Entitled the winner and wearer to the Kingdom) the convenience thereof as freeing his way to Vienna, on one part; and to Commorra, Raab, or Newhausel on the other; and contrarily incomodating his attempt upon the Island of Schut, by its Neighbourly Correspondence and Assistance in case of Danger, where at present the General Count Serini was enquartered, was a great motive and enticement to an Attempt against it. But such had been the Vigilance and Care of Count Strozzi, a Famous and experienced Soldier, in providing and furnishing the City, wherein the hope of the Kingdom was concerned, and his Courage, and all other excellent qualities of a Governor, so known and believed by this Discreet Vizier, that contenting himself with the submission of Modern, St. George, Posing, and other places that lay open and exposed to his Power, and the bravery and gallant Designment of so high an Enterprise, with the unimpeded conduct of the Affair; he retreated honourably: and as if he had proceeded so far merely upon a plot and Design to surprise some places by his sudden Return, Niutra taken by the Vizier. he presently invested Niutra, a place near Newhausel, and as well Fortified, and more respected, because of its Ecclesiastical Concernment, as being a Bishops See; and by terrifying Menaces and preparations for a storm, soon wrought upon the Defendants to a Surrender, who by the Articles thereof were conveyed to Presburgh. The speedy and lucky Event of this rendition, Tyrnaw likewise and other places. was effectual to his practices on other places; for upon the same score Tyrnaw, and some other Towns thereabouts, opened their Gates and submitted to him, upon his Common terms of Religion and Liberty; which Success invited him to the siege of Schinta, a very strong and considerable Fortress, and a Magazine of a great and the best quantity of the Emperor's Artillery; but by the Fidelity and Valour of the Governor and his men, was repulsed thence, and glad to abandon the Enterprise, for that October was more than half spent, and the Climate did much incommodate his Asian and African Soldiery. Therefore to provide them of warmer Winter Quarters, Comes before Schinta in vain. to keep them well and in health against the Spring, he repassed his Great Guns with some of his Army, over his Ship-bridge to Gran or Strigonium, rum ouring that when he had disposed of those unuseful pieces in the depth of Winter, he would return himself with his Europeans to prosecute the War; but in fine, he passed over his whole Army, being followed in his Rear, in expectation of advantage, The Vizier departs out of Hungary. by General Serini, who having parted with General Montecuculi (conjoined in attendance of the Newhausel Design upon the Island of Schut) did at last cut off some six hundred Janissaries, with two hundred Pesonio's, or Baggage people, engaged in the defence thereof, which they resolutely maintained, by barricadoing themselves among the Wagons, so that Serini's Hussars were forced to alight and follow them a foot in their advantages, and there Courageously slew them. This was some expiation of that Defeat given to Count Forgaz very near the same place, His rear attaqued. as a fortnight before his Brother and he had Defeated two great parties, but not with so great success. This happened about the last of October, and so those parts of this side the Danow, conceived some joyful hopes of a respite till the coming of the Spring. But the Vizier by those other after accessions had so strongly fixed himself, by leaving a Garrison of 4000 men in Newhausel, and 1500 in Niutre, besides a body of 10000 men to be ready to assist upon all occasions, that the Christians are still kept to their Arms, to attend their motion and to Guard themselves. And to increase the Danger, Apaffi the Prince of Transylvania, Apaffi appears for the Turks. whom they looked upon as under a Constraint of Compliance with the Turks, and a secret wellwisher to the Christian Cause, discovered himself a Declared and professed Enemy, being inveigled with an investiture of those places taken this Campagnia, and upon the total Conquest, with the Crown of Hungary▪ For as soon as they were rid of the Infidels, he wi●h his half Christians, Null, Moldavians, intermixed with Tartars, and his own plundering Transylvanians, undertook the Lieutenant-ship of the Winter War; those Nations being better able, as enured to the Climate, to undergo the extremities of the weather. Apaffi's first Design was upon the Berg Towns, 〈◊〉 