Jump to content

Bogdan III the One-Eyed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bogdan III the One-Eyed
Bogdan al III-lea cel Chior
Bogdan III the One-Eyed, Saint Nicholas Princely Church
Prince of Moldavia
Reign2 July 1504 – 20 April 1517
PredecessorStephen the Great
SuccessorStephen IV of Moldavia
BornMarch 18, 1479
Huși, Principality of Moldavia
DiedApril 20, 1517 (aged 38)
Huși, Principality of Moldavia
Burial
SpouseDoamna Stana
Doamna Nastasia
Doamna Ruxandra of Wallachia
IssueAlexandru Cornea
Alexandru Lăpușneanu
Stephen IV of Moldavia
DynastyMușat
FatherStephen the Great
MotherDoamna Maria Voichița of Wallachia
ReligionOrthodox

Bogdan III the One-Eyed (Romanian: Bogdan al III-lea cel Chior) or Bogdan III the Blind (Bogdan al III-lea cel Orb; 18 March 1479 – 20 April 1517) was Voivode of Moldavia from July 2, 1504, to 1517.

Family

[edit]

Bogdan was born in Huși as the son of Voivode Stephen III (Stephen the Great) and his wife Maria Voichița. He was his father's only surviving legitimate son.

Conflict with Poland and Tatar incursions

[edit]

Immediately after Bogdan came to the throne, he expressed his intent to marry Elisabeth, sister of Polish King Alexander the Jagiellonian. After being twice refused despite offering generous gifts (including territorial concessions), he raided southern Poland, and Alexander accepted his demands—provided that Bogdan be more lenient towards the status of the Roman Catholic Church in Moldavia—in 1506. Alexander's death and Sigismund the Old's ascendancy led to a breaking of the previous agreement, provoking further incursions on each side. In October 1509, Bogdan was severely defeated on the Dniester river; a peace was signed on January 17, 1510, when the ruler finally renounced his pretensions.

In the same year, Moldavia suffered two major Tatar devastations (they are alleged to have carried away 74,000 as slaves[1])—in 1511, the Tatars even managed to occupy most of the country. The events forced Poland, still recovering from the great invasion of 1506 (see Tatar invasions), to send troops as aid, helping Bogdan regain his lands after a victory in May 1512.

Submission to Ottoman rule

[edit]

In 1514, in order to block the Tatar threat by enlisting the help of a powerful overlord, Bogdan sent chancellor Tăutu to negotiate the terms of Moldavia's submission to the Ottoman Empire (then under the rule of Yavuz Sultan Selim, or Selim I).

The Porte demanded that a certain sum (initially expressed as 4,000 gold coins) be paid yearly, together with a ceremonial gift of 40 horses and 40 falcons, additional expenses (such as for the celebration of Eid ul-Fitr) and assistance in case of war—Princes themselves were required to lead a 4,000-strong army that would place itself under the orders of the Sultan. In exchange for these, Moldavia was allowed a high level of autonomy.

Life

[edit]

Bogdan was blind in one eye, most likely after a wound received during one of his many battles. While the rules of succession to the throne did exclude an impaired individual, as însemnat ("marked"), they seem to have applied just to people who had been affected before their candidacy to the throne, and to those with congenital disorders.[citation needed]

He was married to Stana, Nastasia and finally to Ruxandra, daughter of Mihnea cel Rău, ruling Prince of Wallachia. One of his daughters from his third marriage, Polyxena, married Marko Jakšić (d. 1537).

He was buried next to his father (and other members of his family) in Putna Monastery.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Wapowski, Bernard (1874). Kroniki Bernarda Wapowskiego: cześć ostatnia czasy podługoszowskie obejmująca (1480–1535) (in Polish). Nakładem Akad. Umiej. w Krakowie. p. 98.
[edit]
Preceded by Voivode of Moldavia
1504–1517
Succeeded by