Tahy distinguished himself in the
wars against the Ottoman Turks, for which he was appointed commander of the royal army in
southern Hungary as well as the commander of strongholds in
Szigetvár and
Kanizsa. After his estates in Slavonia and Hungary were seized by the Ottomans in 1556, he acquired new estates in Stattenberg,
Styria and in 1564, one half of the
Susedgrad-
Stubica seigniory, the former estate of the
Báthory family. This acquisition brought him into
confrontation with the Henning family who owned the other half of the Susedgrad-Stubica seigniory. In 1565, using the help of local peasants, the Hennings drove out Tahy and his family and defeated the viceroy's army that was sent there to help the Tahys reclaim their new estates. The seigniory was soon confiscated by the Hungarian Royal Chamber. Tahy confronted the Chamber's manager, which resulted in the leasing of the seigneury back to Tahy in 1569. Soon after, a series of rebellions broke out there. == Role in Croatian-Slovene Peasant Revolt ==