Actions or Mine-Hills, whence the Hungarian Gold is fetched, which as soon as he had parted with the Grand Vizier, then retreating to Belgrade, he attempted, and this the easier for that there was no resistance in readiness to oppose him; the Forces that were raised by the Counts of Cochary and Tekelly, in the Upper Hungary, for the most part (for that the Lower was already joined with Serini, He Attempts the Mine Towns. or awed by the Turks) were a little before (maugre the Enemy's Design of impeding them) already arrived to the gross of the Army; which also for want of necessaries for Man and Horse, devoured by the Turks was now dispersed into Quarters. The two first obstacles of his Design upon the Mine-Towns; and which barred his entrance, were the two Towns of Levents and Novigrad, reputed one of the prime places of Upper Hungary; Levents was also well appointed, Novigrad and Leventz yielded to Apaffi. having in it a Castle Manned with Courageous Soldiers, and firmed with thick Walls, flankers, and Turrets, that accordingly gave the Enemy a rude and unwelcome entertainment, but their numbers being not to be wearied, and no Relief to be expected by the besieged, it was yielded by Agreement, and the Articles, according to the modern Policy of the Turks, punctually observed. From thence Apaffi marched to Novigrad, lying further in Upper Hungary, which after a stout but short resistance not without suspicion that the Governor was of Apaffi's party (more obvious now by his retreat into the Enemy's Country, and the neutrality or rather assistance of the whole Province, as to the generality, towards Apaffi) was rendered likewise and the Garrison dismissed, but not into Christian quarters, being set to work, and enjoined to be in a readiness to assist their late Besiegers. The Enemy encroaching thus upon the Mine Towns, some Regiments which could be best got together, were sent to enforce them, and to hinder the enemy from settling their Winter Quarters in those places, which were nevertheless much despaired of, for that Apaffis with his Aids threatened Cass●via the Metropolis of Upper Hungary with a present siege, Apaffi seizeth some of the Mine Towns. as he did in effect beleagure Fillek, some ten miles distant, prejudging that: the Christians▪ if once able to take the Field, would carry the War into these Quarters, of which therefore they would betimes possess themselves; and therefore notwithstanding the prevention aforesaid, they soon after seized on Shoninitz, Cre●nitz, and other Towns of the Mines; and by threatening Letters and Summons terrified the People thereabouts to an acquiescence and submission under their Command: They faced likewise Tockay (the strongest Hold of all) with Parties; but neither their Courage, Multitudes, Practices, or Hopes, served them to the Adventure of a siege. Naverthelesse to countenance such resolutions, they spread rumours abroad, as if the Grand Vizier would presently return, and Orders were indeed to that purpose dispatched to the Magistrates of● Frystad to make ready two Bridges over the Waegh, so broad as that whole Squadrons might pass over there a breast, upon the design of another Irruption into Moravia. This news caused Count Serini, who till then continued in the Island of Schut▪ observing the Designs of them at Newhausel, to put himself into motion, which presented him with some considerable booties (but inconsiderable parties) designed for Constantinople; Count Serini moves from his Quarters. and that was all he was able to do; the Auxiliaries of the Empire amounting in all not to above 8000. men, under the Command of the Count of Hohenlo, (whose Ancestors were famous in the Low Country War) by their surfeits upon the Fruits of the Country, which are in great abundance in the Hereditary Dominions, being so Diseased that they were in no condition or capacity for any field service; to increase these Auxiliaries the Swedes were near their arrival from Bremen, with seven hundred Horse well mounted; but now like to have met with some danger at Erford, as the Hessen Darmsted aids perished with a greater misfortune upon the Danubius in their passage to Vienna. Neither were the Frontier Garrisons better Conditioned, by want of many necessaries, even Raab, and Commorra, where the Officers that surrendered Newhansel had been newly acquitted, so that amidst so many exigences and straits every thing was feared to excess. The Emperor himself was at this time departing from Vienna to the Diet he had summoned at Regenspurgh, The