Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.the premature death of King Stephen
III of Moldavia prompted an Ottoman Victory at Vaslui on this day.
Since the fall of Constantinople to Mehmed II in 1453, the Ottomans had
worked to extend their power deeper into Christendom through the Balkans.
For a century, they had made conquests in Greece and Serbia, taking hold
of the power vacuum as Venice declined, and they pressed as far as
Hungary. The Christians had been working to oppose Ottoman expansion,
though many of their wars were against one another. Matthias Corvinus,
King of Hungary, stood as the heavyweight of the land, but his defeat in
1467 by Stephen III of Moldavia proved a great new leader with impressive
military clout.
A new story by Jeff ProvineCorvinus gave up his plans of conquest in
Moldavia and took Stephen as an ally, supplying troops and allowing him to
campaign in Transylvania and Wallacia, where the Ottoman-supported Radu
III, half-brother of Vlad Dracul (pictured), reigned. Mehmed II planned an
invasion to conquer the upstart Stephen, and the Ottoman forces met the
Moldavians at the Vaslui in 1475. Stephen had weakened the invading army
with scorched earth tactics, and he sent musicians to draw out the Ottoman
army on a foggy morning. The Ottomans might have charged into the fog,
but, seeing the exhaustion from his troops, General Suleiman decided to
rest and fight defensively.
Stephen was caught with eager troops and his trap empty. He made a rash
decision to attack, noted later by Pope Sixtus IV as his failure in not
consulting God first. The armies met, but the Moldavians had gone outside
of the useful range of their artillery and archers. Fighting raged for
nearly a day until Stephen was killed and the Moldavian generals ordered
retreat. The Ottomans pursued and wiped out the army, seizing the capital
Suceava and effectively conquering Moldavia.
Christendom flew into a panic at the major Ottoman advance. The Genoese,
who had been orchestrating Tartar advances from the north against
Stephen's influence over their Black Sea colonies, appealed to Corvinus
for help. A council was called, and the Pope blessed Corvinus with a new
crusade to liberate Moldavia. The Poles offered forces (in exchange for
their own piece of Moldavia), and Corvinus endorsed Prince Vlad of
Wallacia, whom he had once arrested on pretenses of working with the
Ottomans but now trusted enough to allow him to marry his cousin, Ilona
Szilagyi. While the main force fought in Moldavia, Vlad would undercut
support in the more southern Wallacia, which had been ruled the last year
by the Ottoman Basarab Laiot? the Old due to the treaty his half-brother
had signed.
Vlad was welcomed as a liberator by the High Council, though many of the
boyars again distrusted him as he had slain so many of them the last time
he had come to power. Civil war raged, but Vlad was granted with ample
knights and Hungarian troops, which gave him an impressive victory at
Bucharest in 1476. Mehmed, seeing the key provinces for military security
becoming lost, launched counter-invasions, which ended in Corvinus's great
victory at the Battle of Breadfield in 1479 with nearly 100,000 Turks
slain.
Corvinus and Mehmed signed a treaty stabilizing the new, more southern
borders, including Serbia being transferred to Corvinus as a vassal. The
sultan planned a new expedition once he had secured fresh troops, but his
death in 1481 (supposedly by poisoning at the hand of his Italian doctor)
ended the campaign. His successor Bayezid II maintained the border and
focused more southeasterly, fighting long campaigns to put down the
Safavid rebellions in Persia that would ultimately break the Ottoman
Empire. Corvinus, meanwhile, established his own empire, which grew out of
Balkan conquests as Ottoman power fell over the next century.
Wallacia continued as a key vassal in the Hungarian Empire, sporting Vlad
III as one of its greatest, though strictest, leaders. Vlad III, more
often referred to as Dracula ("son of Drakul"), is remembered for his
legacy of minimizing bureaucratic corruption, harsh punishments for
crimes, and promoting trade. He would be immortalized by Bram Stoker in
1897's Dracula about a harsh Transylvanian industrialist, literally a
robber-baron, who comes to London and begins to drain the blood of its
banks and exchanges through supernatural hypnotism and control of natural
forces.