This is a list of Serbian–Ottoman wars .
Middle Ages
Medieval Serbian–Ottoman Wars
Early encounters
Serbian Empire
Fall of the Serbian Empire
Serbian Despotate
Battle of Tripolje in 1402
Siege of Novo Brdo in 1412
Ottoman invasion of Serbia in 1425
Ottoman invasion of Serbia in 1427
Ottoman invasion of Serbia in 1437
Ottoman invasion of Serbia in 1438
Ottoman invasion of Serbia (1439–1444)
Crusade of Varna
Ottoman invasion of Serbia (1454–1455)
Ottoman invasion and occupation of Serbia in 1459
Between 1457 and 1459, the medieval Serbian lands became a buffer zone between the Kingdom of Hungary and the Ottoman Empire .[ 1] [ 4] [ 5] Serbian resistance against the Ottoman Turks did not end until the siege of Smederevo in 1459.[ 1] In 1471, the Serbian Despotate was renewed in exile as a vassal state of the Kingdom of Hungary and continued to exist until the mid-16th century.[ 1] [ 4] [ 5] Up until its demise in 1540, it spent its entirety fighting against the Ottoman Empire .[ 1] [ 4] [ 5] The Serbian Despotate provided support and auxiliary troops to the Kingdom of Hungary.[ 4] [ 5]
Ottoman period
Ottoman Serbia
Ottoman expansion in Europe ended with their defeat in the Great Turkish War in 1699.[ 6] The Treaty of Karlowitz forced them to surrender the region of Hungary under Ottoman control and portions of present-day Croatia , Romania , Slovakia , and Serbia to the Habsburg Empire , which pushed the Great Migrations of the Serbs to the southern regions of the Kingdom of Hungary (though as far in the north as the town of Szentendre , in which they formed the majority of the population in the 18th century, but to smaller extent also in the town of Komárom ) and Habsburg-ruled Croatia .[ 6]
19th century
Revolutionary Serbia
Principality of Serbia
20th century
Kingdom of Serbia
See also
Citations
^ a b c d e Djokić, Dejan (2023). "Chapter 2: Empire (c. 1170–1459)". A Concise History of Serbia . Cambridge Concise Histories. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . pp. 83– 139. doi :10.1017/9781139236140.003 . ISBN 9781139236140 .
^ Djokić, Dejan (2023). "Chapter 5: Independence (1860–1914)". A Concise History of Serbia . Cambridge Concise Histories. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . pp. 275– 331. doi :10.1017/9781139236140.006 . ISBN 9781139236140 .
^ a b c d Ivanović, Miloš (2019). "Militarization of the Serbian State under Ottoman Pressure". The Hungarian Historical Review . 8 (2: Moving Borders in Medieval Central Europe ). Budapest : Institute of History, Research Centre for the Humanities, Hungarian Academy of Sciences : 390– 410. ISSN 2063-9961 . JSTOR 26902328 .
^ a b c d Ivanović, Miloš (2018). "The Nobility of the Despotate of Serbia between Ottoman Empire and Hungary (1457–1459)". In Jovanović, Kosana; Suzana, Miljan (eds.). Secular Power and Sacral Authority in Medieval East-Central Europe . Amsterdam : Amsterdam University Press . pp. 167– 178. doi :10.1515/9789048531325-015 . ISBN 9789048531325 .
^ a b Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2002). "Shifting Serbias — Kings, Tsars, Despots and Patriarchs: from the beginning to the eighteenth century" . Serbia: The History Behind the Name . Bloomsbury : C. Hurst & Co. pp. 14– 20. ISBN 1850654778 .
References