Michael I Apafi
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Template:Redirect template Template:Infobox royalty Michael Apafi (Template:Langx; 3 November 1632 – 15 April 1690) was Prince of Transylvania from 1661 to his death.
Background
The Principality of Transylvania emerged after the disintegration of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary in the second half of the 16th century.Template:Sfn The principality included Transylvania proper and other territories to the east of the river Tisza, known as Partium.Template:Sfn The princes of Transylvania paid a yearly tribute to the Ottoman sultans and could not conduct an independent foreign policy.Template:Sfn They also maintained a special relationship with the Habsburg rulers of Royal Hungary (the realm developing on the northern and western territories of medieval Hungary), theoretically acknowledging that their principality remained a land of the Holy Crown of Hungary.Template:Sfn
Early life
Born in Ebesfalva (now Dumbrăveni in Romania) on 3 November 1632, Michael was the son of György Apafi of Apanagyfalva and Borbála Petky.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn György Apafi was the ispán (or head) of Küküllő County in the Principality of Transylvania.Template:Sfn Michael's childhood and youth is almost undocumented.Template:Sfn He grew up in a large family: his mother gave birth to six sons and five daughters.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He lost his father at the age of three.Template:Sfn His teachers were Cartesians and he studied philosophy, astronomy and mechanics.Template:Sfn He was a passionate horologist and collector of watches.Template:Sfn He married a Transylvanian noblewoman, Anna Bornemissza in 1650.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn She was related to the aristocratic Kemény and Bánffy families.Template:Sfn
Chaos
George II Rákóczi, Prince of Transylvania, invaded the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth without seeking the Ottoman sultan's consent in January 1657.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He had concluded an agreement with King Charles X of Sweden about the partition of the Commonwealth and wanted to secure the Polish throne for himself.Template:Sfn Rákóczi had also entered into correspondence with Count Miklós Zrínyi (or Nikola Zrinski), a prominent aristocrat in Royal Hungary, who offered the Hungarian throne to him against the Habsburg monarch, Leopold I.Template:Sfn As a young Transylvanian nobleman, Michael Apafi accompanied Rákóczi to the Polish campaign.Template:Sfn
The new Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire, Köprülü Mehmed Pasha, had set about the consolidation of the empire just months before Rákóczi's Polish campaign.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He instructed Rákóczi to return from his Polish campaign several times.Template:Sfn For Rákóczi ignored his instructions, Köprülü Mehmed ordered the Crimean Tatars to attack the Transylvanian army in Poland.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Polish troops invaded Transylvania and his allies abandoned Rákóczi who was forced to sign a humiliating peace treaty, promising to pay 1,2 million florins as compensation to the Commonwealth on 22 July 1657.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rákóczi hurried back to Transylvania, leaving the bulk of his army behind.Template:Sfn The Transylvanian troops were approaching their homeland when the Tatars ambushed and captured them on 31 July.Template:Sfn The Tatars dragged their prisoners off to the Crimea.Template:Sfn Apafi and the commander of the army, John Kemény, were among the captives.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Tatars demanded a ransom for the release of the Transylvanian aristocrats, but Rákóczi denied pay it from his own treasury.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Transylvania fell into chaos.Template:Sfn Köprülü Mehmed ordered Rákóczi's depositionTemplate:Sfn and an obedient Diet elected Francis Rhédey prince, but Rákóczi regained his throne early in 1658.Template:Sfn After Rákóczi did not obey the Grand Vizier's summons, Köprülü's Ottoman and Tatar troops invaded Transylvania, destroying Gyulafehérvár (Alba Iulia) and other towns and capturing tens of thousands of prisoners in September.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Köprülü withdrew his troops from the principality only after the head of the Prince's Council, Ákos Barcsay was elected prince by the Diet on 7 October.Template:Sfn A civil war broke out, with Rákóczi seeking Leopold I's support and Barcsay urging the Ottomans to intervene.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rákóczi who was fatally wounded fighting against the Ottomans died on 7 Juny 1660, but the Ottomans soon imprisoned Barcsay to secure the collection of a large indemnity for costs of the war.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Ottomans captured Várad (Oradea) on 17 August and took possession of most of the Partium.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Apafi's former commander, John Kemény, had meanwhile returned from the Tatar captivity to Transylvania.Template:Sfn After the Ottoman conquest of Várad, Kemény rose up against Barcsay with the remnants of Rákóczi's supporters.Template:Sfn The Diet elected him prince on 1 January 1661.Template:Sfn On 23 April, he also persuaded the Diet to quit Ottoman suzerainty and seek Leopold I's protection.Template:Sfn Leopold I appointed Field Marshall Raimondo Montecuccoli to lead an army to Transylvania.Template:Sfn Köprülü Mehmed offered a compromise to Leopold I, demanding the acknowledgement of the Ottoman conquest of Várad and of the sultans' suzerainty over Transylvania in return for appointing a new prince and stopping the punitive Ottoman military campaigns.Template:Sfn His offer was accepted and a secret treaty confirmed the compromise.Template:Sfn
