The partition of
Hungary between the Ottoman and Habsburg empires lasted more
than 150 years. Habsburg Austria controlled Royal Hungary,
which consisted of counties along the Austrian border and
some of northwestern Croatia. The Ottomans annexed central
and southern Hungary. Transylvania became an Ottoman vassal
state, where native princes, who paid the Turks tribute,
ruled with considerable autonomy. After the Hungarian defeat
at Mohacs, the Protestant Reformation took hold in Hungary.
Initially, German burghers in Transylvania and Royal Hungary
adopted Lutheranism; later, John Calvin's works converted
many Magyars in Transylvania and central Hungary. The
Reformation spread quickly, and by the early seventeenth
century hardly any noble families remained Catholic.
Archbishop Peter Pazmany reorganized Royal Hungary's Roman
Catholic Church and led a Counter-Reformation that reversed
the Protestants' gains in Royal Hungary, using persuasion
rather than intimidation. Transylvania, however, remained a
Protestant stronghold. The Reformation caused rifts between
Catholic Magyars, who often sided with the Habsburgs, and
Protestant Magyars, who developed a strong national identity
and became rebels in Austrian eyes. Chasms also developed
between Royal Hungary and Transylvania and between the
mostly Catholic magnates and the mainly Protestant lesser
nobles. Reign
of Ulaszlo II and Louis II
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Hungary
Library of Congress Country Study Partition of
Hungary
Library of Congress Country Study
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