'' of
Lokman The victory did not give the Ottomans the security they wanted. Buda was left undefended; only the French and Venetian ambassadors waited for the Sultan to congratulate him on his great victory. Though they entered the unguarded evacuated
Buda and pillaged the castle and surroundings, they retreated soon afterwards. On the evening of the battle, Sultan Suleiman and his general staff had no idea of the magnitude of the victory they had achieved. Believing that they were facing only a part of the armies of the Hungarians and her allies that had taken up arms against them that day, they cautiously refrained from pursuing the defeated Hungarian army vigorously and, believing that the battle would continue the next day, kept their army under arms all night. Only the next day did Suleiman wake up to the fact that he had won a decisive victory on the plain of Mohács, where he remained for four more days with his army. During this time he executed about 2000 captured Hungarian nobles whose bodies were found by archeologists after 2020. On 1 September,
Malkoçoğlu Bali Bey received permission and orders to advance with his cavalry for a raid, and on 4 September, after burning Mohács, the army itself began its advance towards Buda, where it arrived on 11 September. Queen Mary, who was in Buda, received news of the defeat and the death of the king on the evening of 30 August, and, having loaded most of her treasures onto a ship, fled to Pozsony(Pressburg or Posonium since 1918 renamed to Bratislava, capital of Slovakia), accompanied by the bishop of Veszprém, Elek Szalaházy, treasurer, and the papal nuncio, Baron De Burgio. The wealthier part of the population of Buda and
Pest followed her. The
Buda Castle was left without a guard and the keys were sent ahead to Földvár to the victorious sultan. Suleiman declared the campaign over with the temporary occupation of Buda, which, despite the fact that orders had been given to spare it, was set on fire on September 14 and 15 together with most of Pest, with the exception of the royal palace, which served as the residence of the Sultan and his entourage. However, this did not prevent his raiding armies from continuing to ravage the west of the Danube to Győr and the Styrian borders. Malkoçoğlu Bali Bey’s horsemen murdered the mainly male population with hair-raising cruelty, and the settlements they came across were plundered and then set on fire, but the castles and fortified places were not much harmed. Pécs, whose citizens who could handle weapons had fought and bled to death at Mohács together with their bishop, opened its gates asking for mercy. However, this was of no use, because the
Akinji troops[mostly irregulars who joined to the Sultans army without payment so were interested in looting] plundered, burned and destroyed the city.
Székesfehérvár was fortunately saved from destruction by its citizens and the county nobles who had fled there. Visegrád, which had been left without a guard by the governor, was defended by the Pauline and Cseri friars who had fled there with the help of the people who had fled there. Mihály Nagy, the lieutenant of the hajdús of the archbishop of Esztergom defended the fortress of
Esztergom successfully. On the other hand, the inhabitants of the area who fled to the Maróth castle of the archbishop of Esztergom met a tragic end; since there was only room for a few people there, the others set up camp between Maróth and
Dömös and partly transformed it into a wagon fortress, partly fortified it with ramparts. But these works were not yet fully completed when the Turkish raiding party, which also had a few cannons, began to shell the camp. The defenders held out heroically for a while, but on the third day, September 13, the Turks broke into the camp and brutally massacred about 25,000 people, including old people, women and children. After this, Malkoçoğlu Bali Bey marched to
Tata and
Komárom. The Esztergom chapter and archbishopric officials fled to the castle of
Komárom.with the fallen archbishop and the treasures of the churches. Malkoçoğlu Bali Bey wanted to take the two cities, which were quite heavily occupied, at all costs, but the siege did not take place, because on September 16 the Sultan ordered all troops to gather under Buda by the 21st.
