The Siege of Sziget

http://dbpedia.org/resource/The_Siege_of_Sziget an entity of type: Thing

Le Péril de Sziget (hongrois : Szigeti veszedelem Péril de Sziget) est un poème épique hongrois publié en 1651. Écrit par Miklós Zrínyi et articulé en 15 parties, il relate le siège de Szigetvár de 1566 et la sortie finale des défenseurs, au cours de laquelle une armée hongro-croate en grande infériorité numérique stoppa l'invasion ottomane menée par Soliman Ier. rdf:langString
The Siege of Sziget or The Peril of Sziget (Hungarian: Szigeti veszedelem, Latin: Obsidio Szigetiana, Croatian: Opsada Sigeta) is a Hungarian epic poem in fifteen parts, written by Miklós Zrínyi in 1647 and published in 1651, about the final battle of his great-grandfather Nikola IV Zrinski (also Miklós Zrínyi in Hungarian) against the Ottomans in 1566. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Péril de Sziget
rdf:langString The Siege of Sziget
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rdf:langString Le Péril de Sziget (hongrois : Szigeti veszedelem Péril de Sziget) est un poème épique hongrois publié en 1651. Écrit par Miklós Zrínyi et articulé en 15 parties, il relate le siège de Szigetvár de 1566 et la sortie finale des défenseurs, au cours de laquelle une armée hongro-croate en grande infériorité numérique stoppa l'invasion ottomane menée par Soliman Ier.
rdf:langString The Siege of Sziget or The Peril of Sziget (Hungarian: Szigeti veszedelem, Latin: Obsidio Szigetiana, Croatian: Opsada Sigeta) is a Hungarian epic poem in fifteen parts, written by Miklós Zrínyi in 1647 and published in 1651, about the final battle of his great-grandfather Nikola IV Zrinski (also Miklós Zrínyi in Hungarian) against the Ottomans in 1566. The poem recounts in epic fashion the Battle of Szigetvár, in which a vastly outnumbered Croatian-Hungarian army tried to resist a Turkish invasion. The battle concluded when Captain Zrinski's forces, having been greatly depleted, left the fortress walls in a famous onslaught. Approximately four hundred troops forayed into the Turkish camp. The epic concludes with Zrinski killing Sultan Suleiman I, before being gunned down by janissaries. Being in the epic tradition, specifically modeled on the Iliad and the Gerusalemme Liberata, it opens with an invocation of a muse (in this case, the Virgin Mary), and often features supernatural elements; Cupid even appears in Part XII. Zrinski is several times compared to Hector in the text. Kenneth Clark's renowned history Civilisation lists the Szigeti veszedelem as one of the major literary achievements of the 17th century. While John Milton's Paradise Lost is often credited as resurrecting the classical epic, it was published in 1667, a full sixteen years after the Veszedelem. Petar Zrinski, the author's brother, published a Croatian version of the epic in 1652. The first English translation was published in 2011.
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