HERO OF SZIGETVÁR

In all of Hungarian history there is only one recorded case
of two men with the same name - Count Miklós Zrínyi - having achieved such heights of
fame and glory that each serves as an inspiration to Magyars even today.
The two Zrínyis lived a hundred years apart. The first Miklós Zrínyi attained his place
in history through his heroic death, while the other his great-grandson, did so by both
the pen as a poet and by the sword as a warlord reminiscent of Hunyadi.
To understand Miklós Zrínyi, the poet-warlord, one has to go back to his ancestor who
was the central hero of the Siege of Szigetvár in 1566. Both were of Croatian origin.
The Siege of Szigetvár
Szigetvár, situated close to the city of Pécs in Southern Hungary, was never a
particularly large or strong fortress. Its existence, however, had been a thorn in the
Turks' side since 1556, when Ali Pasha of Buda had lost ten thousand men under its walls
in an unsuccessful siege.
Ten years later Suleiman the Magnificent, the victor of Mohács, decided that as a
preparatory step to the capture of Vienna, Szigetvár must be destroyed. When in August
1566 he arrived with 90,000 troops and 300 cannons under Szigetvár, he
was not impressed. To him, Szigetvár was a "molehill."
A few hundred kilometers to the north another army, 80,000 strong, struck camp between
Gyor and Komárom. These were the troopsgathered by Emperor Maximilian,
King of Hungary, to fend off the anticipated Turkish advance on Vienna after the expected
fall of Szigetvár. The efforts of Hungarian leaders to induce Sam Ekhard, the Imperial
commander of his force, to aid the beleaguered fortress were of no avail.
Count Miklós Zrínyi, who was then the Ban (viceroy) of Croatia, decided to take charge
of the defense himself. With only 2,500 Hungarian and Croatian soldiers he had no
illusions about the final outcome. The wives and daughters of Zrínyi's officers refused
to leave the city, they wanted to stay with their husbands and fathers until death.
After due preparations for the siege, Zrínyi gathered his men for a meeting during which
all swore to defend Szigetvár against the infidels to their last breath. Then red flags
were hoisted as a signal to the Turks that Zrínyi was ready for battle.
What made Szigetvár defensible at all were not high hills or strong walls, but the
marshes of the Almás Creek which surrounded Szigetvár, a city built on three islands. A
dammed lake added to its defense potential. Szigetvár's three islands were connected by
wooden platforms built over the water. The largest island was
situated in the middle, serving as the base for the "old city." Connected to it
on one side was the "new city" and on the other side the fort proper, which
included a high point called Nádasdy Hill. From Nádasdy Hill, gun emplacements looked
down on the plain around Szigetvár.
The defenders were at an immediate disadvantage, because an unusually dry summer had
reduced their best weapon: water, to inundate the marshes. Whatever was left in the lake
and moats had been drained by the Turks, who had destroyed the dam
in preparation for the siege. As a next step, the Turks built three causeways of brushwood
and dirt across the drained lake bed. The Portuguese artillery expert, Aliportug, whom the
Sultan had used at the siege of Malta, devised a monster platform, made of forty-two
wagons (three wagons wide, fourteen wagons long).
fastened together by tree trunks to bridge the gap between the bastion and the causeway.
The Turks took the indefensible "new city," built on the smallest island, in two
days, a feat claiming the lives of 3,000 Turks and 300 defenders. But the fortress proper
still stood and the guns from Nádasdy Hill continued to batter the attackers, causing
heavy casualties.
In his frustration, Grandvizier Ahmed Sokolovits changed tactics. He sent envoys to
Zrínyi, promising him eternal possession of all of Croatia and Slovenia if he would only
surrender. Zrínyi turned the offer down with contempt. Next, the Turks used arrows to
shoot messages written in Hungarian and Croatian to the defending soldiers to induce them
to open the gate. The result was the same.
Angered. the Grandvizier ordered the fortress to be bombarded on all four sides day and
night. At the same time, his men began sinking shafts to underminethe entrenchments, to no
avail. The general attack on the night of August 26 was beaten back with the Turks losing
Ali Pasha of Buda, and Ali Borsuk, the commander of Turkish artillery.
Suleiman Dead and Still "Alive"
Suleiman the Magnificent was furious. On August 29, the 40th anniversary of his Mohács
triumph, the aged Sultan personally took charge of an all-out attack which was renewed ten
times during the day. But this time it was Zrínyi who took revenge for Mohács: thousands
of the Sultan's best soldiers were piling up dead
or wounded in the ten futile attempts at a breakthrough. The Portuguese Aliportug was one
of the first victims, felled on his wagon-bridge trying to crossover with Janissary
troops. The defenders even captured the commander of the Janissaries.
