Siege of Buda (1530)

Siege of Buda (1530)
Part of Little War in Hungary

Buda in 1530
Date1530: Oct. 31 - Dec. 20
Location
Result Ottoman victory[1]
Belligerents
Habsburg Empire

Ottoman Empire

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

The siege of Buda in 1530 was a failed attempt to capture Buda from the Ottomans by Ferdinand I.[1]

In 1529 Suleiman the Magnificent captured Buda and installed John Zápolya as his vassal.[2] Because Zápolya was weak, to protect Buda, Suleiman left a garrison of 3,000 Ottoman soldiers under the command of Alvise (Ludovico) Gritti, who were later joined by 800 Serbs and Turks.[3]

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 31 to December 20, in 1530.[4]

The besiegers were hindered by the weather and by Gritti’s successful defence of the castle.[5] Wilhelm von Roggendorf ordered an overall attack on 10 November.[5] The siege was launched from three points, from the north-east, the east and from the Gellért Hill in the south-west.[5] 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.[5] 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.[5] 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.[5]

  1. ^ a b 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.
  2. ^ Tracy, James. "The Road to Szigetvár: Ferdinand I's Defense of His Hungarian Border, 1548–1566." Austrian History Yearbook 44 (2013): 17-36.
  3. ^ Oborni, Teréz. "Stjepan Brodarić, diplomat na dvoru kralja Ivana Zapolje." Podravina: časopis za multidisciplinarna istraživanja 9, no. 18 (2010): 23-33.
  4. ^ Istvánffy, Nicolaus (1724). Regni Hungarici Historia (in Latin). Cologne: Sumptibus Henrici Rommerskirchen. pp. 106–107.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Veszprémy, László. "Buda: From a Royal Palace to an Assaulted Border Castle, 1490–1541." In Medieval Buda in Context, pp. 495-512. Brill, 2016.

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