Sigismund Báthory

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Sigismund Báthory
File:Zsgmondbáthory.jpg
Born Zsigmond Báthory
(1572-03-20)March 20, 1572
Nagyvárad (today Oradea)
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.[1]
Libochovice
Nationality Hungarian
Ethnicity Hungarian
Spouse(s) Archduchess Maria Christina of Austria (1574-1621)

Sigismund Báthory (Hungarian: Báthory Zsigmond, Romanian: Sigismund Bathory) (1572 – March 27, 1613) was Prince of Transylvania.

Biography

Hailing from the Báthory family's Somlyó branch, he was the son of Christopher Báthory, Voievod of Transylvania, and nephew of Stephen Báthory, King of Poland. He was elected prince in his father's lifetime, but being quite young at his father's death, the government was entrusted to a regency.[2]

In 1588 he attained his majority, and joined the league of Christian Princes against the Turks. The obvious danger of such a course caused no small anxiety in the principality, and the diet of Torda (today: Turda, Romania) even went so far as to demand a fresh coronation oath from Sigismund. Upon his refusal to render it, the council members threatened him with deposition. Ultimately Báthory got the better of his opponents, and executed all whom he got into his hands (1595).[3]

In 1595, at Gyulafehérvár (today Alba Iulia), Sigismund Báthory signed a treaty with Michael the Brave, the Voivod of Wallachia, in which Wallachia came under sovereignty of Transylvania, requiring Sigismund to send Michael the Brave an aid for fighting the Ottomans.

On August 13, 1595 at the Battle of Călugăreni near the Neajlov river, Michael defeated a Turkish army led by Sinan Pasha. Despite the victory Michael, having too few troops to continue the war, retreated toward Transylvania. Joining Sigismund Báthory's 40,000-strong army led by István Bocskay, they liberated Târgovişte (October 8, 1595), Bucharest (October 12, 1595) and Brăila. Wallachia was liberated on October 29, 1595.

The turning-point of his career was his separation from his wife, Archduchess Maria Christina of Austria (1574-1621) (daughter of Archduke Charles II of Inner Austria), in 1599, an event followed by his own abdication the same year. It was on this occasion that he offered the throne of Transylvania to Rudolph II, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Hungary, in exchange for the duchy of Opole in Silesia. As Duke of Opole he also was a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire.[4]

In April 1598 Sigismund resigned as Prince of Transylvania in favor of Emperor Rudolf, reversed his decision in October 1598, and then resigned again in favor of Cardinal Andrew Báthory, his cousin. This allowed Transylvania to fall under the influence of the King of Poland. Michael the Brave reestablished an alliance with Emperor Rudolf, began a campaign against Andrew on October 5, 1599, and became Prince of Transylvania in November 1599, while the Habsburg general Giorgio Basta entered Transylvania from the west at the same time.

In 1600, however, Sigismund at the head of an army of Poles and Cossacks, attempted to recover his throne again, but was routed by Michael the Brave, voivode of Moldavia and Wallachia, at Suceava. In February 1601 the diet of Kolozsvár (today: Cluj-Napoca, Romania) reinstated him, but again he was driven out, after the Battle of Goroszló, by Michael the Brave and general Giorgio Basta, never to return. He died at Prague in 1613.[4]

His reign was described by the contemporary Baranyai Decsi Janos in his chronicle link

See also

For other nobles of the same name, please see Sigismund.

Notes

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  2. Bain 1911, p. 513.
  3. Bain 1911, pp. 513–514.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Bain 1911, p. 514.

References

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External links

Sigismund Báthory
Born: 1572 Died: 27 March 1613
Regnal titles
Preceded by Voivode of Transylvania
1581–1586
Succeeded by
office abolished
Preceded by Prince of Transylvania
1586–1597
Succeeded by
Rudolph
Preceded by Prince of Transylvania
1598–1599
Succeeded by
Andrew Báthory
Prince of Transylvania
1601
Succeeded by
Rudolph
Prince of Transylvania
1602
Notes and references
1. Regnal Chronologies

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