Transylvanian peasant revolt
Template:Short description Template:Good article {{#invoke:Infobox military conflict|main}}
The Transylvanian peasant revolt (Template:Langx), also known as the peasant revolt of Bábolna or Bobâlna revolt (Template:Langx), was a popular revolt in the eastern territories of the Kingdom of Hungary in 1437. The revolt broke out after George Lépes, bishop of Transylvania, had failed to collect the tithe for years because of a temporary debasement of the coinage, but then demanded the arrears in one sum when coins of higher value were again issued. Most commoners were unable to pay the demanded sum, but the bishop did not renounce his claim and applied interdict and other ecclesiastic penalties to enforce the payment.
The Transylvanian peasants had already been outraged because of the increase of existing seigneurial duties and taxes and the introduction of new taxes during the first decades of the century. The bishop also tried to collect the tithe from the petty noblemen and from Orthodox Vlachs who had settled in parcels abandoned by Catholic peasants. In the spring of 1437, Hungarian and Vlach commoners, poor townspeople from Kolozsvár (now Cluj-Napoca in Romania)<ref group="note">The article always mentions the Romanian official name of the settlements in parentheses, because Transylvania is now part of Romania.</ref> and petty noblemen started to assemble on the flat summit of Mount Bábolna near Alparét (Bobâlna) where they set up a fortified camp. The bishop and his brother, Roland Lépes, the deputy of the voivode (or royal governor) of Transylvania, gathered their troops to fight against the rebels. The voivode, the two counts of the Székelys and many Transylvanian noblemen also hurried to the mountain to assist them against the rebels.
The rebels sent envoys to the voivode to inform him about their grievances, but the envoys were captured and executed. The voivode invaded the rebels' camp, but the peasants resisted and made a successful counter-attack, killing many noblemen during the battle. To prevent the rebels from continuing the war, the bishop and the leaders of the noblemen started negotiations with the rebels' envoys. Their compromise was recorded in the Kolozsmonostor Abbey on 6 July. The agreement reduced the tithe by half, abolished the ninth (a seigneurial tax), guaranteed the peasants' right to free movement and authorized them to hold an annual assembly to secure the execution of the agreement.
The noblemen, the counts of the Székelys and the delegates of the Saxon seats concluded a "brotherly union" against their enemies at Kápolna (Căpâlna). The rebellious peasants left their camp and moved towards Dés (Dej). After a battle near the town, the parties concluded a new agreement on 6 October which increased the rent payable by the peasants to the landowners. Shortly thereafter, the peasants invaded the Kolozsmonostor Abbey and took possession of Kolozsvár and Nagyenyed (Aiud). The united armies of the voivode of Transylvania, the counts of the Székelys and the Saxon seats forced the rebels to surrender in January 1438. The leaders of the revolt were executed and other rioters were mutilated at the assembly of the representatives of the Three Nations of Transylvania in February.
BackgroundEdit
Transylvania ("the Land beyond the Forests") was a geographic region in the 15th-century Kingdom of Hungary.Template:Sfn Four major ethnic groups – the Hungarians, Saxons, Székelys, and Vlachs (Romanians) – inhabited the territory.Template:Sfn The Hungarians, the Hungarian-speaking Székelys, and the Saxons formed sedentary communities, living in villages and towns.Template:Sfn Many of the Vlachs were shepherds, herding their flocks between the mountains and the lowlands,Template:Sfn but the monarchs and other landowners granted them fiscal privileges to advance their settlement in arable lands from the second half of the century.Template:Sfn The Vlachs initially enjoyed a special status, which included that they were to pay tax only on their sheep, but Vlach commoners who settled in royal or private estates quickly lost their liberties.Template:Sfn For administrative purposes, Transylvania was divided into counties and seats.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The seven Transylvanian counties were subjected to the authority of a high-ranking royal official, the voivode of Transylvania.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The seats were the administrative units of the autonomous Saxon and Székely communities.Template:Sfn
