Ottoman campaign in Hungary in 1552 , 1552 of
Temesvár, 1552 was defended to the last man in 1552 In the spring of 1551, the Ottomans held the Hungarian border forts of
Pécs,
Fehérvár, Esztergom, Vác, Nógrád, Hatvan and Szeged. During the conquest campaign in 1551, the Turks were defeated by
George the Frater at
Timișoara (Temesvár) and Lippa, and the Sultan was outraged. This marked the end of the peace of Drinapolis (Erdine) in 1547. György Fráter deceived the sultan - in fact, he only wanted to gain time and finally hand over Transylvania, which had been under the rule of the Kingdom of Hungary since 1003, to the Hungarian king, Ferdinand of Habsburg. Due to the Turkish threat, on the instructions of Ferdinand I, in 1550–51, on the site of the old Szolnok earthen castle, Szolnok was surrounded by a new city wall (partly according to the plan of
István Dobó), and its weak castle was fortified. Lőrinc Nyáry was appointed to the forefront. This new strength did not fit into the Turkish plans to keep central Hungary. Suleyman's main goal was to make a bigger gap between the western part of Hungary and the Principality of Transylvania. For all this, Sultan Suleiman sent another conquering army against the politically divided Kingdom of Hungary. The commander-in-chief of his army,
Kara Ahmed, who left Constantinople, was the serdar[general] and other commanders were
Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey of
Rumelia and Hadim Ali pasha r(governor) of Buda. The poorly paid mercenaries of King Ferdinand and the Hungarian population fled the Turkish armies. Several Hungarian castles were left to their fate without protection. Ahmed's army's aim was to acquire the Timisoara region, while Hadim Ali had to occupy the castles of
Hont and
Nógrád, thus securing the way to the rich mining towns of the highlands. castle was a component of the defence line against the Ottoman expansion in the 16th century In 1552 two Ottoman armies crossed the border into the Hungarian Kingdom. One of them – led by
Hadim Ali Pasha – started a campaign against the western and central part of the country whilst the second army – led by
Kara Ahmed Pasha – attacked the fortresses in the
Banat region. Hadim Ali Pasha laid siege to the castle at
Veszprém and captured it on 2 June. The army of Ali Pasha – about 10,000 to 12,000 strong – got below
Drégely Castle on the morning of 6 July. The fall of Drégely started a chain of defeats of castles of
Hont and
Nógrád counties. Ottoman troops conquered nine-tenths of the castles in the two counties in short order. During the campaign they occupied
Timișoara, Veszprém,
Szécsény,
Hollókő,
Buják,
Lippa, Lugos, Karánsebes, Drégely and several smaller fortresses. Pasha Hadim Ali marched from Buda and Vizier Kara Ahmed marched from the West side of Transylvania (Partium). The Habsburg army under made a belated attempt to stop the Ottoman troops at
Plášťovce (then ), but was completely defeated in a two-day
battle of Palást, and 4,000 German and Italian prisoners were deported to Istanbul. The two armies united under Szolnok, then besieged and conquered the
Szolnok Castle, and turned against the gate of Upper Hungary, Eger. At the end of the July there was an enormous gap in the Hungarian border castle system. In 1552, Suleiman's united forces (Kara Ahmed pasha, Hadim Ali pasha, and Mehmed Sokollu beglerbey) laid
siege of Eger, located in the northern part of the Kingdom of Hungary, but the defenders led by István Dobó repelled the attacks and defended the Eger Castle. In 1554, the town of
Fiľakovo in south-central Slovakia with the castle of the same name was conquered by the Turks and was the seat of a
sanjak until 1593, when it was reconquered by the Imperial troops. On 27 March 1562, Hasszán, the
sanjak-bey of Fülek (Fiľakovo) castle, defeated the Hungarian army of the
Upper Lands at the .
Siege of Szigetvar 1556 The Ottoman armies advancing in
Transdanubia managed to occupy all the surrounding fortresses in the years 1540-1550, so
Szigetvár was completely left alone. After the Turkish attack, led by
Toygun Pasha, governor of Buda, was repulsed by László Kerecsényi in 1555, the first full-scale siege of the fortress took place in the summer of 1556. Despite the extraordinary efforts of the Ottomans the
castellan in charge of the defense, Marko Horvat Stančić
hr], kept the fortress against the multiple attacks led by Ali Pasha, governor of Buda. While Szigetvár was besieged, on July 18, a Habsburg army besieged the Ottoman fort at
Babócsa, on the west side of the Rinya River, 45 km west of Szigetvár. The commanders were Hungarian Palatine
Tamás Nádasdy and Croatian Ban
Nikola IV Zrinski. Ali Paşa knew that for Süleymân, losing a fort under Ottoman control is a bigger sin than failing to take one. Ali Paşa temporarily lifted the siege and took his men to Babócsa, to rescue the garrison but, on July 23-24, at a battle at the Rinya River, Nikola Zrinski defeated Ali Paşa, who then returned to Szigetvár, which, during his absence, had damaged walls repaired and the garrison reinvigorated. The Ottomans lifted the siege and left Szigetvár - chased and attacked while they fled.
Aftermath The castle, damaged during the siege, was rebuilt under the leadership of the captain and with the involvement of the Italian military engineer Pietro Ferrabosco, using the most modern military techniques, as a result of which it became the most modern and strongest border fortress in Hungary by the end of the 1550s, protected by a rampart wall, corner bastions, and moats. ==1560s==