Siege of Buda (1530)
The siege of Buda in 1530 was a failed attempt to capture Buda from the Ottomans by Ferdinand I.[1]
Siege of Buda (1530) | |||||||
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Part of Little War in Hungary | |||||||
![]() Buda in 1530 | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Ferdinand I Wilhelm von Roggendorf |
Suleiman the Magnificent Lodovico Gritti | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
10,000 German, Austrian, Spanish, Czech and Hungarian soldiers |
3,000 Turks 800 Serbs and Turks | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown | Unknown |
In 1529 Suleiman the Magnificent captured Buda and installed John Zápolya as his vassal.[2] Ferdinand wanted to rule the entirety of the Kingdom of Hungary, as a result he attempted to occupy Buda which resulted in a siege that lasted from October to December in 1530.[3]
The besiegers were hindered by the weather and by Gritti’s successful defence of the castle.[4] Wilhelm von Roggendorf ordered an overall attack on 10 November.[4] The siege was launched from three points, from the north-east, the east and from the Gellért Hill in the south-west.[4] The attack from the south-west was initially successful, however the defenders cleverly mobilised the reserves they had set up and drove back the attackers.[4] An advance of Ottoman relief troops was reported on 20 November, the Habsburg offensive was cancelled and the army set out back to Vienna on 22 November.[4] It can be concluded that the attackers withdrew in panic as their sick and injured soldiers were captured by the men of John Zápolya who had them massacred.[4]
References
- Pálfffy, Géza. "Hungary, Vienna and the Defence System against the Ottomans in the Age of Süleyman." In The Battle for Central Europe, pp. 321–337. Brill, 2019.
- Tracy, James. "The Road to Szigetvár: Ferdinand I's Defense of His Hungarian Border, 1548–1566." Austrian History Yearbook 44 (2013): 17-36.
- Oborni, Teréz. "Stjepan Brodarić, diplomat na dvoru kralja Ivana Zapolje." Podravina: časopis za multidisciplinarna istraživanja 9, no. 18 (2010): 23-33.
- Veszprémy, László. "Buda: From a Royal Palace to an Assaulted Border Castle, 1490–1541." In Medieval Buda in Context, pp. 495-512. Brill, 2016.