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See also: king of Poland and
See also: prince of Transylvania, the most famous member of the Somly6 branch of the See also: ancient Bathory See also: family, now See also: extinct, but originally almost coeval with the Hungarian See also: monarchy
.
Istvan Bdthory spent his early years at the See also: court of the emperor See also: Ferdinand, subsequently attached himself to Janos Zapolya, and won equal renown as a valiant
See also: lord-marcher, and as a skilful diplomatist at the imperial court
.
Zapolya rewarded him with the voivodeship of Transylvania, and as the loyal defender of the rights of his See also: patron's son, See also: John
See also: Sigismund, he incurred the animosity of the emperor See also: Maximilian, who kept him in prison for two years
.
On the 25th of May 1571, on the See also: death of John Sigismund, Bathory was elected prince of Transylvania by the Hungarian estates, in spite of the opposition of the court of Vienna and contrary to the wishes of the See also: late prince, who had appointed Gaspar Bekesy his successor
.
Bekesy insisting on his claims, a See also: civil war ensued in which Bathory ultimately drove his See also: rival out of Transylvania (1572)
.
On the See also: flight of See also: Henry of Valois from Poland in 1574, the
See also: Polish See also: nobility, chiefly at the instigation of the See also: great chancellor, See also: Jan See also: Zamoyski, elected Bathory king of Poland (1575) in opposition to the emperor Maximilian, the See also: candidate of the senate
.
On hearing of his altogether unexpected See also: elevation, Bathory summoned the Transylvanian estates together at Medgyes and persuaded them to elect his See also: brother Christopher prince in his See also: stead; then hastening to See also: Cracow, he accepted the onerous conditions laid upon him by the Polish See also: Diet, espoused the princess See also: Anne, the elderly See also: sister of the last Jagiello, Sigismund II., and on the 1st of May was crowned with unprecedented magnificence
.
At first his position was extremely difficult; but the sudden death of the emperor Maximilian at the very moment when that potentate, in See also: league with the See also: Muscovite, was about to invade Poland, completely changed the face of things, and though See also: Stephen's distrust of the Habsburgs remained invincible, he consented at last to enter into a defensive See also: alliance with the See also: empire which was carried through by the papal See also: nuncio on his return to See also: Rome in 1578
.
The leading events of Stephen Bathory's glorious reign can here only be briefly indicated
.
All armed opposition collapsed with the surrender of See also: Danzig
.
" The See also: Pearl of Poland," encouraged by her immense See also: wealth, and almost impregnable fortifications, as well as by the secret support of See also: Denmark and the emperor, had shut her See also: gates against the new monarch, and was only reduced (Dec
.
16,
1577) after a six months' siege, beginning with a pitched See also: battle beneath her walls in which she lost 5000 of her mercenaries
.
Danzig was compelled to pay a See also: fine of 200,000 guldens, but her civil and religious liberties were wisely confirmed
.
Stephen was now able to devote himself to See also: foreign affairs
.
The difficulties with the sultan were temporarily adjusted by a truce signed on the 5th of See also: November 1577; and the Diet of Warsaw waspersuaded to See also: grant Stephen subsidies for the inevitable war against Muscovy
.
Two
See also: campaigns of wearing See also: marches, and still more exhausting sieges ensued, in which Bathory, although repeatedly hampered by the parsimony of the Diet, was uniformly successful, his skilful See also: diplomacy at the same See also: time allaying the suspicions of the See also: Porte and the emperor
.
In 1581 Stephen penetrated to the very See also: heart of Muscovy, and, on the 22nd of See also: August, sat down before the ancient city of See also: Pskov, whose vast See also: size and imposing fortifications filled the little Polish army with dismay
.
But the king, despite the murmurs of his own See also: officers, and the protestations of the papal nuncio, Possevino, whom the See also: curia, deluded by the mirage of a union of the churches, had sent expressly from Rome to mediate between the See also: tsar and the king of Poland, closely besieged the city throughout a winter of arctic severity, till, on the 13th of See also: December 1581, See also: Ivan the Terrible, alarmed for the safety of the third city in his empire, concluded See also: peace at Zapoli (Jan
.
15, 1582), thereby ceding See also: Polotsk and the whole of Livonia
.
The chief domestic event of Stephen's reign was the establishment in Poland of the See also: Jesuits, who alone had the intelligence to understand and promote his designs of uniting Poland, Muscovy and Transylvania into one great See also: state with the See also: object of ultimately expelling the See also: Turks from See also: Europe
.
The project was dissipated by his sudden death, of apoplexy, on the 12th of December 1586
.
See I
.
Polkowski, The See also: Martial Exploits of Stephen Bdthory (Pol.; Cracow, 1887); See also: Paul Pierling, Un See also: Arbitrage pontifical an xvi" siecle (Brussels, 1890); Lajos Szadeczky, Stephen Bdthory's election to the See also: Crown of Poland (Hung.; See also: Budapest, 1887)
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