The voivodes presided over the noblemen's general assemblies, which were annually held at a meadow near Torda (Turda).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn From the early 15th century, the voivodes rarely visited Transylvania, leaving the administration of the counties to their deputies, the vice-voivodes.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Transylvanian noblemen were exempted from taxation in 1324.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Noblemen were granted the right to administer justice to the peasants living in their estates in 1342.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The prelates acquired the same right in their domains in the second half of the 14th century.Template:Sfn In 1366, Louis I of Hungary decreed that an oath taken by a Vlach knez (or chieftain) who "had been brought"Template:Sfn to his estate by royal writ was equal to a true nobleman's oath, but other knezes were on a footing of equality with the heads of villages.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The legal position of the knezes was similar to the "nobles of the Church" and other groups of conditional nobles, but the monarchs frequently rewarded them with true nobility.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The ennobled Vlachs enjoyed the same privileges as their ethnic Hungarian peers, thus they became members of the "Hungarian nation" which had been associated with the community of noblemen.Template:Sfn On the other hand, the Vlach commoners who lived on their estates lost their liberties.Template:Sfn
The Székelys were a community of privileged border guards.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They fought in the royal army, for which they were exempted from taxation.Template:Sfn A royal official, the count of the Székelys, was their supreme leader, but the Székely seats were administered by elected officials.Template:Sfn The Saxons also had the right to elect the magistrates of their seats.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They enjoyed personal freedom and paid a lump sum tax to the monarchs.Template:Sfn The wealthiest Saxon towns – Bistritz, Hermannstadt and Kronstadt (Bistrița, Sibiu and Brașov) – owned large estates which were cultivated by hundreds of peasants.Template:Sfn Dozens of Saxons and Székely families held landed property in the counties, for which they also enjoyed the status of noblemen.Template:Sfn Saxon and Székely leaders were occasionally invited to Torda to attend the general assemblies, which enabled the leaders of the three nations to coordinate their actions.Template:Sfn
The towns, located in the counties, could hardly compete with the large Saxon centers.Template:Sfn Kolozsvár was granted the right to buy landed property from the noblemen or other landowners in 1370, but its burghers were regarded as peasants by the bishops of Transylvania and the abbots of Kolozsmonostor Abbey, who forced them to pay the ninth (a seigneurial tax) on their vineyards until 1409.Template:Sfn The merchants from Kolozsvár, Dés and other Transylvanian towns were exempted from internal levies, but the noblemen often ignored that privilege, forcing the merchants to pay duties while travelling across their domains.Template:Sfn
The Hungarians, Saxons and Székelys adhered to Roman Catholicism.Template:Sfn The Diocese of Transylvania included most of the province, but the Saxons of Southern Transylvania were subjected to the archbishops of Esztergom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Catholic commoners were to pay an ecclesiastic tax, the tithe, but John XXIII exempted the lesser noblemen from paying it in 1415.Template:Sfn However, George Lépes, the bishop of Transylvania, ignored this decision, especially after John had been declared an antipope.Template:Sfn The Vlachs were originally exempt from the ecclesiastic tax, but Sigismund of Luxemburg, king of Hungary, decreed that the Vlachs who settled on lands abandoned by Catholic peasants were to also pay the tithe.Template:Sfn Sigismund was an absent monarch, deeply involved in European politics; he spent much time outside Hungary, especially in his other realms, such as Germany and Bohemia.Template:Sfn
The Ottomans attacked Transylvania almost every year starting in 1420.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The peasants had to pay the increasing costs for defence against the Ottomans.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They were regularly obliged to pay "extraordinary taxes" in addition to the chamber's profit (the traditional tax payable by each peasant household to the royal treasury).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The king also ordered that every tenth peasant should take up arms in case of an Ottoman attack, although peasants had always been exempt from military obligations.Template:Sfn The accommodation of the troops was also an irksome duty, because the soldiers often forced the peasants to supply them with food and clothes.Template:Sfn The landowners began to collect the ninth from the peasants.Template:Sfn Although the ninth had already been introduced in 1351, it was not regularly collected in Transylvania.Template:Sfn The noblemen also made attempts to hinder the free movement of their serfs.Template:Sfn
The increasing taxes and the new burdens stirred up the commoners. The Transylvanian Saxons could only overcome their rebellious serfs with the assistance of the vice-voivode, Roland Lépes, in 1417.Template:Sfn The united armies of the counties and the Saxon seats crushed the Székely commoners' uprising in 1433.Template:Sfn In early 1434, the burghers of Kronstadt had to seek the assistance of the count of the Székelys against the Vlachs who had risen up in Fogaras County.Template:Sfn Hussite ideas, especially their egalitarian Taborite version, began to spread among the peasantry in the 1430s.Template:Sfn In May 1436, George Lépes urged the inquisitor James of the Marches to come to Transylvania, because Hussite preachers had converted many people to their faith in his diocese.Template:Sfn