Reign
Ascension to throne
Apafi spent more than three years in captivity before his wife could raise his ransom.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The sum of his ransom is unknown, but Anna Bornemissza must have converted parts of their property into cash.Template:Sfn She sold their village of Almakerék (Mălâncrav), according to 19th-century historians.Template:Sfn After his return to Transylvania in 1661,Template:Sfn Apafi settled in his estates.Template:Sfn
The Ottoman sultan Mehmed IV appointed Kuchuk Ali, Pasha (or governor) of Temeşvar Eyalet, to restore Ottoman suzerainty in Transylvania by force.Template:Sfn Kuchuk Ali invaded the principality from the West in late June 1661.Template:Sfn He offered the princely throne first to István Petky (a kinsman of Apafy), then to Pál Béldi, and then to István Lázár, but they refused the offer.Template:Sfn Meanwhile, Crimean Tatars poured into the principality and joined Kuchuk Ali's troops in pillaging the countryside.Template:Sfn The Pasha appointed Apafi as prince and Apafi did not dare to disobey.Template:Sfn Kuchuk Ali ordered the delegates of the Three Nations to gather at a meadow near Marosvásárhely (Târgu Mureș) and to acknowledge Apafi's appointment on 14 September 1661.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Pasha demanded 250,000 florins as compensation for the costs of the war and further 50,000 florins as tribute.Template:Sfn
John Kemény captured Kolozsvár (Cluj-Napoca), but Montecuccoli withdrew most of his troops from Transylvania after learning of Apafi's ascension to the throne on 18 September.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Montecuccoli left small German mercenary troops in five Transylvanian strongholds and Apafi vainly requested Leopold I to surrender them.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Apafi convened the Diet to Kleinschelken (Șeica Mică) to secure the full legitimization of his rule,Template:Sfn because his appointment violated the constitutional principle of the free election of the princes.Template:Sfn After he fook the customary princely oath, the Diet installed him as prince on 20 November.Template:Sfn The Diet set a fifteen-day deadline for all noblemen to acknowledge Apafi's rule, but Kemény did not obey.Template:Sfn
Köprülü Mehmed's son, Fazıl Ahmed Pasha, who succeeded his father as grand vizier on 1 November,Template:Sfn addressed a letter to Apafi.Template:Sfn He assured Apafi of the protection of the Ottoman sultan, Mehmed IV, but also reminded him that he had owed his throne only to Ottoman support.Template:Sfn Apafi sent envoys to Kemény to achieve his rival's resignation in return for an amnesty, but Kemény had the envoys captured.Template:Sfn Kemény died fighting against an Ottoman army near Grossalisch (Seleuș) on 22 January 1662.Template:Sfn The commander of the Ottoman army, Kuchuk Mehmed, did not leave the principality after his victory.Template:Sfn
Consolidation
Kemény's death consolidated Apafi's position.Template:Sfn Transylvanian noblemen hurried to pay homage to him.Template:Sfn He did not dismiss Kemény's chancellor, János Bethlen, and made Gábor Haller his treasurer.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although Kemény's staunchest partisans sought Leopold I's support, their envoys could not exact a promise from him.Template:Sfn The German garrison surrendered Görgény (Gurghiu) to Apafi and the Sublime Porte released part of the sum to be paid by him.Template:Sfn The German garrison at Kolozsvár continued to resist.Template:Sfn Kuchuk Mehmed laid siege to the town and Apafi was forced to join the Ottomans.Template:Sfn Apafi wanted to expel the German mercenaries from this important Transylvanian town, but he also wanted to prevent the Ottoman troops from entering Kolozsvár, fearing that they would not abandon it.Template:Sfn He started sending letters to Leopold I, asking him to command the garrison to surrender to him.Template:Sfn Leopold I did not grant his request,Template:Sfn but a truce was signed and Kuchuk Mehmed abandoned the siege on 15 June.Template:Sfn
