On 11 May 1553, Mircea the Shepherd, backed in person by the
prince of
Moldavia,
Alexandru Lăpușneanu, retook his throne after successful defeating Radu and the
Habsburgs. His second period of rule was short, as the very same Alexandru Lăpușneanu, suspecting him of bad faith, sent his high
vornic, Nădăbaico, to remove Mircea from the throne. Then, he obtained from the Ottoman Porte the right to rule for
Pătrașcu, while Mircea had to leave for
Istanbul. After Pătrașcu died in January 1558,
Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent once again granted Mircea the Shepherd the right to rule. His appointment provoked an exodus of boyars across the
Southern Carpathians and out of Wallachia. Mircea promised these men that if they returned and paid homage to him, he would forgive them. He received them at the princely court in
Bucharest, in the presence of Ottoman dignitaries. Nevertheless, after the Ottomans had left, Mircea killed the boyars, Stănilă the
vornic being the most important of these. That same day, 3 February 1558, was the first time that representatives of the
Orthodox clergy also perished. ==Death==