Peasant warEdit
Bishop Lépes's actionsEdit
In order to tackle financial burdens resulting from the Hussite wars and military campaigns against the Ottoman Empire, Sigismund of Luxemburg put lower value silver coins into circulation in 1432.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The new pennies were known as quarting because they contained only a quarter of the silver content of the old currency.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bishop Lépes, who knew that pennies of higher value would again be minted in a few years, suspended the collection of the tithe in 1434.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
After the valuable coins were issued, Lépes demanded the tithe for the previous years in one sum.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Historians estimate that the peasant families were required to pay six to nine gold florins, although the value of an average peasant lot was only about 40 florins.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Most peasants were unable to pay this amount, especially because they also had to pay the seigneurial taxes to the owners of their parcels.Template:Sfn
To secure the payment of the arrears, the bishop applied ecclesiastic penalties, placing whole villages under interdict in summer 1436.Template:Sfn He also excommunicated the petty noblemen who had refused to pay the tithe.Template:Sfn However, most serfs resisted and their lords were unwilling to assist the bishop.Template:Sfn At the bishop's request, the king ordered the voivode and the ispáns (or heads) of the counties to secure the collection of the tithe in early September.Template:Sfn The king also decreed that all peasants who failed to pay the arrears within a month after their excommunication were to pay twelve golden florins as a penalty.Template:Sfn
Rebellion breaks outEdit
The revolt developed from local disturbances in the first half of 1437.Template:Sfn The villagers from Daróc, Mákó and Türe (Dorolțu, Macău and Turea) assaulted the abbot of Kolozsmonostor at Bogártelke (Băgara) in March.Template:Sfn In Alsó-Fehér County and around Déva (Deva), the serfs gathered into small bands and attacked the noblemen's manors.Template:Sfn Peasants from Alparét and Bogáta (Bogata de Sus) were the first to settle on the top of the nearby Mount BábolnaTemplate:Sfn in May or June.Template:Sfn Being surrounded by high cliffs and dense forests and crowned by a plateau of about Template:Convert, the mountain was an ideal place for defence.Template:Sfn Following the Taborites' military strategy, the rebels established a camp on the flat summit of the mountain.Template:Sfn
A lesser nobleman, Antal Nagy de Buda, came with a group of peasants from Diós and Burjánosóbuda (Deușu and Vechea) to the mountain.Template:Sfn The Vlach Mihai arrived with people from Virágosberek (Florești).Template:Sfn Salt miners from Szék (Sic) and poor townspeople from Kolozsvár joined the peasantry.Template:Sfn About 5–6,000 armed men gathered on the plateau by the end of June, according to historian Lajos Demény's estimation.Template:Sfn
Bishop Lépes and his brother, the vice-voivode, started to assemble their troops near the peasants' camp.Template:Sfn The absent voivode, Ladislaus Csáki, hurried to Transylvania.Template:Sfn The counts of the Székelys, Michael Jakcs and Henry Tamási, also joined the united armies of the voivode and the bishop.Template:Sfn The young noblemen who joined the campaign wanted to make a sudden assault on the peasants, but the bishop suggested that the peasants should be pacified through negotiations.Template:Sfn The delay enabled the rioters to complete the fortification of their camp.Template:Sfn
First battle and compromiseEdit
The peasants elected four envoys to inform the voivode about their grievances.Template:Sfn They requested Csáki to put an end to abuses over the collection of the tithe and to persuade the bishop to lift the ecclesiastic bans.Template:Sfn They also demanded the confirmation of the serfs' right to free movement.Template:Sfn Instead of entering into negotiations, the voivode had the rebels' envoys tortured and executed in late June.Template:Sfn He soon invaded the rebels' camp, but the peasants repulsed the attack and encircled his army.Template:Sfn During the ensuing battle, many noblemen perished; Bishop Lépes barely escaped from the battlefield.Template:Sfn
The representatives of the noblemen and the rebels entered into negotiations in early July.Template:Sfn The rebels' deputies were appointed by their leaders, including Pál Nagy de Vajdaháza, who styled himself "the flag bearer of the universitas of the Hungarian and Vlach inhabitants of this part of Transylvania".Template:Sfn The use of the term "universitas" evidences that the peasantry sought the acknowledgement of their liberties as a community.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The peasants emphasized that they wanted to "regain their freedoms granted them by the ancient kings, freedoms that had been suppressed by all sorts of subterfuges",Template:Sfn because they were convinced that their liberties had been recorded in a charter during the reign of the first king of Hungary, Saint Stephen.Template:Sfn Their belief in a "good king" who had secured his subjects' welfare in a mythical "golden age" was not unusual in the Middle Ages.Template:Sfn
