John Hunyadi was a leading Hungarian military and political figure during the 15th century.
Background
There is very little inbormation about his background. Probably, he was born c. 1385. The place of his birth is likewise unknown. According to the document, John's father served in the royal household as a "court knight" at that time, suggesting that he was descended from a respected family. Hunyadi's father died before 12 February 1419.
The identification of John Hunyadi's mother is even less certain. Probably, she was the daughter of a rich boyar, or nobleman, whose estates were located at Morzsina (present-day Margina, Romania).
Education
He mastered his military skills on the southern borderlands of the Kingdom of Hungary.
Career
John Hunyadi spent his youth at the court of the emperor Sigismund, and he distinguished himself in arms from an early age. The last years of Sigismund and the short reign of his son-in-law Albert (1437 - 1439) witnessed increasing Turkish pressure in southern Hungary.
Under both kings John Hunyadi held military commands: he was made ban of Szörény in 1439 and voivode of Transylvania and captain of Belgrade in 1440. From 1441 on Hunyadi was constantly in the field. He inflicted severe defeats upon the Turks in 1442-1443. By 1444 Hunyadi, with the aid of Cardinal Caesarini and the Serbian George Brankovic, forced the sultan Murad II to a truce. For the first time since their invasions in the late 14th century, the Turks had been fought to a standstill by a Hungarian army.
King Ulászló, however, was persuaded by Caesarini to violate the truce and in 1444 led a Hungarian army to the slaughter at the battle of Varna, where he died; Hunyadi barely escaped with his life. The death of Ulászló again plunged Hungary into a domestic crisis.
The new king, Ladislas Posthumus, was a minor, and Hunyadi was appointed regent of Hungary in 1446. In the face of disruptive activities of bands of Czech soldiers in the north and jealous rivals from the higher aristocracy, Hunyadi maintained political order by balancing the interests of the lesser nobility against those of the great magnates and by shaping the Hungarian army into an effective fighting force.
After the Turkish capture of Constantinople in 1453, Hungary once again became the target of the Turkish armies. In a final heroic effort Hunyadi shattered the army of Sultan Mohammed II at Belgrade in 1456. Three weeks after his victory, however, John Hunyadi died of the plague, which had broken out in the army.
After King Ladislas died in 1457, the Hungarians elected John Hunyadi's second son, Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary.
Achievements
John Hunyadi is known to history as törökverö, conqueror of the Turks. His role in the history of Hungary is that of a protector at a time when Hungary's nominal protectors - its kings - were ineffective and when Hungary's enemies-the Turks and internal factionalism-were strong. He was a national hero. His son, Matthias Corvinus, became the king of Hungary; under his rule Hungary flourished.
In Bulgarian folklore, the memory of Hunyadi was preserved in the epic song hero character of Yankul(a) Voivoda, along with Sekula Detentse, a fictitious hero.
Religion
He is portrayed as an ardent supporter of the Catholicization of Orthodox peoples.
Personality
Hunyadi's skill as a general was equaled by his skill as a statesman.
Quotes from others about the person
The French writer and diplomat Philippe de Commines described Hunyadi "as a very valiant gentleman, called the White Knight of Wallachia, a person of great honour and prudence, who for a long time had governed the kingdom of Hungary, and had gained several battles over the Turks".
Connections
In 1432, Hunyadi married Erzsébet Szilágyi (c. 1410–1483), a Hungarian noblewoman. John Hunyadi had two children, Ladislaus and Matthias Corvinus.