Emperor to the diet at Regensburg. to Consider with the Princes of Germany of some quick expedient to redress those evils, leaving the Archduke Charles joseph, to Govern in his absence, who (to add affliction to misery) is since Deceased, The Death of the Archduke Charles Joseph. and the direct Line of the Imperial Family (save in the Person of the present Emperor) totally extinguished; a matter of no small moment to some Designs in the world, especially since the Pope and the French were so near a Rupture; yet to alleviate the present distress, Providence was pleased to bestow on the Vigilance and Conduct of Count Serini, a very remarkable success. Some Forces of Apaffi intermingled with Tartars, and many Turks, pursuing their Design of another Invasion into Moravia; having also an eye upon the Island of Schut, had privily laid a Bridge over the River Mur, and had passed two thousand Horse already over it; of which Serini having good and timely notice by a discharge of a Cannon, he rose from his post, and with his Troops so fiercely charged them, that betwixt surprised and dismayed, and fairly worsted, they betook themselves back to the Bri●ge, where rancountring with numbers of their fellows passing over in great haste to them, they could neither go forward, nor backward, but were forced to take the River, which spared none: there escaped very few of those two thousand. This was done in the morning, Novemb. 27. when Serini brought two field pieces and 300. of his Foot to face the Enemy, The Turks defeated in their passage over the Mur, by Count Serini. who stood on the other side the Water and managed a revengeful Skirmish all the day long, and then retreated towards Canisia, from whence they are dreaded to reinforce this their first attempt, being exceedingly enraged at this disgraceful disappointment. There was mention made in the Diet, of Mars. Turenne to succeed in the Supreme Command in Hungary, by means of an Invitation and request to the French King, but it was more out of compliment to oblige that King, than any such resolution of the States of the Empire, who have found it the greatest difficulty of the whole affair as to the Ricks aid, to satisfy the Pretensions and Ambitions of their own Princes to that Command, and in fine have concluded without constituting any Generalissimo, but left the Army to their distinct Generals of Horse and Foot. The Emperor's General is Count Mountecuculi, the Field Marshals are the Paltsgrave of Sultzbach for Horse, and General Spar a Subject of the marquis of Brandenburg, of Foot. Over the Aids, the General of Horse is Leopold marquis of Baden; of Foot, Vlrick Duke of Wittenberg, with Count Fugger M. Gen. of Horse, Duke Adolph of Holstein, Duke Gustave of Durlach, (the Younger House of Baden) and Baron de Souches Major General of Foot. The Aids of the four Circles of the Rhine without their Auxiliaries will amount to 28000 men, The force of the Empire sum●ed up. the other circles out of which the hereditary Provinces of Austria, Bohemia, and are to be excepted will make as many more, which with the 13000 advanced by the Pope, and the French Forces, and the aforenamed Auxiliaries will make up a body of 80000 men, besides the Emperors own Army, which will amount and is to be made up to 40000 men Effectif. In the mean time of these consultations at Regensburg, Apaffi the Prince of Transylvania, was driving on his designs in that Province, Several places revolt in Transylvania to Ap●ffi. working upon the Emperor's necessities and the discontents of the Garrisons of Zekelkeyt and Clausenburg, which in conclusion for want of pay, dismissed their Officers and submitted the Towns to Him, having been held by the Emperor ever since the Troubles and death of Prince Rakoczi. Zacmar also wavered, but was happily reclaimed by some moneys that came opportunely, to satisfy the Soldiers. The year proving very mild and gentle in the depth of winter, had frustrated many designs of the Tartars, who had taken up their Quarters in Hungary to be ready for some Invasion, whereupon overburdening the places and Garrisons they were in, and provisions growing scarce, after some quarrels 'twixt the Turks and them for victual, they dispersed themselves for better accommodation. At the same time Count Nicholas Serini the Emperor's General took advantage of this their separation, and the benefit of a sudden Frost, and with his Army consisting of between 30 and 35000 men, among whom were the Germane aids under Count Hohenlo, made an Invasion