March 27, 2011 <Back to Index>
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Francis
II Rákóczi (Hungarian: II. Rákóczi Ferenc;
27 March 1676 in Borsi, Royal Hungary – 8 April 1735 in Tekirdağ, Ottoman Empire)
Hungarian aristocrat, he was the leader of the
Hungarian uprising against the Habsburgs in 1703-11 as the prince (fejedelem)
of the Estates Confederated for Liberty of the Kingdom of Hungary. He
was also Prince of
Transylvania, an Imperial Prince, and a member of the Order of the
Golden Fleece. Today he is considered a national hero in Hungary. His name is historically also spelled Rákóczy. He was
the richest landlord in the Kingdom of
Hungary and was
the count (comes perpetuus) of the Comitatus Sarossiensis (in Hungarian Sáros)
from 1694 on. He was the third of three children born to Francis I
Rákóczi, elected ruling prince of Transylvania,
and Jelena Zrinska (Zrínyi Ilona in Hungarian), who was the
daughter of
Petar Zrinski (Zrínyi
Péter in
Hungarian), Ban of Croatia,
and niece of the poet Nikola Zrinski (Zrínyi Miklós in Hungarian). His grandfather and great-grandfather,
both called George, were Princes of Transylvania.
He had a brother, George, who died as a baby before Francis was born,
and a sister, Julianna,
who was four years older than Francis. His father died when Francis II
was four months old. Upon Francis
I's death, his widow requested guardianship of her children; however,
the advisors of Emperor
Leopold I insisted
that he retain guardianship of both Francis and his sister, especially
as Francis I had willed this before death. Despite further
difficulties, Jelena Zrinska was able to raise her children, while the
Emperor retained legal guardianship. The family lived in the castle
of Munkács (today Mukacheve, in Ukraine), Sárospatak and Regéc
until 1680, when
Francis’s paternal grandmother, Sophia
Báthory, died. Then,
they moved permanently into the castle of Munkács.
Rákóczi retained strong affection for this place
throughout his life. Aside from his mother, Rákóczi's key
educators were György
Kőrössy, castellan to the family, and János Badinyi. Jelena
Zrinska’s second husband, Imre
Thököly took
little
interest in Rákóczi's education, as he was by then
heavily involved in politics. However, the failure of the Turks to
capture the Habsburg capital in the Battle of Vienna in 1683 frustrated
Thököly's plans to become King of Upper Hungary.
When
the Turks began to grow suspicious of his intentions,
Thököly proposed sending the young Rákóczi to Constantinople as a guarantee of his goodwill.
But Rákóczi’s mother opposed this plan, not wishing to be
separated from her son. In
1686 Antonio Caraffa besieged
their residence, the castle of Munkács. Jelena Zrinska
successfully led the defence of the castle for three years, but
capitulated in 1688. The two Rákóczi children fell again
under the guardianship of Leopold I,
and moved to Vienna with their mother. They
regained their possessions, but could not leave the city without the
Emperor's permission. At
the
age of 17, the Emperor emancipated Rákóczi from his
mother, thereby allowing him to own property. His sister Julianna had
interceded for him after marrying a powerful Austrian, General
Aspremont. Rákóczi lived with the Aspremonts until his
marriage in September 1694, to 15-year-old Princess Amelia, daughter of
the Landgrave of Hesse-Wanfried and a descendant of Saint Elizabeth of
Hungary. The couple moved to the
Rákóczi castle
at Sárospatak, where Rákóczi began to manage his
properties. The Treaty
of Karlowitz on 26 January 1699, forced Thököly and Jelena Zrinska into exile.
Rákóczi remained in Vienna under
the Emperor’s supervision. Relying on the prevalent anti-Habsburg
sentiment, remnants of Thököly’s peasant army started a new
uprising in the Hegyalja region of Northeastern present-day
Hungary, which was part of the property of
the Rákóczi family. They captured the castles of Tokaj, Sárospatak and Sátoraljaújhely,
and asked Rákóczi to become their leader, but he was not
eager to head what appeared to be a minor peasant rebellion. He quickly
returned to Vienna, where he tried his best to clear his name.
Rákóczi then befriended Count
Miklós Bercsényi, whose property at Ungvár (today Ужгород
(Uzhhorod), in Ukraine),
lay
next to his own. Bercsényi was a highly educated man, the third
richest man in the kingdom (after Rákóczi and Simon
Forgách), and was related to most of the Hungarian
aristocracy. As
the House of
Habsburg was on
the verge of dying out in Spain, France was
looking for allies in its fight against Austrian hegemony.
