The Ottomans defeated the Poles, who were supporting the Habsburgs in the Thirty Years' War, at the Battle of Cecora in September–October 1620, but were not able to further intervene efficiently before the Bohemian defeat at the Battle of the White Mountain in November 1620. File:Defending the Polish banner at Chocim, by Juliusz Kossak, 1892
The attack on Transylvania followed long Habsburg efforts to
enlist Polish support. Poland was potentially a more important ally
than Spain, and Sigismund III was as devout a Catholic as Philip III.
Poland’s military power was to be demonstrated in 1621 when it was
to raise an army of 45,000 backed by 40,000 Cossacks. More
significantly, Poland bordered on Silesia and Hungary, placing it in
a direct position to help, and it had signed a mutual assistance pact
in 1613 promising aid against rebellions. As Emperor Ferdinand’s
sister, the Polish queen naturally championed intervention, but the
king remained undecided. His own ambitions remained firmly fixed on
the Baltic and he was disappointed at his in-law’s lack of
assistance when Sweden invaded Livonia in 1617–18. (Ferdinand would
again fail to help against a second invasion in 1621.) Sigismund also
had to consider his nobles who preferred raiding against their
traditional targets, the Turks and Muscovites. However, the Russians
had made peace in December 1618, widening Sigismund’s options.
Many Polish clergy were receptive to Habsburg arguments that the
Protestant Bohemians posed a common threat. Sigismund had instructed
his son Wladyslaw to decline a Bohemian invitation to stand in their
royal election. As the situation worsened during 1619, Ferdinand held
out inducements, including an offer to relinquish the bishopric of
Breslau to Poland. Many Polish historians regard the Thirty Years War
as a lost opportunity, arguing that Sigismund should have accepted
this offer, or grabbed Silesia by playing the role later adopted by
Sweden and joining the German Protestants. Sigismund had no such
plans. Instead, he sought a way of satisfying the Polish pro-Habsburg
lobby without committing himself to a long war that would distract
from his primary objective of recovering Sweden. The leaders of the
Sejm agreed, because limited intervention provided a way of removing
the 30,000 unpaid Cossacks. These troops had been discharged after
the recent war with Russia and their raiding across the southern
frontier risked provoking a new conflict with the sultan. The
Cossacks have entered history as the Lisowczycy, after their original
commander, Aleksander Lisowczycy, a Lithuanian veteran who commanded
a regiment in the Russian war. The Lisowczycy were the kind of
cavalry that ‘God would not want and the Devil was afraid of’.
Unlike the traditional Polish cavalry, they wore no body armour,
relying on speed and fake retreats to lure opponents into traps. They
were happy to be paid, but also fought for booty, deliberately
terrorizing civilians into submission.
The Habsburg ambassador intended to recruit the Cossacks to
reinforce the imperial army, but they were reluctant to serve too far
from home in a land they considered full of impregnable fortresses
where plunder would be hard to take. Plans were changed so that 4,000
Lisowczycy joined 3,000 other Cossacks recruited by György Homonnai,
an Upper Hungarian magnate who was also a member of the Transylvanian
Estates and a personal enemy of Bethlen, who he believed had cheated
him in that country’s election of 1613. Having been driven into
exile, Homonnai had already fostered two failed rebellions. He now
struck across from his estates in Podolia at the end of October 1619.
Bethlen had left Rákóczi with only 4,000 men in Transylvania,
refusing to believe Homonnai posed a threat. The two armies met near
Ztropka (Stropkow in modern Slovakia) on 22 November, where Rákóczi’s
men were routed after they mistook the classic feigned retreat for
the real thing.
Homonnai’s attack fuelled an already volatile situation in east
Central Europe. Despite the grand vizier’s promise, the Ottomans
had hesitated to break their truce with the Habsburgs. Nonetheless,
they regarded Bethlen as their client and did not want him driven
from Transylvania, especially by the Poles who were already
interfering in neighbouring Moldavia. Peace had just been concluded
with Persia, allowing the sultan to send the Tartars, backed by
Ottoman regulars, into Moldavia where they routed a Polish relief
force at Cecora in October 1620. Sigismund sent a huge army the
following year that entrenched at Chocim (Hotim) on the Dneister and
managed to repel almost twice its number of Tartars and Turks. Fresh
problems with Sweden forced Sigismund to agree peace later in 1621,
restoring the pre-1619 situation, though Poland had to accept the
sultan’s candidate as prince of Moldavia. This conflict was
separate from the Thirty Years War, but nonetheless proved
significant for the Empire in preventing Poland and the Ottomans from
intervening.
The threat to Bethlen was already receding before he left his camp
outside Vienna. He had arrested most of Homonnai’s supporters after
the earlier rebellions. Finding few willing to support him, Homonnai
was already in retreat by 2 December. With the wider situation
remaining unclear, Bethlen was nonetheless forced to accept the
mediation of the Hungarian diet, agreeing an eight-month truce with
Ferdinand on 16 January 1620. Bethlen remained a threat to Ferdinand,
but the immediate danger had passed.
Sigismund refused to allow the Lisowczycy back into Poland, and
redirected them along the mountains into Silesia to join the imperial
army. Five detachments totalling 19,000 fighters set out between
January and July 1620, though some were intercepted by the Silesian
militia. The steady reinforcement enabled Bucquoy to resume the
offensive, launching three attacks from Krems in March, April and
early June against Thurn’s Bohemians and Austrians entrenched
around Langenlois to the north. The Silesians and Moravians returned,
bringing the Confederate army up to 25,000 by May when Anhalt arrived
to take command. They were joined by 8,000 Hungarian and
Transylvanian cavalry sent by Bethlen who, despite Ferdinand’s
generous terms, still distrusted the emperor and decided to re-enter
the war. Bethlen and Frederick had already sent a joint delegation to
Constantinople in March 1620 to seek Ottoman assistance for the
revolt. Mehmed Aga reached Prague in July to deliver the sultan’s
belated congratulations on Frederick’s coronation. He asked to see
where the Defenestration had taken place and enthusiastically
promised 60,000 Ottoman auxiliaries for Bohemia. Many in Prague were
deeply uncomfortable with courting the Ottomans, yet the leadership
was seduced by the fantastical scheme of a grand alliance smashing
both Poland and the Habsburgs. Scultetus did a theological somersault
to stress common ground between Calvinism and Islam, while Baron
Tschernembl argued any means were justified provided they saved the
true cause from the papists. Despite misgivings, Frederick wrote to
the sultan on 12 July, making Bohemia a tributary state of the
Ottoman empire in return for assistance. A delegation of a hundred
Bohemians, Hungarians and Transylvanians set out for Constantinople
with 70,000 fl. in bribes to seal the deal. Meanwhile, Frederick
promised 300,000 fl. to Bethlen, even pawning his jewels to raise the
first instalment.
With support growing, and having easily repulsed another attack by
Homonnai in August 1620, Bethlen seized control of the diet at
Neusohl in Upper Hungary. This had convened in May at Ferdinand’s
request to broker peace among all Hungarians. Bethlen’s supporters
declared the abolition of the clerical Estate and the confiscation of
the property of all who opposed them. Ferdinand ordered the diet to
disband on 13 August. Twelve days later, Bethlen’s supporters
elected him king of Hungary. Throughout, the solidly Catholic
Croatian diet (Sabor) rejected the Hungarians’ overtures and
aligned itself with its Inner Austrian neighbours, still loyal to the
Habsburgs.
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