Instead of attacking, he challenged Ahmed Pasha to a csárda (tavern) negotiation. Over plum brandy and roasted wild boar, he offered a deal: free trade rights for Ottoman goods through Kárpátia, in exchange for protection and the Pasha’s abandoned timber camp. The Pasha, amused by the Hungarian’s audacity, agreed.
Word spread. Investors from Pressburg (Bratislava) and Pest arrived on steamships. Szilágyvár grew into a town of cobblestone streets, a public bath (built over a thermal spring), and a gimnázium where Hungarian, German, and Romanian children studied together. The population soared past 500 by early 1802. Anno 1800 Magyaritas
He remembered the legend of the : a giant, mechanical deer forged by medieval Hungarian gold miners to carry ore through the Carpathians. The story was likely myth, but the idea was real. If he could build a steam-powered hauling engine shaped like a stag, it would become the region’s landmark — a tourist attraction for wealthy investors and a practical tool for logging and mining. Instead of attacking, he challenged Ahmed Pasha to