Mircea I of Wallachia

"Mircea cel Bătrân" redirects here. For the village in Ialomiţa County, see Reviga.
Mircea the Elder
Mircea cel Bătrân (Romanian)

Mircea the Elder. Fresco in the Episcopal Church of Curtea de Argeș
Voivode of Wallachia
Reign 23 September 1386–1395
1397–31 January 1418
Predecessor Dan I
Vlad I Uzurpatorul
Successor Vlad I Uzurpatorul
Mihail I
Born 1355
Died 31 January 1418
Burial 4 February 1418
Cozia Monastery, Vâlcea County
Spouse Doamna Mara
Doamna Anca
Issue Mihail I
Radu II Prasnaglava
Alexandru I Aldea
Vlad II Dracul
Ana
Arina
House House of Basarab
Father Radu I
Mother Doamna Calinichia[1]
Religion Orthodox Christian[2]

Mircea the Elder (Romanian: Mircea cel Bătrân, pronounced [ˈmirt͡ʃe̯a t͡ʃel bəˈtrɨn], d. 31 January 1418) was Prince of Wallachia from 1386 until his death. The byname "elder" was given to him after his death in order to distinguish him from his grandson Mircea II ("Mircea the Younger"). Starting in the 19th century, Romanian historiography has also referred to him as Mircea the Great (Mircea cel Mare).[3]

Family

Mircea was the son of voivode Radu I of Wallachia and Lady Callinichia,[4] thus being a descendant of the House of Basarab.[5] He was the father of Vlad II Dracul and Alexander I Aldea, and grandfather of Mircea II, Vlad Țepeș (Dracula), Vlad Călugărul and Radu the Handsome. All of these would at one time or the other rule Wallachia, with Mircea II and Vlad Țepeș both being able military commanders (the latter became one of the most notorious leaders in history, and the inspiration for the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker).

Reign

Wallachia under Mircea cel Bătrân, c. 1390

Mircea's reign is often considered to have brought stability to Wallachia. Found in a volatile region of the world, this principality's borders constantly shifted, but during Mircea's rule, Wallachia controlled the largest area in its history: from the Southern Carpathians in the north to the Danube in the south, and from today's Iron Gates on the Danube in the west to the Black Sea in the east.[6]

Mircea strengthened the power of the state and organized the different high offices, promoted economic development, increased the state's revenue, and minted silver money that enjoyed wide circulation not only inside the country but also in neighboring countries. He gave the merchants of Poland and Lithuania trade privileges and renewed those his predecessors had given to the people of Braşov. As a result, Mircea was able to afford increasing his military power. He fortified the Danube citadels and strengthened "the great army" made up of townspeople and of free and dependent peasants. He also proved to be a great supporter for the Eastern Orthodox Church.[7] Mircea the Elder is the first in the region to deal with slaves giving 300 gypsy dwellings to a monastery in 1388.[8]

While organizing the country and its institutions, Mircea also formed a system of lasting alliances which enabled him to defend the independence of the country. Through the intermediary of Petru Muşat, the prince of Moldavia, he concluded a treaty of alliance with Władysław II Jagiełło, king of Poland in 1389.[9] The treaty was renewed in 1404 and 1410. He maintained close relations with Sigismund of Luxembourg, the king of Hungary, relying on their common interest in the struggle against Ottoman expansion.[10][11]

Conflicts with the Ottoman Empire

The seal of Voivode Mircea from 1390, depicting the coat of arms of Wallachia

His interventions in support of the Bulgarians south of the Danube who were fighting against the Turks brought him into conflict with the Ottoman Empire. In 1394, Beyazid I (also known as "Yıldırım Beyazıt", "the Thunderbolt") crossed the Danube river, leading 40,000 men, an impressive force at the time. Mircea had only about 10,000 men so he could not survive an open fight. He chose what today is called a guerrilla warfare by starving the opposing army and using small, localized attacks and retreats (a typical form of asymmetric warfare). On October 10, 1394, the two armies finally clashed at the Battle of Rovine, which featured a forested and swampy terrain, thus preventing the Ottomans from properly spreading their army; Mircea finally won the fierce battle and threw the Ottomans out of the country.[12][13] This famous battle was later epically described by the poet Mihai Eminescu in his Third Epistle. However, Mircea had to retreat to Hungary, while the Turks installed Vlad Uzurpatorul on the throne of Wallachia.