The parties reached a compromise which was recorded in the Kolozsmonostor Abbey on 6 July.Template:Sfn They agreed that the tithe would be reduced by half.Template:Sfn The payment of the rents, taxes and other levies due to the landowners and the royal treasury was suspended until the tithe was collected.Template:Sfn The agreement abolished the ninth and prescribed that the peasants were only required to pay the rent to the landowners.Template:Sfn The annual amount of the rent was fixed at 10 denars, much lower than the rent from before the uprising.Template:Sfn The noblemen also acknowledged the peasants' right to free movement, which could only be limited if a peasant failed to fulfill his obligations to the landowner.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn To keep the execution of the agreement under surveillance, the peasants were authorized to hold an annual assembly at Mount Bábolna.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Their assembly was entitled to punish noblemen who had broken the compromise.Template:Sfn
The Kolozsmonostor agreement prescribed that the "delegates of the noblemen and the inhabitants of the realm" should ask Sigismund of Luxemburg to send an authentic copy of Stephen's charter.Template:Sfn The peasants agreed that the provisions of the charter were to be applied in case of a contradiction between the charter and the Kolozsmonostor agreement.Template:Sfn The peasants preserved the right to elect delegates and start new negotiations with the representatives of the noblemen if Stephen's charter did not properly regulate their obligations towards the landowners.Template:Sfn
Union of the Three NationsEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The bishop and the noblemen regarded the Kolozsmonostor agreement as a temporary compromise.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Their motives were to encourage the rebels to demobilize and to give them time to muster new troops.Template:Sfn They assembled at Kápolna and started negotiations with the counts of the Székelys and the delegates of the Saxon seats.Template:Sfn This was the first occasion when the representatives of the noblemen, Székelys and Saxons held a joint assembly without the authorization of the monarch.Template:Sfn They concluded a "brotherly union" against their enemies in early September, pledging to provide military assistance to each other against both internal and foreign aggressors.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The bishop seems to have acknowledged that petty noblemen were exempt from paying the tithe, according to Demény, because the Diet of Hungary decreed that noblemen could not be forced to pay the tithe in 1438.Template:Sfn
Second battle and second compromiseEdit
The rebels abandoned their fortified camp on Mount Bábolna, most probably because they needed new provisions.Template:Sfn They moved towards Dés, pillaging the noblemen's manors during their march.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They threatened all who did not support them with severe punishments.Template:Sfn They established a new camp on the Szamos (Someș) River near the town.Template:Sfn A new battle was fought between the rebels and their enemies near the camp in late September.Template:Sfn
After being unable to overcome the rebels, the noblemen started new negotiations with them at Dellőapáti (Apatiu).Template:Sfn The representatives of the two parties reached a new compromise on 6 October, which was included in a new charter in the Kolozsmonostor Abbey four days later.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn For unknown reasons, the peasants accepted less favorable terms than those of the first agreement.Template:Sfn Demény argues, their leaders had most probably realized that they were unable to resist for a long time.Template:Sfn
According to the new agreement, the minimum amount of the rent payable by the peasants to the landowners was increased to 12 denars per year; peasants who held larger plots were to pay 25 to 100 denars to their lords, which was equal to the sum payable before the uprising.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The new agreement did not determine the "gifts" that the peasants were to give to the landowners, only stating that they were required to fulfill this obligation three times a year.Template:Sfn The agreement confirmed the noblemen's right to administer justice to the peasants living in their estates, but also stipulated that the peasants could appeal against their lords' decision to the court of a nearby village or small town.Template:Sfn
Last phaseEdit
The second agreement was again regarded as a provisional compromise by both parties.Template:Sfn The charter prescribed that a joint delegation of the rebels and the noblemen should be sent to the king, who was staying in Prague, to seek his arbitration.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn There is no evidence of the appointment of the delegates or their departure for Prague.Template:Sfn Sigismund of Luxemburg died on 9 December 1437.Template:Sfn
