The carrying of the bloody sword around the Kingdom of Hungary on the eve of the Battle of Mohács
"The letters [...] deserve even more attention because if we read them in succession, if we may say so, they can take us back to the sad atmosphere of the weeks preceding the disaster. Starting from Buda, Érd, Adony, Paks, Tolna, Kesztölc, Báta, Újfalu are all stations of the gloomy calvary of the child-king, who, in letters of ever increasing forlorn spirit, asks for help, orders first every fifth, then every second, and finally every serf to rise up, the enlistment of plague patients and the monks cito, cito, citissime..." - wrote Elemér Mályusz, who copied the documents of King Louis II in the archives of the Batthyány family in Körmend, and then in 1926, on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the Battle of Mohács, he published the royal charters concerning mobilisation prior to the battle on 29 August 1526.
Two of these royal charters are commands from Louis II, dated 31 July 1526 from Adony. The piece presented here is addressed to the nobility of Croatia and Slavonia: the king instructs them that as soon as they receive his letter and see the bloody sword (gladius cruentatus) he has ordered to be carried around due to the threat of the country's doom, they are to rise up under the burden of disloyalty, together with half of their peasants, and join the ban. The second charter was addressed by Louis II to the Ban of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia, Ferenc Batthyány, who was, amongst other things, ordered to have the bloody sword carried around: "faciatis circumferri gladium cruore tinctum", i.e. "carry around the sword dipped in blood".
Fortunately, both documents survived the partial destruction of the Batthyány Archives and since 2021 they are part of the pre-Mohács collection of the Central Archives.

Date: Adony, 31 July 1526.
Reference code: HU-MNL-OL-DL 108761. (Körmend Archives of the Batthyány family, Memorabilia series, No. 69/11.)