The
Siege of Nándorfehérvár (Present day:
Belgrade) occurred from July 4 to July 22, 1456. After the
fall of Constantinople in 1453,
Ottoman sultan
Mehmed II was rallying his resources in order to
subjugate the
Kingdom of Hungary.
His
immediate objective was the border fort
(Hungarian végvár) of
the town of Belgrade
(in old
Hungarian Nándorfehérvár). John Hunyadi, a Hungarian nobleman and warlord,
who had fought many battles against the Ottomans in the previous
two decades, prepared the defense of the fortress.
The siege eventually escalated into a major battle, during which
Hunyadi led a sudden counterattack that overran the Turkish camp,
ultimately compelling the wounded Sultan Mehmet II to lift the
siege and retreat. The siege of Belgrade has been characterized as
having "decided the fate of
Christendom"
.
Preparations
At the end of
1455, after a public
reconciliation with all his enemies, Hunyadi began preparations. At
his own expense he provisioned and armed the fortress, and leaving
in it a strong garrison under the command of his brother-in-law
Mihály Szilágyi and his
own eldest son
László, he proceeded
to form a relief army and a fleet of two hundred
corvettes. As no other baron was willing to help
(fearing Hunyadi's growing power more than the Ottoman threat), he
was left entirely to his own resources.
A
Franciscan friar allied with Hunyadi,
Giovanni da Capistrano,
preached a crusade to attract peasants and yeomanry to Hunyadi's
cause. The recruits were ill-armed (many with only
slings and
scythes) but
full of enthusiasm, and they flocked to the standard of Hunyadi,
the core of which consisted of a small band of seasoned mercenaries
and a few banderia of noble horsemen. All in all, Hunyadi could
build a force of 25–30,000 men.
Siege
However, before these forces could have been assembled,
Mehmet II's invasion army (160,000 men in early
accounts, 60-70,000 according to newer research) arrived at
Belgrade. On
July 4,
1456, the siege began. Szilágyi could only rely on a
force of 5,000-7,000 men in the castle. Mehmet set up his siege on
the neck of the headland and started firing on the walls on
June 29,
1456. He
arrayed his men in three sections. The Rumelian (that is, European)
corps had the majority of his 300 cannons, and his fleet of 200 or
so river vessels had the rest. The Rumelians were arrayed on the
right wing and the Anatolian corps was arrayed on the left. In the
middle were the sultan's personal guards, the janissaries, and his
command post. The Anatolian corps and the janissaries were both
heavy infantry type troops. He posted his river vessels mainly to
the northwest of the city to patrol the marshes and ensure that the
fortress was not reinforced. They also kept an eye on the Sava to
the southwest to avoid the infantry's being outflanked by Hunyadi's
army. The Danube to the east was guarded by the spahi, the sultan's
light cavalry corps, to avoid being outflanked on the right. These
formidable forces were resisted by only about 7,000 men in the
fortress, although the Serbian soldiers helped resist Muslim
attacks as well.

Siege of Nándorfehérvár 1456 (From a
15th century Turkish manuscript).
When word of this got to Hunyadi, he was in the south of Hungary
recruiting additional light cavalry troops for the army with which
he intended to lift the siege. Although relatively few of his
fellow nobles had been willing to provide manpower, the peasants
were more than willing to do so. Cardinal Giovanni Capistrano had
been sent to Hungary by the Vatican both to preach against
heretics, such as Greek Orthodox Christians, and to preach the
Crusade against the Ottomans. He managed to raise a large, albeit
poorly trained and equipped, peasant army, with which he left for
Belgrade. He and Hunyadi travelled together, but commanded
separately. Between the two of them, they had roughly 40,000 to
50,000 men.

Fortress of Nándorfehérvár as it
looked in the Middle Ages.
Lower and upper town with the palace are visible.
The
outnumbered defenders relied mainly on the strength of the
formidable castle of Belgrade
which was at
the time one of the best engineered in the Balkans.
As
Belgrade
was
designated to be the capital of the Serbian Despotate by Despot Stefan Lazarevic in 1404 after the Battle of Angora, major work was done to
transform the small old Byzantine castle into a more resilient
stronghold. As Ottoman raids were expected after they
recovered from the heavy loss against the
Mongols, advanced building techniques from Byzantine
and Arab fortress designs were used, which had been learned during
the period of Seljuk and Ottoman military conflicts from the
mid-11th century.
