Truce of Adrianople (1547)

The Truce of Adrianople in 1547, named after the Ottoman city of Adrianople (present-day Edirne), was signed between Charles V and Suleiman the Magnificent. Through this treaty, Ferdinand I of Austria and Charles V recognized total Ottoman control of Hungary,[1] and even agreed to pay to the Ottomans a yearly tribute of 30,000 gold florins for their Habsburg possessions in northern and western Hungary as a buffer for Vienna.[2][3] The Treaty followed important Ottoman victories in Hungary, such as the siege of Esztergom (1543).

Truce of Adrianople
1547
The 1547 Truce of Adrianople was made between the Holy Roman Empire and the Ottoman Empire.

When Louis II of Hungary fell at Mohacs fighting the Turks in 1526, his crown was thrown to the Habsburgs. The agreement bought the Catholic Habsburgs peace on their eastern frontier so they could answer the German Protestant Princes in the west, which coalesced to the Thirty Years War, 1618-1648. The truce was the result of a triangular affair with John Sigismund Zápolya, Voivode of Transylvania. It wasn't until the truce expired in 1551 that Ferdinand I asserted as legitimate his claim to all of Hungary. In it one can glean the dissension that followed the Habsburgs until 1918.[4]

Notes

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  1. ^ Cartography in the traditional Islamic and South Asian societies by John Brian Harley p.245 [1]
  2. ^ Ground warfare: an international encyclopedia by Stanley Sandler p.387 [2]
  3. ^ The Cambridge history of Islam by Peter Malcolm Holt p.328
  4. ^ Kann, Robert A. (1974). A History of the Habsburg Empire 1526-1918. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 1–44. ISBN 0-520-04206-9.