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See also: king of Poland and Hungary, the eldest son of
See also: Wladislaus II
.
Jagiello, by his See also: fourth wife, See also: Sophia of See also: Vyazma, was See also: born at See also: Cracow on the 31st of See also: October 1424, succeeding to the See also: throne in his tenth See also: year
.
The domestic troubles which occurred during his minority had an important influence upon the development of the See also: Polish constitution; but under the wise administration of Zbigniew Olesnicki Poland suffered far less from her rebels than might have been anticipated, and Wladislaus gave the first proof of his manhood by defeating the See also: arch-traitor Spytek of Melztyn in his See also: camp at Grotnik on the 4th of May 1439
.
On the sudden See also: death of the emperor See also: Albert, whn was also king of Bohemia and Hungary, the Hungarianselected Wladislaus as their king, despite the opposition of the widowed empress See also: Elizabeth, already big with the
See also: child who subsequently ascended the Hungarian throne as Wladislaus V
.
But Wladislaus III., who was solemnly crowned king of Hungary at Buda by the Magyar primate in See also: July 1440, had to fight against the partisans of the empress for three years till See also: Pope See also: Eugenius IV. mediated between them so as to enable Wladislaus to See also: lead a crusade against the See also: Turks
.
War was proclaimed against Sultan See also: Murad II. at the See also: diet of Buda on Palm See also: Sunday 1443, and with an army of 40,000 men, mostly See also: Magyars, the See also: young monarch, with See also: Hunyadi commanding under him, crossed the Danube, took See also: Nish and Sofia, and advancing to the slope of the Balkans, returned to Hungary covered with See also: glory
.
See also: Europe resounded with the praises of the youthful See also: hero, and the Venetians, the Genoese, the duke of See also: Burgundy and the pope encouraged Wladislaus to continue the war by offering him every assistance
.
But at this juncture the sultan offered terms to Wladislaus through See also: George Brankovic, despot of See also: Servia, and, by the See also: peace of See also: Szeged (July 1, 1444), Murad engaged to surrender Servia, See also: Albania and whatever territory the Ottomans had ever conquered from Hungary, including 24 fortresses, besides paying an indemnity of 1oo,000 florins in gold
.
Unfortunately, Wladislaus listened to the representations of the papal See also: legate, See also: Cardinal Julian Cesarini, who urged him in the name of See also: religion to break the peace of Szeged and resume the war
.
Despite the representations of the Poles and of the majority of the Magyars, the king, only two days after solemnly swearing to observe the terms of the treaty, crossed the Danube a second See also: time to co-operate with a See also: fleet from the West which was to join hands with the See also: land army at Gallipoli, whither also the Greeks and the See also: Balkan Slays were to See also: direct their auxiliaries
.
But the Walachians were the See also: sole See also: allies of Hungary who kept faith with her, and on the bloody See also: field of
See also: Varna, See also: November the loth, 1444, Wladislaus lost his See also: life land more than a fourth of his army
.
See Julian Bartoszewicz, View of the Relations of Poland with the Turks and Tatars (Pol.) (Warsaw, 186o) ;See also: August Sokolowski, See also: History of Poland, vol. ii
.
(Pol.) (Vienna, 19o4); Ignacz Acsady, History of the Hungarian See also: Realm, vol. i
.
(Hung.) (See also: Budapest, 1905)
.
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