The castle was designed in an elaborate form with three lines of
defence: the inner castle with the palace and huge Donjon, the
upper town with the main military camps with four gates and a
double wall, and the lower town with the cathedral in the urban
center and a port at the Danube. The endeavor was one of the most
elaborated military architecture achievements of the Middle Ages.
After the Siege the Hungarians reinforced the north and eastern
side with an additional gate and several towers, one of which, the
Nebojsa tower, was designed for artillery purposes.
On
July 14,
1456 Hunyadi
arrived to the completely encircled city with his flotilla on the
Danube while the Turkish navy lay astride the Danube River. He
broke the naval blockade on
July 14, sinking
three large Ottoman galleys and capturing four large vessels and 20
smaller ones. By destroying the Sultan's fleet, Hunyadi could
transport his troops and much-needed food into the city. The fort's
defense was also reinforced.
But Mehmet II was not willing to end the siege and after a week of
heavy artillery bombardment, the walls of the fortress were
breached in several places. On
July 21
Mehmet II ordered an all-out assault which began at sundown and
continued all night. The besieging army flooded the city, and then
started its assault on the fort. As this was the most crucial
moment of the siege, Hunyadi ordered the defenders to throw tarred
wood, and other flammable material, and then set it afire. Soon a
wall of flames separated the Janissaries fighting in the city from
their comrades trying to breach through the gaps into the upper
town. The fierce battle between the encircled Janissaries and
Szilágyi's soldiers inside the upper town was turning in favour of
the Christians and the Hungarians managed to beat off the fierce
assault from outside the walls. The Janissaries remaining inside
the city were thus massacred while the Turkish troops trying to
breach the upper town suffered heavy losses. When a Turkish soldier
almost managed to pin the Sultan's flag on top of a bastion, a
soldier of Serbian decent named Titus Dugović (
Dugovics
Titusz in Hungarian) grabbed him and together they plunged
from the wall. (For this heroism John Hunyadi's son, the Hungarian
king
Matthias Corvinus, made
Titus's son a nobleman three years later.)
Battle

Siege of Nándorfehérvár 1456.
The next day something unexpected happened. By some accounts, the
peasant crusaders started a spontaneous action, and forced
Capistrano and Hunyadi to make use of the situation. Despite
Hunyadi's orders to the defenders not to try to loot the Turkish
positions, some of the units crept out from demolished ramparts,
took up positions across from the Turkish line, and began harassing
enemy soldiers. Turkish spahis (provincial cavalry) tried without
success to disperse the harassing force. At once, more Christians
joined those outside the wall. What began as an isolated incident
quickly escalated into a full-scale battle.
John of Capistrano at first tried to order his men back inside the
walls, but soon found himself surrounded by about 2,000 Crusaders.
He then began leading them toward the Ottoman lines, crying, "The
Lord who made the beginning will take care of the finish!"
Capistrano led his crusaders to the Turkish rear army across the
Sava river. At the same time, Hunyadi
started a desperate charge out of the fort to take the cannon
positions in the Turkish camp.
Taken by surprise at this strange turn of events and, as some
chroniclers say, paralyzed by some inexplicable fear, the Turks
took flight. The Sultan's bodyguard of about 5,000 Janissaries
tried desperately to stop the panic and recapture the camp, but by
that time Hunyadi's army had also joined the unplanned battle, and
the Turkish efforts became hopeless. The Sultan himself advanced
into the fight and killed a knight in single combat, but then took
an arrow in the thigh and was rendered unconscious. After the
battle, the Hungarian raiders were ordered to spend the night
behind the walls of the fortress and to be on the alert for a
possible renewal of the battle, but the Turkish counterattack never
came.
Under cover of darkness the Turks retreated in haste, bearing their
wounded in 140 wagons. At the city of Sarona, the sultan regained
consciousness. Upon learning that his army had been routed, most of
his leaders killed and all his equipment abandoned, the 24-year-old
ruler was barely prevented from committing suicide by taking
poison. The surprise attacks caused heavy losses and much disarray.
Thus,
during the night a defeated Mehmed withdrew his remaining forces
and returned to Constantinople
.
Aftermath
The Hungarians had, however, to pay dearly for this victory, as
plague broke out in the camp, in which
John
Hunyadi himself died three weeks later (
August 11,
1456).
He was buried in the
Cathedral of Gyulafehérvár
, the capital of Transylvania.
As the design of the fortress had showed well during the siege,
some additional enforcements were made by the Hungarians. The
weaker eastern walls, where the Ottomans breached through into the
upper town were reinforced by the Zindan gate and the Heavy Nebojsa
tower. This was the last of the great modifications to the fortress
until 1521 when Sultan Süleyman eventually captured it.