In 1396, Mircea participated in an anti-Ottoman crusade started by Hungary's monarch. The crusade ended with the Ottoman victory at the Battle of Nicopolis on September 25.[12] In the next year, 1397, Mircea, having defeated Vlad the Usurper with Hungarian help, stopped another Ottoman expedition that crossed the Danube, and in 1400 he defeated yet another expedition of Turks crossing the country.[14]

The defeat of Sultan Beyazid I by Timur Lenk (Tamerlane) at Ankara in the summer of 1402 opened a period of anarchy in the Ottoman Empire and Mircea took advantage of it to organize together with the Hungarian king a campaign against the Turks. In 1404 Mircea was thus able to impose his rule on Dobrogea again. Moreover, Mircea took part in the struggles for the throne of the Ottoman Empire and enabled Musa to ascend that throne (for a brief reign). It was at this time that the prince reached the height of his power.[15]

Towards the end of his reign, Mircea signed a treaty with the Ottomans; in return for a tribute of 3,000 gold pieces per year, the Ottomans desisted from making Wallachia a province ("pashalik").[16]

Legacy

The "bravest and ablest of the Christian princes", as he was described by German historian Leunclavius, ruled Wallachia for 32 years.[17] Mircea was an ktetor, building among other monuments, the Cozia Monastery near Călimănești in ca. 1390. He had churches built after Serbian architectural styles, after the models of the Lazarica Church, Veluće, Naupara, and Kalenić monastery.[18]

In popular culture

Mircea was played by Sergiu Nicolaescu in the 1989 film Mircea, which was also directed by Nicolaescu.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. Panaitescu, P. P. "II. Mircea cel Bătrân. Originea și familia lui". Mircea cel Bătrân (PDF) (in Romanian) (II ed.). Corint.
  2. "Mircea cel Bătrân". Enciclopedia României (in Romanian).
  3. Hasdeu, p. 130; Xenopol, p, 89; Iorga, p. III
  4. Panaitescu, P. P. "II. Mircea cel Bătrân. Originea și familia lui". Mircea cel Bătrân (PDF) (in Romanian) (II ed.). Corint.
  5. Giurescu, pp.362
  6. Giurescu, pp.363
  7. . SEVEREANU, Ducaţii Ţării Române şi cu numele a doi domnitori: Vlad I şi Mircea I, Bucureştii, l, 1935, p. 250-260
  8. Achim, Viorel (2004). The Roma in Romanian History. Central European University Press. p. 14. ISBN 963-9241-84-9.
  9. M. Manea, A. Pascu, B. Teodorescu, Istoria Românilor din cele mai vechi timpuri până la revoluția din 1821, Ed. Didactică și Pedagogică, București, 1997, p. 231.
  10. „Marele Mircea voievod", Bucureşti, 1987
  11. 1388 - 1390: Kaplai Ianos; 1390 - 1391: Mihai Perényi; 1392: Gerbeni Szemere; 1392 - 1393: Ditrich Bebek.
  12. 1 2 Stoica, Vasile (1919). The Roumanian Question: The Roumanians and their Lands. Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Printing Company. p. 16.
  13. Giurescu, pp. 367
  14. Giurescu, pp. 368.
  15. Giurescu, pp. 369
  16. Giurescu, p. 370.
  17. C-tin C. Giurescu, p. 384
  18. Ion Pătroiu (1987). Marele Mircea Voievod. Editura Academiei Repubvlicii Socialiste România. p. 460.
  19. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0126439/

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mircea I of Wallachia.


Preceded by
Dan I
Prince of Wallachia
1386–1394/1395
Succeeded by
Vlad I Uzurpatorul
(The Usurper)
Preceded by
Vlad I Uzurpatorul
restored as
Prince of Wallachia

1397–1418
Succeeded by
Mihail I
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