into the Turks Country, Count Serini's expedition into the Turks Country. in the lower Hungary and parts of Croatia, as far as Esseck near the conjunction of the Danow and the River Dravus, a place infamous for the descent of Caczianerus King Ferdinand's the First's General, and the noble Lodr●●us, defeated there hard by, by the policy of the Turks, as mentioned before. This Bridge it the only passage the Turks have, besides sudden shifts by boats, etc. for conveyance from Belgrade, otherwise called Greek We●ss●nburg, and those parts possessed by the Turk, both for Wagon and Artillery, so that the 〈◊〉 Count well knowing what disadvantage the breaking down thereof would cause to the Turks designs at the approaching Campagnia, resolved to destroy it or render it unserviceable to the Enemy; and fortune so favoured the Enterprise, The Bridge of Esseck burnt by him. that Maugre all opposition made by the Enemy, he in one night and day had so maimed and disjointed it, that a great part of it fell into the Dravus, the rest being set on Fire towards the Turks side, but hastily quenched by them; since when they have been very busy in repairing it, the Grand Vizier storming exceedingly, that it was no better defended, and (for which he hath called the Officers appointed to maintain it, into question for their lives) but it is judged impossible, that it can be re-edified this Summer, so as to be made able to bear Carriages, which will be a great stop to the Turks progress by way of lower Hungary. Count Serini having finished this exploit with so good success, Count Serini lays waste the Country round about. laid waste all the Country round about of this (that is) the Northern side of the Dravus, betwixt that and the Danow, among which were many places formerly the possessions of his noble Ancestors (who enjoyed a 〈◊〉 and plentiful revenue in those parts, increased by the additions of the patrimony of the Carlovitii and Torquati, which fell-likewise to them) but now thralled to those Infidels; insomuch that some have reckoned ●1000 Villages burnt by him, but the Turkish desolation hath scarce left so many for him to destroy. This work being over, and having thus revenged himself for the spoil of his Fortunes, he thought it time to return; for that there were several confident rumours that the Enemy with a great body was marching after him, although it proved a mere lie raised and industriously spread by the Turks for fear of further mischief to be done them by his staying in those parts, where h●s name was grown most formidable, and the effects of his conduct highly dreadful. But yet he made not such haste, but that in his way home he made a halt at Quinque Ecclesiae and summoned it, The Town of Quinque Ecclesiae stormed and sacked by him. which the Tow●men seemed to entertain, and by that means drew some of his Forces not suspecting Hostility under reach of their Cannon, which they furiously discharged upon them, and killed some Eminent Officers and men of valour; which Action so incensed Serini, that he gave order for a present storm, by which the Town was mastered and entered, and the plunder thereof given to the Soldiers, and soon after sacked and set on Fire, the Soldiers and such as escaped, flying into the Castle, which held out and was in prudence given over by the General, whose men having been so much toiled and wearied already were in no condition for a Siege, and a sudden attempt was improbable of success. Here were slain many Officers, the greatest number whereof was of the Germans under Count Holenlo. From hence, passing by Zigeth (the Town and Castle whereof were so famously defended by his Grandfather as too tight and tedious a piece of work) he fell upon Segess a Town distant Westward two Hungarian miles (18 English) from Zigeth, S●gess taken and Garrisoned by him. which he took by assault, with the loss of more Officers of note, requited upon the Turks by a promiscuous slaughter of them all (as for Tartars no quarter was any where allowed them) and there he left a Garrison in the very midst of the Enemy's Country and came home by Canysia, Count Strini's honourable Return. which place he had designed to besiege, but his Army being much diminished, the Enterprise is laid aside, till he shall be recruited with new Levyes, answerable to so great an undertaking, in which affair he is at present employed; but it is feared the sudden appearance of the Grand Signior who will open this Campagnia in person, will put him on other Counsels and designs. FINIS.