György Dózsa (-Hungarian, Romanian: Gheorghe Doja, in other Hungarian sources: György Székely) (died 1514) was a Szekler man-at-arms (by some accounts a nobleman) from Transylvania who led a peasants' revolt against the Hungarian landed nobility. He was eventually caught, tortured, and executed along with his followers, and remembered as both a Christian martyr and a dangerous criminal.
No measures had been taken to supply these voluntary crusaders with food or clothing; as harvest-time approached, the landlords commanded them to return to reap the fields, and, on their refusing to do so, proceeded to maltreat their wives and families and set their armed retainers upon the local peasantry. Instantly, the movement was diverted from its original object, and the peasants and their leaders began a war of vengeance against the landlords.
In reaction, the papal bull was revoked, and King Ladislaus II issued a proclamation commanding the peasantry to return to their homes under pain of death. By this time the rising had attained the dimensions of a revolution; all the vassals if the kingdom were called out against it, and soldiers of fortune were hired in haste from the Republic of Venice, Bohemia and the Holy Roman Empire. Meanwhile, Dózsa had captured the city and fortress of Csanád, and signalized his victory by impaling the bishop and the castellan. Subsequently, at Arad, Lord Treasurer István Teleki was seized and tortured to death. In general, however, the rebels only executed particularly vicious or greedy noblemen; those who freely submitted were released on parole. Dózsa not only never broke his given word, but frequently assisted the escape of fugitives. He was unable to consistently control his followers, however, and many of them hunted down rivals. At first, it also seemed as if the powers in the Kingdom were incapable of coping with him.
As his suppression had become a political necessity, he was routed in Timişoara by the combined forces of John Zápolya and István Báthory. He was captured after the battle, and condemned to sit on a heated iron throne with a heated iron crown on his head and a heated sceptre in his hand (mocking at his ambition to be king). While Dózsa was suffering, he was set upon and eaten by six of his fellow rebels, who had been starved beforehand.
Today, on the place of the martyrdom of the hot throne, there is the statue of The Virgin Mary, manufactured by architect László Székely and sculptor György Kiss. According to the legend, during George Dózsa's torture, the Jesuit monks saw in his ear the image of Mary. The first statue was raised in 1865, with the actual monument raised in 1906. A square, a road and a metro station in Budapest (Dózsa György út) bear his name, and it is one of the most popular street names in Hungarian villages (alongside Sándor Petőfi's and Lajos Kossuth's). Many cities in Romania have a Gheorghe Doja street, as his revolutionary image and Transylvanian background have been heavily used by the country's communist regime.
Year of birth missing | 1514 deaths | Executed revolutionaries | History of Hungary | History of Romania | Hungarian people | Mercenaries | Natives of Transylvania | Peasant revolts | Torture victims
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