The shah of Safavid Persia, Tahmasp I, …
Years: 1533 - 1533
The shah of Safavid Persia, Tahmasp I, has become active in the eastern borders of the Ottoman Empire.
Suleyman, preoccupied with affairs in the East and convinced that Austria is not to be overcome at one stroke, grants a truce to archduke Ferdinand in 1533.
Ibrahim Pasa, vested with full powers, represents the sultan in negotiations with the Holy Roman emperor Charles V over the Hungarian question; these negotiations establish most of Hungary as tributary to the Ottomans and confirm the extraordinary powers of the grand vizier.
Ferdinand is to be considered as the King of Germany, and Charles V as the King of Spain, and they are equal to the Grand Vizier of Ottoman Empire.
Moreover, they are banned to count anyone as 'Emperor' except the Ottoman Emperor.
By the peace of 1533, signed in Constantinople, Ferdinand abandons his claims to central Hungary and recognizes Zápolya's rule there as Ottoman vassal, while Süleyman agrees to accept Ferdinand as ruler of northern Hungary in return for the payment of an annual tribute of thirty thousand guldens.
Locations
People
- Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
- Ferdinand I
- John I Zápolya
- Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha
- Suleiman I “the Magnificent”
- Tahmasp I
Groups
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Hungary, Kingdom of
- Holy Roman Empire
- Transylvania (Hungarian governate)
- Ottoman Empire
- Habsburg Monarchy, or Empire
- Hungary, Royal
- Croatia, (Habsburg) Kingdom of
