Late Middle Ages · Europe · Politics

1335

Congress of Visegrád sketches a Central Europe

November 1335

Three kings - John of Bohemia, Casimir of Poland, and Charles Robert of Hungary - met in a Hungarian castle on the Danube and agreed to bypass Vienna's staple route, redirecting trade through Brno and Cracow. The deal launched a regional anti-Habsburg axis that lasted half a century and demonstrated that Central European states could cooperate against larger powers.