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Long Turkish War

Long War
Fifteen Years' War of Hungary
Part of the Ottoman-Habsburg wars

Allegory of the Turkish war – The declaration of war before Constantinople
Date29 July 1593 – 11 November 1606
(13 years, 3 months, 1 week and 6 days)
Location
Hungary, Wallachia, Balkan Peninsula
Result

Ottoman victory

Treaty of Vienna (1606)
Belligerents

 Holy Roman Empire

Principality of Transylvania
 Wallachia
Moldavia
 France
 Spain
Zaporozhian Cossacks
Serbian hajduks
Papal States

Ottoman Empire

Khanate of Crimea
Commanders and leaders
Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor
Vincenzo I Gonzaga
Hermann Christof von Russwurm
Karl von Mansfeld (DOW)
Michael the Brave 
Ruprecht von Eggenberg
Giorgio Basta
István Bocskai
Starina Novak
Sultan Murad III
Sultan Mehmed III
Sultan Ahmed I
Koca Sinan Pasha
Cığalazade Yusuf Sinan Pasha
Lala Mehmed Pasha
Tiryaki Hasan Pasha
Damat Ibrahim Pasha
Telli Hasan Pasha 
Strength
More than 100,000 men[2][3][4] 160,000–180,000[5][6]
Casualties and losses
Unknown, heavy Unknown, heavy



The Long Turkish War (German: Langer Türkenkrieg), Long War (Hungarian: Hosszú háború, Serbo-Croatian: Дуги рат, romanizedDugi rat) or Thirteen Years' War was an indecisive land war between the Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire, primarily over the Principalities of Wallachia, Transylvania, and Moldavia.[7] It was waged from 1593 to 1606 but in Europe it is sometimes called the Fifteen Years War (Hungarian: Tizenöt éves háború), reckoning from the 1591–92 Turkish campaign that captured Bihać. In Turkey it is called the Ottoman–Austrian War of 1593–1606 (Turkish: 1593-1606 Osmanlı-Avusturya Savaşı).[8]

In the series of Ottoman wars in Europe, it was the major test of force in the time period between the Ottoman–Venetian War (1570–73) and the Cretan War (1645–69). The next of the major Ottoman-Habsburg wars was the Austro-Turkish War (1663–64). Overall, the conflict consisted in a large number of costly battles and sieges, but with little gain on either side.

Overview edit

The major participants of the war were the Habsburg Monarchy, the Principality of Transylvania, Wallachia, and Moldavia opposing the Ottoman Empire. Ferrara, Tuscany, Mantua, and the Papal State were also involved to a lesser extent.[9]

War funding edit

The Turkenkriege rallied larger than usual support behind the Holy Roman Emperor. The Reichstag convened in 1594 and voted a substantial tax grant, renewing this four years later and again in 1603. Some 20 million florins were promised and at least four-fifths actually reached the imperial treasury. A further 7 to 8 million florins were paid when Rudolf appealed to the Circle assemblies as well, giving a total of 23 to 28 million florins yielded by the minor German princes. The Habsburg monarchy itself raised around 20 million florins. Another 7.1 million flowed in from Italy, including both Imperial Italy and Papal and Spanish territories outside of the Emperor's formal rule, as well as from Spain itself.[10]

Prelude edit

Skirmishes along the Habsburg–Ottoman border intensified from 1591. In 1592, the fort of Bihać fell to the Ottomans following the siege of Bihać.

History edit

1593 edit

In the spring of 1593, Ottoman forces from the Eyalet of Bosnia laid siege to the city of Sisak in Croatia, starting the Battle of Sisak that eventually ended in a victory for the Christian forces on June 22, 1593. That victory marked the end of the Hundred Years' Croatian–Ottoman War (1493–1593).

The Long Turkish War started on July 29, 1593, when the Ottoman army under Sinan Pasha launched a campaign against the Habsburg Monarchy and captured Győr (Turkish: Yanıkkale) and Komárom (Turkish: Komaron) in 1594.

