János Zápolyai, who had become the leader …
Years: 1514 - 1514
János Zápolyai, who had become the leader of the so-called national party of the Hungarian nobility in the chaos after the death of Matthias Corvinus in 1490, has been the governor of Transylvania from 1511.
Zápolya brutally suppresses the uprising of 1514, crushing the remnants of the rebel army by October and hereby increases his popularity with the gentry.
Consequently, the second Diet of Rákos appoints him governor of the infant king Louis II.
After the revolt, the Hungarian nobles enact laws that condemn the serfs to eternal bondage and increase their work obligations.
The Diet of 1514 condemns the entire peasant class to “real and perpetual servitude” and binds it permanently to the soil.
It also increases the number of days the peasants have to work for their lords, imposes heavy taxes on them, and orders them to pay for the damage caused by the rebellion.
With the serfs and nobles deeply alienated from each other and jealous magnates challenging the king's power, Hungary is vulnerable to outside aggression.
Locations
People
- György Dózsa
- John I Zápolya
- Tamás Bakócz
- Vladislaus II, King of Bohemia and King of Hungary and Croatia
