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September 25, 2022

This week in history witnessed the launch of a daringly amazing campaign dedicated to defending and liberating Christian lands from Islam.

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The year was 1442.  After having suffered countless atrocities from the invading Turks, “everyone [in the West] spoke of making war on the infidels and driving them out of Europe” — and it was entirely due to the martial exploits of John Hunyadi, the Transylvanian-born hero who had singlehandedly bested the Turks in several recent engagements.

After putting an army of some 25,000 Christians together — mostly from Hungary, Poland, Wallachia, Moldavia, and Serbia — Hunyadi took the initiative by doing the unthinkable: he led them into Turkish-held territories at the end of September 1442 — when campaigning season was supposed to end, due to the usual harsh weather, not begin.

Hunyadi was always in the vanguard, a day ahead of the main army and Hungarian king, Ladislaus III, its formal leader.  The Christian army marched south of the Danube, scourging the Turks in every encounter and liberating Christian town after town.  The deeper the Christians penetrated into subject Ottoman territory, the larger their army became, as overjoyed Christian subjects, casting off the yoke of their Muslim masters, rushed to join and augment the ranks of their saviors.

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After Hunyadi took Niš in early November, and in an attempt to trap and annihilate the Christians, three different Muslim armies converged on the town.  With lightning speed, Hunyadi defeated all three, one by one, before they could unite.

By late November, the Christians had reached Sophia in Bulgaria — more than 450 miles whence the Crusaders had first started marching.  Considering that Sophia had been under Islamic rule for more than half a century, since 1382, the long oppressed “Bulgarians went wild with joy.” Liberator and liberated reconverted the mosques back into churches and gave thanks in them.

The long cherished dream of freedom from Islamic domination was becoming palpable:

The Balkan peoples became excited by the hope of their liberation which appeared close. … [T]he local population welcomed them everywhere with gifts and food, so that the soldiers hardly used the supplies they had brought along. The camp of the king became filled with Bulgarians, Bosnians, Serbians, and Albanians. … According to the sources from that time, the population was very much set against its [Turkish] oppressors.

The victorious Crusaders next set their sights on Adrianople (Edirne) — the very capital of the Ottoman Empire, and the sultan’s own seat of power.  Once a beautiful Greek city, Adrianople was now a major center of the Muslim slave trade.  Its markets were so inundated with Christian flesh that children sold for pennies, “a very beautiful slave woman was exchanged for a pair of boots, and four Serbian slaves were traded for a horse.”

Outside the Ottoman capital often lay the remains of the unwanted or undesirable.  As Bartolomeo de Giano had observed four years earlier, “so great a quantity of [European] bodies lay consumed, partially rotted, partially devoured by dogs, that it would seem unbelievable to anyone who had not seen it with their own eyes.”