1594 edit

In early 1594, the Serbs in Banat rose up against the Ottomans.[11] The rebels had, in the character of a holy war, carried war flags with the icon of Saint Sava.[12] The war banners were consecrated by Patriarch Jovan Kantul, and the uprising was aided by Serbian Orthodox metropolitans Rufim Njeguš of Cetinje and Visarion of Trebinje.[13] In response, Ottoman Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha demanded that the green flag of the Prophet Muhammed be brought from Damascus to counter the Serb flag and ordered that the sarcophagus containing the relics of Saint Sava be removed from the Mileševa monastery and transferred to Belgrade via military convoy.[12] Along the way, the Ottoman convoy killed all the people in its path as a warning to the rebels.[12] The Ottomans publicly incinerated the relics of Saint Sava on a pyre atop the Vračar plateau on April 27 and had the ashes scattered.[12]

1595–96 edit

In 1595, an alliance of Christian European powers was organized by Pope Clement VIII to oppose the Ottoman Empire (the Holy League of Pope Clement VIII); a treaty of alliance was signed in Prague by the Holy Roman Emperor, Rudolf II and Sigismund Báthory of Transylvania. Aron Vodă of Moldavia and Michael the Brave of Wallachia joined the alliance later that year. The Spanish Habsburgs sent an army of 6,000 experienced infantry and 2,000 cavalry from the Netherlands under Karl von Mansfeld, commander-in-chief of the Spanish Army of Flanders, who took command of the operations in Hungary.[14]

The Ottomans' objective in the war was to seize Vienna,[citation needed] while the Habsburg Monarchy wanted to recapture the central territories of the Kingdom of Hungary controlled by the Ottoman Empire. Control of the Danube line and possession of the fortresses located there was crucial. The war was mainly fought in Royal Hungary (mostly present-day western Hungary and southern Slovakia), Transdanubia, Royal Croatia and Slavonia, the Ottoman Empire (Rumelia – present-day Bulgaria and Serbia), and Wallachia (in present-day southern Romania).

 
Habsburg troops take the Hatvan castle in 1596

In 1595, the Christians, led by Mansfeld, captured Esztergom and Visegrád, strategic fortresses on the Danube, but they did not lay siege to the key fortress of Buda. The Ottomans launched a siege of Eger (Turkish: Eğri), conquering it in 1596.

In 1595 in the Balkans, a Spanish fleet of galleys from the Kingdom of Naples and Kingdom of Sicily under Pedro de Toledo, marquis of Villafranca, sacked Patras, on the Rumelia Eyalet of the Ottoman Empire, in retaliation for Turkish raids against the Italian coasts.[15] The raid was so spectacular that Sultan Murad III discussed exterminating the Christians of Constantinople in revenge. He finally decided to order the expulsion of all unmarried Greeks from the city.[16] In the following years, Spanish fleets continued to raid the Levant waters, but large-scale naval warfare between Christians and Ottomans did not resume.[17] Instead, privateers such as Alonso de Contreras took on the role of harassing Ottoman ships.[15][17]

On the eastern front of the war, Michael the Brave, prince of Wallachia, started a campaign against the Ottomans in the autumn of 1594, conquering several castles near the Lower Danube, including Giurgiu, Brăila, Hârşova, and Silistra, while his Moldavian allies defeated the Ottoman armies in Iaşi and other parts of Moldova.[18] Michael continued his attacks deep within the Ottoman Empire, taking the forts of Nicopolis, Ribnice, and Chilia,[19] and even reaching as far as Adrianople.[20] At one point his forces were only 24 kilometres (15 mi) from the Ottoman capital, Constantinople.

 
The execution of mutinous Walloon mercenaries in 1600

He was however forced to fall back across the Danube, and the Ottomans in turn led a massive counter-offensive (100,000 strong) which aimed to not only take back their recently captured possessions but also conquer Wallachia once and for all. The push was initially successful, managing to capture not only Giurgiu but also Bucharest and Târgoviște, despite fierce opposition at Călugăreni (23 August 1595). At this point the Ottoman command grew complacent and stopped pursuing the retreating Wallachian army, focusing instead on fortifying Târgoviște and Bucharest and considering their task all but done. Michael had to wait almost two months for aid from his allies to arrive, but when it did his counter-offensive took the Ottomans by surprise, managing to sweep through the Ottoman defences on three successive battlefields, at Târgoviște (18 October), Bucharest (22 October), and Giurgiu (26 October). The Battle of Giurgiu in particular was devastating for the Ottoman forces, which had to retreat across the Danube in disarray.[21]

The war between Wallachia and the Ottomans continued until late 1599, when Michael was unable to continue the war due to poor support from his allies.

The turning point of the war was the Battle of Mezőkeresztes, which took place in the territory of Hungary on October 24–26, 1596. The combined Habsburg-Transylvanian force of 45–50,000 troops was defeated by the Ottoman army. The battle turned when Christian soldiers, thinking they had won the battle, stopped fighting in order to plunder the Ottoman camp.[citation needed] This battle was the first significant military encounter in Central Europe between a large Christian army and the Ottoman Turkish Army after the Battle of Mohács. Nevertheless, Austrians recaptured Győr and Komarom in 1598.