Consequently, they established contact with Rákóczi and
promised support if he took up the cause of Hungarian independence. An
Austrian spy seized this correspondence and brought it to the attention
of the Emperor. As a direct result of this, Rákóczi was
arrested on 18 April 1700, and imprisoned in the fortress of Wiener Neustadt (south of Vienna). It
became obvious during the preliminary hearings that, just as in the
case of his grandfather Petar Zrinski,
the
only possible sentence for Francis was death. With the aid of his
pregnant wife Amelia and the prison commander, Rákóczi
managed to escape and flee to Poland.
Here he met with Bercsényi again, and together they resumed
contact with the French court. Three years later, the War of the
Spanish Succession caused
a
large part of the Austrian forces in the Kingdom of Hungary to
temporarily leave the country. Taking advantage of the situation, Kuruc forces
began a new uprising in Munkács, and Rákóczi was
asked to head it. He decided to invest his energies in a war of
national liberation, and accepted the request. On 15 June 1703, another
group of about 3000 armed men headed by Tamás
Esze joined him
near the Polish city of Lawoczne. Bercsényi also arrived, with
French funds and 600 Polish mercenaries. Most
of the Hungarian nobility did not support Rákóczi’s
uprising, because they considered it to be no more than a jacquerie,
a peasant rebellion. Rákóczi’s famous call to the
nobility of Szabolcs county seemed to be in vain. He
did manage to convince the Hajdús
(emancipated peasant warriors) to join his forces, so his forces
controlled most of the Kingdom of
Hungary to the
east and north of the Danube by late September 1703. He
continued by conquering Transdanubia soon
after. Since the Austrians had to fight Rákóczi on
several fronts, they felt obliged to enter negotiations with him.
However, the victory of Austrian and British forces against a combined
French-Bavarian army in the Battle of
Blenheim on
13 August 1704, provided an advantage not only in the War of the
Spanish Succession, but also prevented the union of
Rákóczi’s forces with their French-Bavarian allies.
This
placed
Rákóczi into a difficult military and financial
situation. French support gradually diminished, and a larger army was
needed to occupy the already-won land. Meanwhile, supplying the current
army with arms and food was beyond his means. He tried to solve this
problem by creating a new copper-based coinage, which was not easily
accepted in Hungary as people were used to silver coins. Nevertheless,
Rákóczi managed to maintain his military advantage for a
while – but after 1706, his army was forced into retreat. A meeting of the Hungarian Diet (consisting of 6 bishops, 36 aristocrats
and about 1000 representatives of the lower nobility of 25 counties),
held near Szécsény (Nógrád
county) in September 1705,
elected Rákóczi to be the "vezérlő fejedelem" -
(ruling) prince - of the Confederated Estates of the
Kingdom of Hungary, to be assisted by a 24-member Senate.
Rákóczi and the Senate were assigned joint responsibility
for the conduct of foreign affairs, including peace talks.
Encouraged by England and the Netherlands,
peace
talks started again on 27 October 1705 between the Hungarians and
the Emperor. Both sides varied their strategy according to the military
situation. One stumbling block was the sovereignty over Transylvania –
neither side was prepared to give it up. Rákóczi’s
proposed treaty with the French was stalled, so he became convinced
that only a declaration of independence would make it acceptable for
various powers to negotiate with him. In 1706, his wife (whom he had
not seen in 5 years, along with their sons József and
György) and his sister were both sent as peace ambassadors, but
Rákóczi rejected their efforts on behalf of the Emperor.
In
1707 during the Great Northern
War he was one
of the candidates to the throne of Poland,
supported by Elżbieta
Sieniawska. On
Rákóczi’s
recommendation, and with Bercsényi’s
support, another meeting of the Diet held at Ónod (Borsod county) declared the
deposition of the House of
Habsburg from
the Hungarian throne on 13 June 1707. But neither this act, nor the
copper currency issued to avoid monetary inflation, were successful. Louis XIV refused
to enter into treaties with Prince Rákóczi, leaving the
Hungarians without allies. There remained the possibility of an
alliance with Imperial Russia,
but this did not materialize either. At the Battle
of Trenčín (Hungarian Trencsén, German Trentschin, Latin Trentsinium,
Comitatus Trentsiniensis,
today in Slovakia), on 3 August 1708
Rákóczi’s horse stumbled, and he fell to the ground,
which knocked him unconscious. The Kuruc
forces
thought him dead and fled. This defeat was fatal for the uprising.
Numerous Kuruc leaders transferred their allegiance to the Emperor,
hoping for clemency. Rákóczi’s forces became restricted
to the area around Munkács and Szabolcs
county.
