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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SOU-STE |
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STEPHEN (ISTVAN) BATHORY (1533-1586) , king of Poland and prince of Transylvania, the most famous member of the Somly6 branch of the ancient Bathory family, now extinct, but originally almost coeval with the Hungarian monarchy. Istvan Bdthory spent his early years at the court of the emperor Ferdinand, subsequently attached himself to Janos Zapolya, and won equal renown as a valiant 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 patron's son, John Sigismund, he incurred the animosity of the emperor Maximilian
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secret support of Denmark and the emperor, had shut her gates against the new monarch, and was only reduced (Dec. 16,1577) after a six months' siege, beginning with a pitched battle beneath her walls in which she lost 5000 of her mercenaries. Danzig was compelled to pay a fine of 200,000 guldens, but her civil and religious liberties were wisely confirmed. Stephen was now able to devote himself to foreign affairs. The difficulties with the sultan were temporarily adjusted by a truce signed on the 5th of November 1577; and the Diet of Warsaw waspersuaded to grant Stephen subsidies for the inevitable war against Muscovy. Two campaigns of wearing marches, and still more exhausting sieges ensued, in which Bathory, although repeatedly hampered by the parsimony of the Diet, was uniformly successful, his skilful diplomacy at the same time allaying the suspicions of the Porte and the emperor. In 1581 Stephen penetrated to the very heart of Muscovy, and, on the 22nd of August, sat down before the ancient city of Pskov, whose vast size and imposing fortifications filled the little Polish army with dismay. But the king, despite the murmurs of his own officers, and the protestations of the papal nuncio, Possevino, whom the curia, deluded by the mirage of a union of the churches, had sent expressly from Rome to mediate between the tsar and the king of Poland, closely besieged the city throughout a winter of arctic severity, till, on the 13th of December 1581, Ivan the Terrible, alarmed for the safety of the third city in his empire, concluded peace at Zapoli (Jan. 15, 1582), thereby ceding Polotsk and the whole of Livonia. The chief
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See I. Polkowski, The Martial Exploits of Stephen Bdthory (Pol.; Cracow, 1887); Paul Pierling, Un Arbitrage pontifical an xvi" siecle (Brussels, 1890); Lajos Szadeczky, Stephen Bdthory's election to the Crown of Poland (Hung.; Budapest, 1887). (R. N. B.) End of Article: STEPHEN (ISTVAN) BATHORY (1533-1586) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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