In 1599, the Turks and their Tatar allies attacked Prievidza, Topoľčany and other towns in the Nitra river valley in Upper Hungary, in what is now Slovakia, and took thousands of people into slavery.

1601–06 edit

 
The siege of Buda in 1602

In August 1601, at the Battle of Guruslău, Giorgio Basta and Michael the Brave defeated the Hungarian nobility led by Sigismund Báthory in Transylvania, who accepted Ottoman and Polish protection. After the assassination of Michael the Brave by mercenary soldiers under Basta's orders,[22] the Transylvanian nobility, led by Mózes Székely, was again defeated at the Battle of Braşov in 1603 by the Habsburg Empire and Wallachian troops led by the voivode of Wallachia, Radu Şerban. Hence, the Austrian Habsburgs seemed to be able to win a decisive victory.[clarification needed]

In September 1601, armies of the Holy Roman Empire laid siege to Nagykanizsa. Despite the numerical superiority, coalition armies had to abandon the siege 2 months later, due to heavy losses.

The last phase of the war (from 1604 to 1606) corresponds to the uprising of the Prince of Transylvania Stephen Bocskay. When Rudolf – mostly based on false charges[citation needed] – started prosecutions against a number of noble men in order to fill up the court's exhausted treasury, Bocskay, an educated strategist, resisted. He collected desperate Hungarians together with disappointed members of the nobility to start an uprising against the Habsburgs ruler. The troops marched westwards, supported by the Hajduk of Hungary, won some victories and regained the territories that had been lost to the Habsburg army until Bocskay was first declared the Prince of Transylvania (Marosvásárhely, February 21, 1605) and later also of Hungary (Szerencs, April 17, 1605[clarification needed]). The Ottoman Empire supported Bocskay with a crown that he refused (being Christian). As Prince of Hungary he accepted negotiations with Rudolf II and concluded the Treaty of Vienna (1606).

Aftermath edit

 
The peace negotiations in Zsitvatorok in 1606

The Long War ended with the Peace of Zsitvatorok on November 11, 1606, with meagre territorial gains for the two main empires – the Ottomans won the fortresses of Eger, Esztergom, and Kanisza, but gave the region of Vác (which they had occupied since 1541) to Austria. The treaty confirmed the Ottomans' inability to penetrate further into Habsburg territories. It also demonstrated that Transylvania was beyond Habsburg power. Although Emperor Rudolf had failed in his war objectives, he nonetheless won some prestige thanks to this resistance to the Ottomans, by presenting the war as a victory. The treaty stabilized conditions on the Habsburg–Ottoman frontier. Also, Bocskay managed to retain his independence, but he also agreed to give up the title of "King of Hungary".

Rudolf portrayed himself as victorious in the Long War, but this did not protect him from the Habsburg family's internal politics. Rudolf, by the end of the war, had massive debts to lenders, border troops and the field army, made concessions with the Hungarian nobility, and disappointed the princes of the Holy Roman Empire who had subsidized the Habsburg-Ottoman frontier. Once peace was concluded with the Ottomans, the Habsburgs turned on one another. This struggle forced the family to confront the unresolved matter of Rudolf's successor and culminated in the childless Emperor Rudolf being pitted against his brother Matthias in the Brothers' Quarrel.[23]