Knowing that their camp on the Szamos could easily be attacked, the rebels marched towards Kolozsvár in October or November.Template:Sfn They invaded and pillaged the Báthorys' estates at Fejérd (Feiurdeni).Template:Sfn They also captured and beheaded many noblemen before attacking the abbey and forcing the abbot to flee.Template:Sfn A group of rebels took possession of Nagyenyed with the assistance of its poor burghers and the inhabitants of the nearby villages.Template:Sfn Most burghers of Kolozsvár also sympathized with the rebels, who thus entered the town without resistance.Template:Sfn A Saxon charter recorded that Antal Nagy de Buda died fighting against the noblemen before 15 December.Template:Sfn Demény refutes the credibility of the report, saying that all other sources indicate that the peasants were still resisting in January 1438.Template:Sfn
The united armies of the new voivode, Desiderius Losonci, and Michael Jakcs laid siege to Kolozsvár.Template:Sfn On 9 January, they sent a letter to the Saxon leaders, urging them to send reinforcements to contribute to the destruction of the "faithless peasants".Template:Sfn During the siege, "not one soul could come out or go in" the town, according to the besiegers' report.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The blockade caused a famine which forced the defenders to surrender before the end of January.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The rebel groups around Nagyenyed were annihilated around the same time.Template:Sfn
Aftermath and assessmentEdit
The delegates of the three Estates of Transylvania, noblemen (including the ennobled Saxons and Vlachs), Székelys, and Saxons, assembled at Torda on 2 February 1438.Template:Sfn They confirmed their "brotherly union" against the rebellious peasants and the Ottoman marauders.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Nine leaders of the revolt were executed at the assembly.Template:Sfn Other defenders of Kolozsvár were mutilated.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Taking advantage of the victory, the leaders of the noblemen also made attempts to harm their personal enemies.Template:Sfn For instance, the voivode who wanted to seize some properties of the Báthorys accused them of having cooperated with the rebels.Template:Sfn In retaliation for its support of the rebels, Kolozsvár was deprived of its municipal rights on 15 November.Template:Sfn However, the burghers attained the restoration of their liberties with the support of John Hunyadi on 21 September 1444.Template:Sfn
Contemporaneous letters unanimously described the revolt as a peasant war against their lords.Template:Sfn On 22 July 1437, the judge royal, Stephen Báthory, referred to the Transylvanian events as the "peasants' war"; on 30 September, Roland Lépes mentioned that a nobleman had been wounded "in the general fight against the peasantry"; and Bishop Lépes wrote of the "war of the peasants" on 27 January 1439.Template:Sfn Other documents (including the records of the meetings of the town council of Nagyenyed) emphasized that craftsmen and townspeople also joined the revolt.Template:Sfn No contemporaneous source recorded that national hatreds played any role in the uprising.Template:Sfn On the contrary, the cooperation of the Hungarian and Vlach commoners during the rebellion is well-documented.Template:Sfn The first compromise between the rebels and the noblemen explicitly mentioned their common grievances.Template:Sfn For instance, the rebels complained that "both the Hungarians and the Vlachs who lived near castles" had arbitrarily been compelled to pay the tithes on their swines and bees.Template:Sfn
Historian Joseph Held states, the "conservative stance of the Transylvanian peasant movement was similar to late medieval peasant movements elsewhere in Europe".Template:Sfn The peasants only wanted to secure the abolition of new seigneurial duties and the restoration of the traditional level of their taxes, without calling into question the basic structure of the society.Template:Sfn On the other hand, Lajos Demény writes, the movement developed into a "general attack against feudal society" in Transylvania.Template:Sfn Both historians conclude that the rebels could not achieve their principal purposes.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The peasants' right to free movement was partially restored,Template:Sfn but the landowners were again able to reduce it during the last decade of the century.Template:Sfn According to historian Jean Sedlar, Vlach peasants "occupied the lowest rung of the social ladder, superior only to slaves" in medieval Transylvania because of their Orthodox faith. However, no merely ethnic prejudice prevented Vlachs from acquiring land and joining the Hungarian noble class, provided they accepted Catholicism and adopted a noble life-style. At the same time, the fact that upward mobility required the renunciation of Vlach identity clearly hindered this group from developing a sense of ethnic solidarity.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
SourcesEdit
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External linksEdit
Template:Medieval and Early Modern European Peasant Wars Template:Riots, protests and civil disorder in Romanian territory