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John Hunyadi leads by 17.6 pts · 2 figures compared

General · Medieval

General · Medieval
Hunyadi commanded the Hungarian and allied forces against the Ottoman army of Sultan Murad II at Varna. The crusader army was defeated, and King W
Following the death of King Albert II and the minority of Ladislaus V, John Hunyadi was elected regent of Hungary by the Diet. He assumed effective control of the kingdom, organizing defense against Ottoman threats and consolidating royal authority.
Hunyadi led a Hungarian army into Serbia to confront the Ottomans at Kosovo Polje. After three days of fighting, the Hungarian forces were defeated by Sultan Murad II. The loss ended major crusading efforts in the Balkans for decades.
Hunyadi, with the help of Franciscan friar John of Capistrano, led a relief force to break the Ottoman siege of Belgrade. The Hungarian victory forced Sultan Mehmed II to retreat, halting Ottoman expansion into Hungary for 70 years. Hunyadi died of plague shortly after.
Yang Ye defected from the Northern Han kingdom to the Song dynasty after the Song conquest of Taiyuan. He was appointed as a general in the Song army, bringing his military experience to the Song's campaigns against the Liao.
Yang Ye commanded a Song army at the Battle of the Qigou River against the Liao. After being ordered to advance by the main commander Pan Mei, Yang Ye's forces were surrounded and defeated. He was captured and died shortly after, reportedly by suicide.
This comparison has not been analyzed yet.
One-time AI generation (~1 minute). Scores and timeline are already available below.
Each figure is scored on 6 dimensions (0—100 scale) based on structured historical data: Military (10%), Political (20%), Influence (20%), Legacy (20%), Leadership (15%), Strategy (15%). The weighted total produces the final ranking.
Scores are computed from structured sub-indicators in the database. Scale factors adjust for era (Ancient ×0.85, Modern ×1.0) and civilization size (Eastern ×1.05, Other ×0.80) to account for differences in population and military scale.
Comparisons are limited to 2—3 figures to ensure readability and statistical meaningfulness.
±5 points per dimension — Sub-scores are derived from historical records with inherent uncertainty. Two figures within 5 points on a dimension should be considered roughly equivalent in that area.
±3 points overall — The weighted combination of 6 dimensions produces a total score with approximately ±3 points of uncertainty. Differences of less than 3 points are not statistically significant— the figures are effectively tied.
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