Battles edit

 
Siege of Buda
 
Siege of Esztergom in 1595
 
Recapture of Pápa in 1597

References edit

  1. ^ a b Csorba, Csaba; Estók, János; Salamon, Konrád (1998). Magyarország Képes Története. Budapest: Hungarian Book-Club. pp. 62–64. ISBN 963-548-961-7.
  2. ^ A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East, Spencer C. Tucker, 2009, p. 547
  3. ^ Attila Weiszhár – Balázs Weiszhár : Csaták kislexikona (Small lexicon of the Battles), Maecenas Publisher 2000. ISBN 963-645-080-3
  4. ^ The Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol. 6 Mahk-Mid p. 1030
  5. ^ Ervin Liptai: Magyarország hadtörténete I. 1984. ISBN 963-326-337-9
  6. ^ Zsigmond Pach: Magyarország története 1526–1686, 1985. ISBN 963-05-0929-6
  7. ^ Cathal J. Nolan (2006). The age of wars of religion, 1000–1650: an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 846. ISBN 978-0313337345. Retrieved 2012-03-23.
  8. ^ "Türkçe Bilgi: 1593–1606 Osmanlı-Avusturya Savaşı". Türkçe Bilgi.
  9. ^ "Great Turkish War (1683–1699)". Military History Books. Helion. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
  10. ^ Wilson, Peter H. (2009). "Europe's Tragedy: A History of the Thirty Years War." Allen Lane. p. 98.
  11. ^ Rajko L. Veselinović (1966). (1219–1766). Udžbenik za IV razred srpskih pravoslavnih bogoslovija. (Yu 68–1914). Sv. Arh. Sinod Srpske pravoslavne crkve. pp. 70–71.
  12. ^ a b c d Nikolaj Velimirović (1989). The Life of St. Sava. St. Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-88141-065-5.
  13. ^ Editions speciales. Naučno delo. 1971 – via Google books.
  14. ^ Mugnai, Bruno; Flaherty, Christopher (2014). Der Lange Türkenkrieg (1593–1606): The long Turkish War, Vol. 1 (ebook). Soldiershop Publishing. ISBN 978-889651991-2, p. 67
  15. ^ a b Braudel, Fernand (1995). The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II, Volume 2. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-52020330-5, p. 1229
  16. ^ Hutton, William Holden (1900): Constantinople: the story of the old capital of the empire. London: J.M. Dent & Co, p. 172.
  17. ^ a b Teneti, Alberto (1967). Piracy and the Decline of Venice, 1580–1615. Berkeley: University of California Press, p. 47
  18. ^ Constantin C. Giurescu, Istoria Românilor. Bucharest: Editura All, 2007 (Romanian), p. 183.
  19. ^ Coln, Emporungen so sich in Konigereich Ungarn, auch in Siebenburgen Moldau, in der der bergischen Walachay und anderen Oerten zugetragen haben, 1596
  20. ^ Marco Venier, correspondence with the Doge of Venice, 16 July 1595
  21. ^ Florin Constantiniu, "O istorie sinceră a poporului român", ISBN 973-8240-67-0. Bucharest: Editura Univers Enciclopedic, 2002 (Romanian), pp. 128–129.
  22. ^ "Michael | prince of Walachia". Britannica.
  23. ^ Peter Wilson, The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy
  24. ^ "Győr ostroma. | Borovszky Samu: Magyarország vármegyéi és városai | Kézikönyvtár". Arcanum (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2018-09-26.