The Noon Bell
Pope Callixtus III ordered the bells of every European church to be
rung every day at noon, as a call for believers to pray for the
defenders of the city. However, in many countries (like England and
Spanish kingdoms), news of the victory arrived before the order,
and the ringing of the church bells at noon thus transformed into a
commemoration of the victory. The Popes didn't withdraw the order,
and Catholic (and the older Protestant) churches still ring the
noon bell in the Christian world to this day.
Follow Up

Stone in the Kalemegdan park, in
Belgrade, with engraved inscription on the place where Christian
forces under command of John Hunyadi won the battle against the
Turks in the year 1456.
The
victory stopped the Ottoman Turkish
advance towards Catholic Europe for 70 years,
though they made other incursions such as the taking of Otranto
in 1480-1481
and the raid of Croatia
and Styria in 1493. Belgrade would
continue to protect Hungary from Turkish attacks until the fort
fell to the Ottomans in 1521.
During the siege,
Pope Callixtus
III ordered the
noon bell, to call
believers to pray for the defenders - but as in many places the
news of victory arrived earlier than the order, it transformed into
the commemoration of the victory, and the Pope modified his the
order to fit this interpretation. Hence the noon bell is still rung
to this day for the memory of Hunyadi's victory.
After the Siege of Belgrade stopped the advance of Mehmed II
towards Central Europe, Serbia and Bosnia were absorbed into the
Empire. Wallachia, the Tartar Khanate of Crimea, and eventually
Moldavia were merely converted into vassal states thanks to strong
military resistance to Mehmed's attempts at conquest. There were
several reasons why the sultan did not directly attack Hungary and
why he gave up the idea of advancing in that direction after his
unsuccessful siege of Belgrade. The mishap at Belgrade indicated
that the Empire could not expand further until Serbia and Bosnia
were transformed into a secure base of operations. Furthermore, the
significant political and military power of Hungary under
Matthias Corvinus no doubt had something
to do with this hesitation. Mehmed was also distracted by
resistance from two semi-independent vassals to the north of the
Danube, over whom he was attempting to
exercise greater authority.
In
Dracula: Prince of Many Faces,
by Raymond T. McNally and Radu Florescu, it is claimed that Mehmed
wanted to reconquer Belgrade in order to gain access to Hungary
through the
Danube River but was
prevented from doing so by a humiliating defeat by
Vlad III at
The Night Attack.
The sultan later came
into conflict with Stephen III
of Moldavia, resulting in an even worse defeat at Battle of
Vaslui
and later a pyrrhic
victory at the Battle of
Valea Albă. Taking into account his aggressive ambition
and statements suggesting he dreamed of world conquest, most
historians agree that Mehmed the Conqueror was initially interested
in occupying Hungary and expanding as far into Europe as possible
but was thwarted by the defeat at Belgrade and contained by
Matthias' military strength as well as fierce resistance by
Vlach vassals. As McNally and Florescu put it,
the sultan "planned to strike at the pillars of European
civilization and bring it tumbling down under his control."
While
Hunyadi's victory at Belgrade and the lasting legacy of his
political decisions (Vlad III the
Impaler and Stephen III both came to power under Hunyadi, and
he went to great lengths to have his son Matthias placed on the
throne) rendered the daunting Mehmed II far less of a threat to
Christendom, his ultimate dream of a Christian reconquest of
Constantinople
would never be realized. Hunyadi had chosen
to stay out of the
Siege of
Constantinople because he was militarily unprepared to fight
Mehmed's mighty army at the time, and instead opted to protect
Hungary and fortify the Balkans. Matthias did not share the concept
of a great war against the Turks and was too embroiled in political
disputes with the
Holy Roman
Empire to his West to be the aggressive warrior his father was,
so his role was limited mostly to defending his own territory and
letting the Balkan leaders bare the brunt of the struggle against
the Ottoman Turks.
While fierce resistance and Hunyadi's effective leadership ensured
that the daring and ambitious Mehmed the Conqueror would only get
as far into Europe as the Balkans, the sultan had already managed
to transform the Ottoman Empire into what would be one of the most
feared powers in Europe (as well as Asia) for centuries.
Most of
Hungary was eventually conquered in 1526 at the Battle of
Mohacs
. Ottoman expansion into Europe continued
with menacing success until the
Siege of
Vienna in 1529, and Ottoman power in Europe remained strong and
still threatening to Central Europe at times until the
Battle of Vienna in 1683.
References