The Siege of Güns or
Siege of Kőszeg (
Turkish: Güns Kuşatması) was a siege of
Kőszeg (
German: Güns) in the
Kingdom of Hungary within
Habsburg Monarchy, that took place in 1532
. In the siege, the defending forces of the
Austrian Habsburg Monarchy under the leadership of
Croatian Captain Nikola Jurišić (
Hungarian: Miklós
Jurisics), defended the small border fort of Kőszeg with only 700--800 Croatian soldiers, with no cannons and few guns. The defenders prevented the advance of the
Ottoman army of
120,000--200,
000 toward
Vienna, under the leadership of
Sultan Suleiman the
Magnificent (
Ottoman Turkish:
سليمان Süleymān) and
Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha.
The exact outcome is unknown, since it has two versions which differ depending on the source. In the first version Nikola Jurišić rejected the offer to surrender on favourable terms, and in the second version, the city was offered terms for a nominal surrender. Suleiman, having been delayed nearly four weeks, withdrew at the arrival of the August rains, and did not continue towards Vienna as he'd intended, but turned homeward.
Suleiman secured his possession in
Hungary by conquering several other forts, but after the Ottoman withdrawal,
Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand I reoccupied some of the devastated territory.
Following this, Suleiman and
Ferdinand concluded a 1533 treaty in
Constantinople that confirmed the right of
John Zápolya as a king of all Hungary, but recognised Ferdinand's possession of some of the reoccupied territory.
On 29 August 1526, at the
Battle of Mohács, the
Christian forces led by
King Louis II were defeated by Ottoman forces led by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.
Louis was killed in the battle, which resulted in the end of the independent Kingdom of Hungary as he died without an heir. Both the
Kingdoms of Hungary and
Croatia became disputed territories with claims from both the Habsburg and Ottoman empires. Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand I, who was a brother of
Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, married the sister of
Louis II and was elected
King by the nobles of both Hungary and Croatia.
The throne of Hungary became the subject of a dynastic dispute between Ferdinand and John Zápolya from
Transylvania, since Suleiman had promised to make
Zápolya the ruler of all Hungary. During Hungarian campaign of 1527--1528, Ferdinand captured
Buda from John Zápolya in 1527, only to relinquish his hold on it in
1529 when an Ottoman counter-attack stripped Ferdinand of all his territorial gains during 1527 and 1528.
The siege of Vienna in 1529 was the first attempt by
Suleiman the Magnificent to capture the
Austrian capital. This siege signalled the pinnacle of Ottoman power and the maximum extent of Ottoman expansion in central
Europe.
Little War in Hungary
Following Suleiman's unsuccessful
Siege of Vienna in 1529, Ferdinand launched a counter-attack in 1530 to regain the initiative and avenge the destruction brought by Suleiman's 120,000 strong army. This campaign is usually considered as the start of the
Little War, the period of a series conflicts between the
Habsburgs and the
Ottoman Empire. An assault of Buda was driven off by John Zápolya, the vassal
King of Hungary, but Ferdinand was successful elsewhere, capturing
Gran (Esztergom) and other forts along the
Danube river, a vital strategic frontier.
During the early period of the Little War in Hungary, Suleiman, as a response to Ferdinand's counter-attack in 1530, and as a part of his fifth imperial campaign (Ottoman Turkish: سفر همايون, Sefer-i humāyūn) in 1532, led a massive army of over 120,000 troops to besiege Vienna again. Due to Suleiman's rapid advances, Ferdinand feared the Christian forces would not be assembled in time to meet him. On 12 July, Suleiman wrote to Ferdinand from
Osijek (German:
Esseg) in
Slavonia, to assure him of the Ottoman advance. According to the letter, Suleiman's fifth campaign was primarily directed against
Charles V, and not personally against Ferdinand. After Suleiman crossed the river Drava at Osijek, instead of taking the usual route for Vienna, he turned westwards into Ferdinand's held Hungarian territory. According to historian
Andrew Wheatcroft, on the route for Vienna, the Ottoman army had briefly invested and captured seventeen fortified towns or castles. Ferdinand withdrew his army, leaving only 700 men with no cannons and a few guns to defend Kőszeg.
Located south of
Sopron, the small town of Kőszeg was only a few miles from the Austrian border. It was held by a task force commanded by the Croatian soldier and diplomat Nikola Jurišić. Kőszeg was not considered a place of importance. It was an insubstantial obstacle and many stronger places had yielded without a fight.
The Grand Vizier of the
Ottomans,
Ibrahim Pasha, did not realize how poorly defended Kőszeg was. After taking a few minor places, Suleiman came to join Ibrahim Pasha shortly afterwards, when the siege had already started.
- published: 02 May 2015
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