For Husein, Pasha of Várad, made further raids against the region of Kolozsvár, the Diet sent envoys to the Ottoman capital Istanbul, requesting the Sultan Mehmed IV's intervention against the Pasha.Template:Sfn The Diet granted a general amnesty to Kemény's former supporters on 22 February 1663.Template:Sfn One of them, Dénes Bánffy, was appointed to be the military commander of the Transylvanian troops.Template:Sfn Mehmed IV declared war on the Habsburg Empire in April and charged Fazıl Ahmed with the command of the new military campaign.Template:Sfn The Grand Vizier informed Apafi that he was determined to transform Royal Hungary into a tributary state and ordered him to join the campaign.Template:Sfn Apafi did not dare to resist Fazıl Ahmed's command, but he sent words to the Palatine (or viceroy) of Hungary, Ferenc Wesselényi, about the Ottomans' plans and deferred his departure.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Kuchuk Mehmed left Transylvania to join the Grand Vizier's army in August, but Apafi departed for the campaign only after Fazıl Ahmed had threatened him of a new Tatar invasion of Transylvania.Template:Sfn By the time he reached the Grand Vizier's camp at Érsekújvár (Nové Zámky, Slovakia) in October, the Ottomans had already captured the town.Template:Sfn On Fazıl Ahmed's order, Apafi called on the Hungarian nobility to yield to the Ottomans, but his manifesto remained unnoticed.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Before leaving Érsekújvár to winter at Belgrade late in October, the Grand Vizier allowed Apafi to return to Transylvania.Template:Sfn
The German mercenaries who were stationed at Székelyhíd (Săcueni) and Kolozsvár had not received their salaries for month.Template:Sfn They mutinied and surrendered the two fortresses to Apafi early in 1664.Template:Sfn Apafi intensified his diplomatic activities, seeking the Protestant monarchs' protection for Transylvania.Template:Sfn He had already approached Lord Winchilsea, the English ambassador at Istanbul.Template:Sfn In 1664, he sent letters directly to King Charles II of England.Template:Sfn He also entered into correspondence with the head of the French diplomacy, Hugues de Lionne.Template:Sfn Leopold I listed Apafi among his potential allies in an anti-Ottoman coalition and Apafi started negotiations with Grigore I Ghica, Prince of Wallachia, about Wallachia's joining the anti-Ottoman alliance.Template:Sfn
Fazıl Ahmed resumed his military campaign against the Habsburg Empire in May,Template:Sfn but Montecuccoli inflicted a defeat on the Ottoman troops in the Battle of Saint Gotthard on 1 August 1664.Template:Sfn Despite the victory, Leopold I did not want to risk a lengthy war against the Ottoman Empire and his deputies signed the Peace of Vasvár on 10 August.Template:Sfn The peace treaty confirmed the Ottomans' territorial gains in return for a 22-year truce and Leopold I formally recognized Apafi's rule in Transylvania.Template:Sfn The peace treaty also ordered the destruction of the westernmost Transylvanian fort, Székelyhíd.Template:Sfn
Balancing acts
The Peace of Vasvár outraged most Hungarian and Croatian aristocrats, because they thought that Leopold I had sacrificed the liberation of Hungary for a humiliating peace.Template:Sfn For Apafi, the Peace of Vasvár proved that the Ottoman Empire was weakening and adopted a new policy, trying to balance between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs.Template:Sfn He and the delegates of the Three Nations addressed a letter to Leopold I, pledging that he would never cede the Transylvanian fortresses previously held by German mercenaries to the Ottomans in March 1665.Template:Sfn They also requested Leopold I to represent the Transylvanian interests during negotiations with the Ottomans, but Leopold's envoys signed a commercial treaty without mentioning Transylvania.Template:Sfn
The discontented Hungarian and Croatian aristocrats held meetings and started conspiring against Leopold I.Template:Sfn They wanted to achieve the reunification of Hungary and they were planning to place George II Rákóczi's son, Francis I Rákóczi, on the throne.Template:Sfn They had to realize that neither France nor the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth was willing to assist them and their leader, Ferenc Wesselényi, resolved to make contacts with Apafi.Template:Sfn Apafi's representatives met with Wesselényi in his castle at Murány (Muráň, Slovakia) in August 1666.Template:Sfn The conspirators decided to approach Fazıl Ahmed with Apafi's mediation.Template:Sfn They offered to acknowledge the Sultan's suzerainty, but Fazıl Ahmed refused their offer because he did not risk an armed conflict with the Habsburg Empire during the Ottoman–Venetian war for Crete.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Wesselényi died unexpectedly early in 1667,Template:Sfn but his fellows continued the conspiracy.Template:Sfn The Transylvanian princely council resolved that Transylvania would not support the conspirators without Fazıl Ahmed's authorization.Template:Sfn
Opposed to the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I, he supported the Ottomans and Hungarian rebels until the Ottoman defeat at the Battle of Vienna on 12 September 1683. Following this, Michael opened talks with Leopold and concluded a treaty with the Austrians on 27 September 1687, obtaining their recognition of his authority in Transylvania.[1]
He died at Fogaras (Făgăraș) in 1690 and was succeeded by his son Michael II Apafi.[2]
A manor house in Mălâncrav belonging to Michael I Apafi has recently been restored by the Mihai Eminescu Trust.[3]
References
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- ↑ Vico, Giambattista (2004) Statecraft : the deeds of Antonio Carafa (De rebus gestis Antonj Caraphaei) (translated and edited by Giorgio A. Pinton) P. Lang, New York, note 29, pages 413–414, Template:ISBN
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Sources
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