George of Hungary (
c. 1422–1502)[1] was an
Ottoman slave that escaped and reverted from
Islam to
Christianity, writing afterwards about his experiences.[2] As per his own description, when George was 15 or 16, he was taken prisoner and sold into slavery when the Ottoman Turks invaded the town of Mühlbach (now
Sebeș) in 1438. George had arrived to the city a year earlier, probably to go to a school in the local Dominican monastery.[3][4]
He would spend 20 years being a slave before he could escape, later becoming a
monk in
Rome. Here, he wrote Tractatus de moribus, condicionibus et nequitia Turcorum ("Treatise on the morals, customs
and treachery of the Turks"), published in 1481 in
Latin. In 1539 it was translated in German language along with a preface by
Martin Luther.[5]
The
ethnicity of George is not known, possibly being either a
German or a
Hungarian. It is thought that he grew up in a bilingual environment and did not have a clear concept of his national identity.[6] After his escape from the Ottomans, George condemned Islam.[4]
See also
Konstantin Mihailović (born in 1430) Escapee slave of the Ottoman Empire who wrote slave narratives
Johann (Hans) Schiltberger (1380 –
c. 1440) Escapee slave of the Ottoman Empire who wrote slave narratives
Emily Ruete, author who wrote narrative about slave mother's captivity.
Christian Slaves of the Ottoman Empire: An analysis of the fifteenth-century captive lives and writings of Konstantin Mihailović, Johan Schiltberger and Brother George of Mühlenbach ~ Patrick Smith (BA Honours) La Trobe University Victoria, Australia August 2020
Williams, Stephen Christopher (1991)"Cronica der Turckey" Sebastian Franck's Translation of the "Tractatus de Moribus, Condicionibus et Nequitia Turcorum" by Georgius de Hungaria. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.
Christian-Muslim Relations. A Bibliographical History. Volume 7 Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa and South America (1500-1600): Volume 7. Central and Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa and South America (1500-1600). Netherlands, Brill, 2015.
^Sabatos, Charles (2015). "The Ottoman Captivity Narrative as a Transnational Genre in Central European Literature". Archiv Orientální. 83 (2): 233–254.
doi:
10.47979/aror.j.83.2.233-254.
S2CID255254784.