Not trusting the word of János Pálffy, who was the
Emperor’s envoy charged with negotiations with the rebels, the Prince
left the Kingdom of Hungary for Poland on 21 February 1711. In
Rákóczi’s absence, Sándor
Károlyi was
named Commander-in-Chief of the Hungarian forces, and quickly
negotiated a peace agreement with János
Pálffy.
Under its provisions, 12,000 rebels laid down their arms, handed over
their flags and took an oath of allegiance to the Emperor on 1 May 1711
in the fields outside Majtény,
in Szatmár county. The Peace
of Szatmár did
not treat Rákóczi particularly badly. He was assured
clemency if he took an oath of allegiance to the Emperor, as well as
freedom to move to Poland if he wanted to leave the Kingdom of Hungary.
He did not accept these conditions, doubting the honesty of the
Habsburg court, and he did not even recognize the legality of the Peace
Treaty, as it had been signed after the death of the Emperor Joseph
I on 17 April 1711, which terminated the
plenipotential authority of János Pálffy. Rákóczi
was offered the Polish Crown twice, supported by Tsar Peter I of
Russia.
He turned the offers down, though, and remained in Poland until 1712,
where he was the honoured guest of the Polish aristocracy. For a while
he lived in Danzig (now Gdańsk,
in Poland)
under the pseudonym of Count
of Sáros. He
left Danzig on 16 November 1712, and went to England, where Queen Anne,
pressured by the Habsburgs, refused to receive him.
Rákóczi then crossed the Channel to France,
landing in Dieppe on 13 January 1713. On 27
April he handed a memorandum to Louis XIV reminding him of his past
services to France and asking him not to forget Hungary during the
coming peace negotiations for theWar of the
Spanish Succession. But neither the Treaty of
Utrecht in 1713
nor the Treaty of
Rastatt in
1714 made any mention of Hungary or Rákóczi. No
provisions were even made to allow Rákóczi’s two sons,
who were kept under surveillance in Vienna, to rejoin their father. Prince
Rákóczi,
although not recognized officially by France,
was much in favour in the French court. But after the death of Louis XIV
on 1 September 1715, he decided to accept the invitation of the Ottoman
Empire (still at
war with the Habsburgs) to move there. He left France in September
1717, with an entourage of 40 people. and landed at Gallipoli on
10 October 1717. He was received with honours, but his desire to head
up a separate Christian army to help in the fight against the Habsburgs
was not under serious consideration. The Ottoman
Empire signed the Peace Treaty
of Passarowitz with
Austria on 21 July 1718. Among its provisions was the refusal of the
Turks to extradite the exiled Hungarians. Two years later, the Austrian
envoy requested that the exiles be turned over, but the
Sultan refused as a matter of honour.
Rákóczi and his entourage were settled in the town of Tekirdağ (Rodostó in Hungarian), relatively distant from the Ottoman
capital, and a large
Hungarian colony grew up around this town on the Sea
of Marmara.
Bercsényi, Count Simon Forgách, Count Antal
Esterházy, Count Mihály Csáky, Miklós
Sibrik, Zsigmond Zay, the two Pápays, and Colonel
Ádám Jávorka were among many who settled there,
sharing the sentiment of the writer Kelemen
Mikes, who said, “I had no
special reason to leave my country, except that I greatly loved the
Prince.” Rákóczi
lived in the Turkish town of Tekirdağ for
18 years. He adopted a set routine: rising early, attending daily Mass,
writing and reading in the mornings, and carpentry in the afternoons;
visited occasionally by his son, György Rákóczi.
Further military troubles in 1733 in Poland awakened his hopes of a
possible return to Hungary, but they were not fulfilled.
Rákóczi was 59 years old when he died on 8 April 1735. Rákóczi’s
testament,
dated 27 October 1732, left something to all his family
members as well as to his fellow exiles. He left separate letters to be
sent to the Sultan and to France’s
Ambassador to Constantinople, asking them not to forget about his
fellow exiles. His internal organs were buried in the Greek church of Rodosto,
while
his heart was sent to France. After obtaining the permission of
the Turkish authorities, Rákóczi’s body was taken by his
faithful chamberlain Kelemen Mikes to Constantinople on
6 July 1735 for burial in Saint-Benoît (then Jesuit) French
church in Galata, where he was buried, according to his last wishes,
next to his mother Jelena Zrinska. His remains were moved on 29 October
1906 to the St.
Elisabeth Cathedral in Kassa, Hungary (today Košice, Slovakia), where he is buried with his mother
Jelena and his son. |