The "Magnificent" was crying in shame and anger when he witnessed how his best
regiments took to flight from the walls. At the end, when he was helped down from his
horse, he was a dying man although he had not been touched by any weapon.
For five days a deadly silence fell upon the Turkish camp while new attempts were made to
sink shafts under the fortress. This time the Turks succeeded. On September 5th a
shattering explosion demolished Nádasdy Hill, fire engulfing all surrounding buildings.
Through the gaps caused by the explosion thousands of Janissaries rushed in and began to
sack the buildings in the marketplace,
killing women and children. They thought the fortress was already theirs.Not quite.
Zrínyi and his soldiers descended on them like avenging angels killing most of the
invaders and repelling two new attacks. Turk bodies were piled up in the passages made by
the explosion, blocking further attempts to enter. Those who remained alive were seen
fleeing like scalded ants from an ants' nest.
Sultan Suleiman could not bear the sight any longer. When the Turkish trumpets signaled
retreat again, a fatal stroke felled him.Sultan had come to kill Miklós Zrínyi and
ultimately it was Zrínyi whose resistance killed him.
Suleiman died, but he lived for three more days - officially, that is.The Grandvizier
believed it was essential to conceal the truth from his troops to prevent general panic.
In an act of make-believe unprecedented in history, he had the Sultan dressed up in his
imperial robes with a diamond-studded turban on his head and a golden war-hammer in his
hand, and placed him in a chair under
his tent as if he were watching his troops in review.
This farce continued for three days to allow time for the complete capture of Szigetvár,
now practically ruined and with only 300 defenders left under Zrínyi's command. All their
cannons and supplies, except for the ammunition, had been destroyed by the flames.
Zrínyi knew that the end was near.
Storming out into Certain Death
The defenders were all prepared to die in keeping with their oath, but first a horrendous
task awaited them. Their wives and daughters were still alive in the tower. Should they
fall into Turkish hands, they would suffer a fate worse than death, and so, they had
chosen instead to die at the hands of their beloved
fathers and husbands.After tearful farewells the men plunged daggers into their loved
ones' hearts. This was the Hungarian version of Masada. the immortal self-sacrifice of
Jewish
zealots in a Roman-besieged fortress two millenniums ago.
With this tragic event behind him, Zrínyi donned the silk and velvet garment he had worn
on his wedding day, and hung a heavy gold chain around his neck. He discarded his shirt of
mail and instead, stuffed his pockets with gold pieces to "provide for my
funeral" and with the unsheathed sword of his father in hand he
joined his men in the tower yard. He blessed and thanked them for their loyalty.
His men, following their commander's example, also discarded their armor.Then Miklós
Zrínyi, with the national flag in one hand, his sword in the other, ordered the opening
of the gate behind which enemy troops swarmed on a bridge.
When the gate was flung open Zrínyi's men fired two heavy cannons stuffed with nails and
sharp pieces of iron, point blank into the enemy ranks. A moment later
Zrínyi and his 300 men stormed out of the fortress. "Like a fiery ray of lightning
he cracked down on them, cutting down everybody within range to make way for himself and
for the courageous men following him," wrote the German historian Wagner.
The bridge had been cleared of Turkish troops when the inevitable happened. Zrínyi was
fatally hit by two bullets in the chest and by an arrow in his eye. His officers and men
also fell - all except three.
Zrínyi's head was promptly severed by the Janissaries and his body placed on a cannon. As
a sign of victory, his head was put on a plate and rushed to the Sultan's tent by troops
still unaware of the Magnificent's death.
This, however was not the end of the resistance.
Booty-hungry Janissaries invaded the fortress searching for the alleged treasures of
Miklós Zrínyi. Thousands jammed the yard and the tower when the last holdout, a young
woman hiding in the underground ammunition chamber, threw a flaming torch into the
gunpowder stored in the cellar. The terrible detonation which followed buried not only
those in the tower but practically everyone in the yard. Thus, it became the burial ground
for 3,000 Janissaries.
All told, the Battle of Szigetvár claimed the lives of 2,500 Magyars and Croatians and
25,000 Turks in a siege in which no stones remained unturned.
The remains of the fortress of Szigetvár still stand as a silent memorial to a battle
fought for country, faith and honor.
Gabor Vincze
Berze Nagy János Gimnázium, Gyöngyös
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