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Encyclopedia > Stephen the Great
The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is Ştefan cel Mare.
Image:Stefan_cel_Mare.jpg
Stephan the Great (Romanian icon)

Ştefan cel Mare (Stephen the Great or St. Steven the Great), born in 1434, was a voivod (prince) of Moldavia (1457-1504), who won renown in Europe for his long resistance against the Ottoman Empire.


He was also the king of the lands on the other side of the town of Vatra Dornei.


With the help of the Wallachian prince Vlad III the Impaler, Ştefan secured the throne of Moldavia in 1457. Menaced by powerful neighbours, he successfully repulsed an invasion by Hungary in 1467, and invaded Wallachia in 1471, which had by then succumbed to Turkish vassalage.


When the Ottoman sultan Mehmed II launched an attack on Moldavia, Stephen defeated the invaders near Vaslui in 1475. Near Vaslui is the site of Steven the Great's historic 1475 victory against the Turks, which temporarily halted the Turkish advance into the Balkans.


Stephen was defeated at Războieni (Valea Alba) next year, but the Turks had to retreat after they failed to take any important fortress. His search for European assistance against the Turks had little success, but his determination "to cut off the pagan's right hand" won him the acclaim of Pope Sixtus IV as "Christ's Athlete".


After 1484 Ştefan had to contend not only with new Turkish onslaughts but also with Polish and Hungarian designs on Moldavian independence. Finally in 1503 he concluded with Sultan Beyazid II a treaty that preserved Moldavian independence, at the cost of an annual tribute to the Turks. From the sixteenth century the principality of Moldavia spent three hundred years under Ottoman sovereignity.


Though it was marked by continual strife, Ştefan's long reign nonetheless brought considerable cultural development; no less than 44 churches and monasteries were erected by Ştefan himself, some of which are now part of UNESCO's World Heritage.


Stefan Cel Mare was called holy by many Christians, but it is said that he had more than 20 illegitimate children. He is buried in the Putna Monastery.


External links

  • Romanian University "Stefan cel Mare" in Suceava (http://www.usv.ro/)
  • Map of the Moldavia of Stefan cel Mare, 1501 (http://www.eliznik.org.uk/RomaniaHistory/maps/moldavia-1501.htm)
  • Map of the Romania of Stefan cel Mare (http://www.ici.ro/romania/en/istorie/hi32.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Stephen I of Hungary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1054 words)
Stephen the Great raising the double cross: equestrian sculpture by Alajos StrĂ³bl, 1906, crowns the "Fishermen's Bastion", Budapest.
Between 995 and 997, Stephen (under the name "Vajk") was the prince of Nitra (a Slovak Christian center and the capital of the Nitrian principality in present day south-western Slovakia) and was living in Nitra together with his wife.
Stephen was canonized by the Vatican as Saint Stephen of Hungary in 1083.
Stephen V of Hungary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (410 words)
Stephen's father, attempting to bind the powerful but pagan Cumans tribe more closely to the dynasty, arranged for Stephen's marriage, as a youth (about 1255), to Elizabeth, the daughter of the Cuman chieftain (named Koteny or Kuthens).
Adversaries of Stephen, especially Ottokar II of Bohemia, believed that Stephen was too great a friend of the mighty Cumans (who could field 16,000 men) to be a true Catholic.
Stephen died suddenly as he was raising an army to rescue his kidnapped infant son Ladislaus from his rebellious vassals.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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