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Battle of Sződfalva

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1527 battle
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Battle of Sződfalva
Part of theHungarian campaign of 1527–1528
Date25 July 1527
Location
ResultDecisive Hungarian victory
Belligerents
Hungarian Kingdom of Szapolyai with theTransylvanian saxons,Transylvanian Romanians, nobblemans and peasants in the countryTiszaSerbian Empire ofJovan Nenad
Commanders and leaders
Jovan Nenad
Strength
13,0008,000
Hungarian civil war (1526–38)

Habsburg–Ottoman war of 1529–1533

Habsburg–Ottoman war of 1534–1537

Habsburg–Ottoman war of 1540–1547

Habsburg–Ottoman war of 1551–1562

Hungarian civil war (1556–1567)

Habsburg–Ottoman war of 1565–1568

TheBattle of Sződfalva orBattle of Sedfal field (Hungarian:Sződfalvi csata,Serbian:Бој на Седфалском пољу (Boj na Sedfalskom polju)) was fought on 25 July 1527 betweenvoivodianSerbs, underJovan Nenad, and theTransylvanian army of (Hungarians andSaxons). In the battle, Jovan Nenad was defeated by a much larger force, and many of his troops dispersed intoSyrmia after the defeat. WhenFerdinand of Austria won, the Serbs maintained an autonomous principality in the area that lasted until 1540.

Background

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In 1525, the Serbs of Vojvodina (who had previously ruled the area as Hungarian vassals) saw the power vacuum created by the struggle for the Hungarian throne, and decided to elevate their status from autonomous principality to full-fledged state. At first, the rebels supportedJános Szapolyai; however, soon the Hungarian king called for Jovan Nenad to relinquish control over the land. In response, the Serbians changed sides toFerdinand. Jovan Nenad and his numerically inferior forces defeated two larger Hungarian forces (the first was the force led by Laszlo Casky and the second was at theBattle of Szőlős).

After the battle of Szőlős, Jovan proclaimed himself the tsar of Voivodina. The Hungarian peasants and noblemen governance by the priests and teachers took up arms against the Serbs and Szapolyai direct bishop ofImre Czibak by restoration of order.

Few Serbian soldiers still stood by Szapolyai, mainly theLipovian Serbs.

The battle

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The Serbian rebels faced the entire combined strength of Transylvania and upper Hungary. They clashed with the Hungarians at Sződfalva, nearSzeged, and were defeated. The army at a slow pace demoralized and only 8,000 soldiers remained of Jovan's army. The Transylvanian army numbered 12,000–13,000 soldiers composed of peasants, rebels, and Romanians. However, Jovan Nenad was able to recoup his losses and reform his army after the defeat.

In an attempt to unite with the forces of Ferdinand, Jovan Nenad was severely wounded in Szeged. In his retreat towards Senta, he was intercepted and murdered in the village of Tornjoš. Jovan Nenad's head was delivered to Zápolya and soon after his death the remainder of his army dispersed, which was the end of Jovan Nenad's liberation movement.

Aftermath

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Jovan Nenad, who managed to recoup his losses at Sedfal field, was later killed en route to a battle against the forces of the Hungarian king. His forces dispersed after his death and the area was given to the Serbian despots who ruled an autonomous principality subordinate to the Hungarian king.

The Serbs returned to theOttoman Empire and took up their duties in the Ottoman army. Serbian soldiers fought in theSiege of Vienna in 1529.

Sources

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Medieval
Serbian–Bulgarian
Serbian–Ottoman
Serbian–Byzantine
Other
Foreign rule
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Ottomans
Venice
Russia
19th century
Serbian Revolution
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20th century
Macedonian Struggle
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21st century
Peacekeeping

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