János Szapolyai (Zápolya), who had reached Szeged with his army on 27 August, set off the next day in a light carriage, accompanied only by a few horsemen, towards Mohács, in order to persuade the king and his army to retreat to
Buda, as he had suggested earlier. For safety's sake, he took the route not directly to Mohács, but to Tolna, and arrived at Dúsnok on the evening of 29 August, but he could not continue his journey, because due to the torrential rain that had fallen that evening, the roads in the already marshy region between Dúsnok and the Danube were all under water. Therefore, the voivode could only set off further south on 30 August, but on the way he learned of the outcome of the battle fought the day before, and so he immediately turned back and hurried to his army, lest he be cut off by the raiders. The voivode's further intention, according to his later statement, was to gather a large army behind the Tisza, which was a huge defensive line, with which he could then attack the Turks. For this purpose, he contacted Pál Várday, Archbishop of Eger, whom
King Louis II had sent to the queen immediately before the Battle of Mohács and who arrived in Buda almost simultaneously with the news of the lost battle. Under such circumstances, the archbishop did not join the fleeing queen, but hurried to his archdiocese, from where on September 1 he issued an appeal to the nobility of Heves, Borsod, Gömör, Tolna and Abauj counties and the towns in the archdiocese to make hasty preparations for defense, and to send envoys to Miskolc to discuss of this defense. Here, the bishop and János Pelsőczi Bebek gathered the belated battalions of several highland counties, and on September 15, they held a meeting with the envoys of the Tiszamellék counties regarding the measures to be taken to prevent further enemy attacks, as a result of which the towns and villages of the highland were also called upon to unite their armies with the battalions of the counties at Verpelét. But this salutary decision had little effect, because the cities did not send their armies there(but prepared to defend themselves), and Szapolyai, upon hearing the news of the Turkish(Ottoman) army's advance towards Buda, did not go to Verpelét with his army group, although he had anticipated its arrival there, but instead, moving up the left bank of the Tisza, reached
Mezőtúr on September 10, from where he continued his journey towards Tokaj via Fegyvernek, in order to come into contact with the forces of the northern counties and win them over for himself. After the capture of Buda, Sultan Suleiman, having stopped his campaign in Hungary, decided to lead his army, ignoring the plundered and scorched Transdanubia, back to Pétervárad between the Danube and Tisza and from there to Constantinople. In order to be able to change banks between Buda and Pest, military craftsmen began building a wooden bridge on September 13, which, despite much forced labor, was completed in 6 days, or on September 19. The next day, the army began its crossing to the left bank of the Danube, which continued without a break until September 23, when, due to the collapse of the bridge, the troops who were still on the
Buda side had to be transported across the river by boat. Suleiman also loaded onto ships the fabulous treasures of the
Matthias era, including statues, weapons, other rarities, and most of the famous Corvinus Library, which he found in the royal palace, and had them all taken to Constantinople. By midday on 24 September the entire Ottoman-Turkish army was concentrated around Pest and the next day it set out for Pétervárad, in two columns; one column, consisting of the Rumelian corps, under the command of
Grand Vizier Ibrahim, was at Szeged, while the other column, consisting of all the other troops, under the personal command of the Sultan, marched along the Danube via Baja-Zombor. Ibrahim's column suffered greatly from the lack of water; therefore the Grand Vizier hastened the march as much as he could, which in turn resulted in the death of a great many horses. On 29 September this column reached
Szeged, whose inhabitants, on hearing of the enemy's arrival, "moved all their families and goods as many they could to the other side of the Tisza." Even during the advance so far, “we obtained an extraordinary amount of booty and took many prisoners; the army was in abundance of flour, wheat, barley, fodder and other foodstuffs.” In Szeged, which was burned in all its parts, much booty and prisoners were taken. “Since there were an extraordinary number of sheep in the said city, 50,000 sheep were driven away for the pasha and 20,000 for the defterdar (chief financial official)
Iskander Celebi.” On October 2, Ibrahim's column reached Titel, near which a Hungarian commander named Deli-Rádics successfully carried out a raid against the Turks, "capturing three to four hundred people alive from among the raiders in the area, and slaughtering about five hundred, and generally blocking the roads, he either captured or killed those coming from any direction." In retaliation, the Bosnian Bey Khosrev, commander of the rearguard, was ordered to ambush the pursuing Hungarian troops, kill some of them, and present six alive to the pasha. On the evening of October 3, Ibrahim arrived with his column in front of
Pétervárad, where he immediately began building the bridge over the Danube. The column led by the Sultan, having marched for 11 days and rested for 3 days, and having plundered, pillaged and destroyed everything along the way, only arrived near Pétervárad on October 7th. On the way, it came across a large fortified place, which it began to besiege, while a very fierce battle ensued. Finally - after the Janissary Agha, Shedsa Agha, the Samsundzi-Bashi (commander of the 71st Janissary Regiment), the Janissary Chausza (chief judge) and several infantry officers, as well as many sipahi (feudal cavalry soldiers) were killed and several aghas (court officers) were wounded - it was captured, plundered and robbed. According to
Kemalpasazade, this fortified place was Bács[the main fortress of
Kalocsa Archdiocese], who remembers the things carried by the Suleiman Column as follows: – Dselálzáde calls the castle or city where this large-scale clash took place on October 5 as "Bads"8, and this is undoubtedly also the same as Bács. According to other information, this fortified place, surrounded by swamps, ditches and carts and offering great resistance, was somewhere between Bács and Pétervárad. However, it is most likely that the Turks had a strong fight in both places, as can be established almost without any doubt from the narrative of Dselálzáde – Pecsevi and Szolakzáde also mention the costly battles that took place around the aforementioned swamp castle. On October 8 and 9, the Turkish army, with rich booty and an inestimable number of prisoners, crossed the Danube bridge built by Ibrahim at Pétervárad, where Suleiman received news from Anatolia that a rebellion had broken out in the
province of Zulkadr, located at the foot of
Mount Taurus in
Asia Minor. Therefore, he sent Behram Beglerbeg with the army of Asia Minor in rapid marches, sent the European vassals home, and himself, with his permanent troops, also hurried to Constantinople with unusually rapid marches, where he arrived on November 13. As a result of his campaign, Suleiman only retained Pétervárad,
Illok, and the rebuilt
Szalankamen, which he had restored and heavily garrisoned. ==Aftermath 1526==