Military career of Stephen the Great
The military career of Stephen the Great spanned for nearly 50 years. Stephen the Great commanded the Moldavian military forces for the first time as a co-commander, alongside his father Bogdan II in 1450, then as a Voivode of Moldavia from 1457 until his death in 1504. His most famous victory took place at the Battle of Vaslui on 10 January 1475, against the Ottoman army of Hadım Suleiman Pasha, earning him the title Athleta Christi ("Champion of Christ") from Pope Sixtus IV.[1] Ottoman defeat at Vaslui was described by contemporaries as "the greatest suffered by an Ottoman army in its history". Stephen's victory boosted the morale of numerous leaders of the Christian European states, as it shattered the Ottoman Empire's reputation of invincibility.[2]
Stephen's leaderships allowed him to muster up to 55,000 troops, mainly consisting of peasants.[3] Stephen is traditionally believed to have taken part in 36 battles, out of which 34 were victories.[4] Other sources estimate Stephen's record at 44–46 victories in battles. He's considered a national hero in both Romania and Moldova, earning him canonisation by the Romanian Orthodox Church.
An anonymous chronicler gave the following impression of Stephen as a military leader and his resilient character:
Master of the craft of war, he went wherever he was needed so that seeing him his men would not disperse and for that reason there was seldom a war that he did not win. And when others defeated him, he did not lose hope, for, when vanquished, he would rise above his vanquishers.[3]
Military record
- Opponent flags
| Ottoman Empire | Crimean Khanate | Nogai Tatars | Golden Horde | Kingdom of Hungary | Kingdom of Poland | Duchy of Masovia | Teutonic Order | Wallachia | Moldavian opposition |
- Results
Favorable result Uncertain result Unfavorable result
| No. | Clash(es) | Date(s) | Location(s) | Conflict(s) | Type(s) | Opponent(s) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Battle of the Crasna River[5] | 5–6 September 1450 | Crasna river, Moldavia | Moldavian–Polish War (1450) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 2. | Battle of Doljești[6] | 12 April 1457 | Doljești, Moldavia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 3. | Battle of Orbic | c. April 1457 | Orbic, Moldavia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 4. | Siege of Chilia (1462)[7] | 22 June 1462 | Chilia, Wallachia | Siege | Defeat | ||
| 5. | Siege of Chilia (1465)[8] | 24 January 1465 | Chilia, Wallachia | Siege | Victory | ||
| 6. | Battle of Baia | 15 December 1467 | Baia, Moldavia | Hungarian–Moldavian War | Open battle | Disputed | |
| 7. | Battle of Lipnic | 20 August 1470 | Lipnic, Moldavia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 8. | Battle of Sochi | 7 March 1471 | Sochi, near Râmnicu Sărat, Wallachia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 9. | Battle of the Vodna River | 18–20 November 1473 | Vodna river, 45km from Bucharest, Wallachia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 10. | Siege of Dâmbovița Fortress | 23 November 1473 | Bucharest, Wallachia | Siege | Victory | ||
| 11. | Battle of Bucharest[9] | 28 November 1473 | Forest near Bucharest, Wallachia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 12. | Battle of Vaslui | 10 January 1475 | Vaslui, Moldavia | Moldavian–Ottoman War (1475–1476) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 13. | Battle of Ştefăneşti | July 1476 | Ștefănești, Moldavia | Moldavian–Ottoman War (1475–1476) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 14. | Battle of Valea Albă | 26 July 1476 | Războieni, Moldavia | Moldavian–Ottoman War (1475–1476) | Open battle | Defeat | |
| 15. | Siege of Neamț Citadel | c. August 1476 | Neamț Citadel, Moldavia | Moldavian–Ottoman War (1475–1476) | Defensive siege | Victory | |
| 16. | Battle of Râmnic | 8 July 1481 | Râmnicu Sărat, Wallachia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 17. | Battle of Cătlăbuga | 16 November 1485 | Cătlăbuga, near Chilia, Moldavia | Moldavian Campaign (1484–1486) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 18. | Battle of Șcheia | 6 March 1486 | Șcheia, Moldavia | Moldavian Campaign (1484–1486) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 19. | Stephen the Great's expedition to Pokuttia | Summer 1490 | Pokuttia, Kingdom of Poland | Expedition | Victory | ||
| 20. | Battle of the Cosmin Forest | 26 October 1497 | Cosmin Forest, Moldavia | Moldavian campaign (1497–1499) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 21. | Battle of Lențești | 29 October 1497 | Lențești, Moldavia | Moldavian campaign (1497–1499) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 22. | Battle of Cernăuți | 30 October 1497 | Cernăuți, Moldavia | Moldavian campaign (1497–1499) | Open battle | Victory | |
| 23. | Moldavian campaign in Poland | June – July 1498 | South-eastern Kingdom of Poland | Moldavian campaign (1497–1499) | Campaign | Victory | |
| 24. | Battle of the Prut River[10] | 5 January 1499 | Prut river, Moldavia | Open battle | Victory | ||
| 25. | Raid on Chilia and Cetatea Albă[10] | 1500 | Chilia and Cetatea Albă, Ottoman Empire | Raid | Victory |
References
- ^ Ernest H. Latham (2022). "Stephen the Great". EBSCO.
- ^ Ovidiu Cristea (2018). "THE AFTERMATH OF A VICTORY: AN EPISODE OF STEPHEN THE GREAT' S DIPLOMACY AFTER THE BATTLE OF VASLUI (10 JANUARY 1475)" (PDF). BANATICA. p. 455.
- ^ a b Sanborne, Mark (1993). Romania. Facts on Files Press. p. 18. ISBN 9780816030897.
- ^ Eagles 2013, p. 51.
- ^ Giurescu 1974, p. 84.
- ^ George Marcu (2011). Bătălia de la Doljeşti (12 aprilie 1457) [Battle of Doljeşti (April 12, 1457)] (in Romanian). Enciclopedia Romaniei. Retrieved 9 March 2026.
- ^ Giurescu 1974, p. 90.
- ^ Giurescu 1974, p. 91.
- ^ Clapa, Gheorghe (2008). "ŢARA DE JOS A MOLDOVEI ÎN EPOCA LUI ŞTEFAN CEL MARE ŞI SFÂNT (1457 - 1504)" [THE NETHERLANDS OF MOLDOVA IN THE TIME OF STEPHEN THE GREAT AND SAINT (1457 - 1504)] (PDF) (in Romanian). Biblioteca Digitală. p. 244.
- ^ a b Giurescu 1974, p. 103.
Bibliography
- Eagles, Jonathan (2013). Stephen the Great and Balkan Nationalism: Moldova and Eastern European History. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 1780763530.
- Giurescu, Constantin C. (1974). Chronological History of Romania. Editura enciclopedică română.