Sources edit

long, turkish, confused, with, later, great, turkish, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspape. Not to be confused with the later Great Turkish War This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Long Turkish War news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Long WarFifteen Years War of HungaryPart of the Ottoman Habsburg warsAllegory of the Turkish war The declaration of war before ConstantinopleDate29 July 1593 11 November 1606 13 years 3 months 1 week and 6 days LocationHungary Wallachia Balkan PeninsulaResultOttoman victory Treaty of Vienna 1606 Belligerents Holy Roman Empire Habsburg Monarchy Saxony Grand Duchy of Tuscany Duchy of Ferrara Duchy of Mantua Duchy of Savoy Knights of St Stephen Kingdom of Hungary 1 Kingdom of Croatia 1 Duchy of Carniola Principality of Transylvania WallachiaMoldavia France Spain Zaporozhian Cossacks Serbian hajduks Papal StatesOttoman Empire Khanate of CrimeaCommanders and leadersRudolf II Holy Roman EmperorVincenzo I Gonzaga Hermann Christof von Russwurm Karl von Mansfeld DOW Michael the Brave Ruprecht von Eggenberg Giorgio Basta Istvan Bocskai Starina NovakSultan Murad III Sultan Mehmed IIISultan Ahmed I Koca Sinan Pasha Cigalazade Yusuf Sinan Pasha Lala Mehmed PashaTiryaki Hasan PashaDamat Ibrahim PashaTelli Hasan Pasha StrengthMore than 100 000 men 2 3 4 160 000 180 000 5 6 Casualties and lossesUnknown heavyUnknown heavy The Long Turkish War German Langer Turkenkrieg Long War Hungarian Hosszu haboru Serbo Croatian Dugi rat romanized Dugi rat or Thirteen Years War was an indecisive land war between the Habsburg Monarchy and the Ottoman Empire primarily over the Principalities of Wallachia Transylvania and Moldavia 7 It was waged from 1593 to 1606 but in Europe it is sometimes called the Fifteen Years War Hungarian Tizenot eves haboru reckoning from the 1591 92 Turkish campaign that captured Bihac In Turkey it is called the Ottoman Austrian War of 1593 1606 Turkish 1593 1606 Osmanli Avusturya Savasi 8 In the series of Ottoman wars in Europe it was the major test of force in the time period between the Ottoman Venetian War 1570 73 and the Cretan War 1645 69 The next of the major Ottoman Habsburg wars was the Austro Turkish War 1663 64 Overall the conflict consisted in a large number of costly battles and sieges but with little gain on either side Contents 1 Overview 1 1 War funding 2 Prelude 3 History 3 1 1593 3 2 1594 3 3 1595 96 3 4 1601 06 4 Aftermath 5 Battles 6 References 7 SourcesOverview editThe major participants of the war were the Habsburg Monarchy the Principality of Transylvania Wallachia and Moldavia opposing the Ottoman Empire Ferrara Tuscany Mantua and the Papal State were also involved to a lesser extent 9 War funding edit The Turkenkriege rallied larger than usual support behind the Holy Roman Emperor The Reichstag convened in 1594 and voted a substantial tax grant renewing this four years later and again in 1603 Some 20 million florins were promised and at least four fifths actually reached the imperial treasury A further 7 to 8 million florins were paid when Rudolf appealed to the Circle assemblies as well giving a total of 23 to 28 million florins yielded by the minor German princes The Habsburg monarchy itself raised around 20 million florins Another 7 1 million flowed in from Italy including both Imperial Italy and Papal and Spanish territories outside of the Emperor s formal rule as well as from Spain itself 10 Prelude editSkirmishes along the Habsburg Ottoman border intensified from 1591 In 1592 the fort of Bihac fell to the Ottomans following the siege of Bihac History edit1593 edit In the spring of 1593 Ottoman forces from the Eyalet of Bosnia laid siege to the city of Sisak in Croatia starting the Battle of Sisak that eventually ended in a victory for the Christian forces on June 22 1593 That victory marked the end of the Hundred Years Croatian Ottoman War 1493 1593 The Long Turkish War started on July 29 1593 when the Ottoman army under Sinan Pasha launched a campaign against the Habsburg Monarchy and captured Gyor Turkish Yanikkale and Komarom Turkish Komaron in 1594 1594 edit In early 1594 the Serbs in Banat rose up against the Ottomans 11 The rebels had in the character of a holy war carried war flags with the icon of Saint Sava 12 The war banners were consecrated by Patriarch Jovan Kantul and the uprising was aided by Serbian Orthodox metropolitans Rufim Njegus of Cetinje and Visarion of Trebinje 13 In response Ottoman Grand Vizier Koca Sinan Pasha demanded that the green flag of the Prophet Muhammed be brought from Damascus to counter the Serb flag and ordered that the sarcophagus containing the relics of Saint Sava be removed from the Mileseva monastery and transferred to Belgrade via military convoy 12 Along the way the Ottoman convoy killed all the people in its path as a warning to the rebels 12 The Ottomans publicly incinerated the relics of Saint Sava on a pyre atop the Vracar plateau on April 27 and had the ashes scattered 12 1595 96 edit In 1595 an alliance of Christian European powers was organized by Pope Clement VIII to oppose the Ottoman Empire the Holy League of Pope Clement VIII a treaty of alliance was signed in Prague by the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II and Sigismund Bathory of Transylvania Aron Vodă of Moldavia and Michael the Brave of Wallachia joined the alliance later that year The Spanish Habsburgs sent an army of 6 000 experienced infantry and 2 000 cavalry from the Netherlands under Karl von Mansfeld commander in chief of the Spanish Army of Flanders who took command of the operations in Hungary 14 The Ottomans objective in the war was to seize Vienna citation needed while the Habsburg Monarchy wanted to recapture the central territories of the Kingdom of Hungary controlled by the Ottoman Empire Control of the Danube line and possession of the fortresses located there was crucial The war was mainly fought in Royal Hungary mostly present day western Hungary and southern Slovakia Transdanubia Royal Croatia and Slavonia the Ottoman Empire Rumelia present day Bulgaria and Serbia and Wallachia in present day southern Romania nbsp Habsburg troops take the Hatvan castle in 1596In 1595 the Christians led by Mansfeld captured Esztergom and Visegrad strategic fortresses on the Danube but they did not lay siege to the key fortress of Buda The Ottomans launched a siege of Eger Turkish Egri conquering it in 1596 In 1595 in the Balkans a Spanish fleet of galleys from the Kingdom of Naples and Kingdom of Sicily under Pedro de Toledo marquis of Villafranca sacked Patras on the Rumelia Eyalet of the Ottoman Empire in retaliation for Turkish raids against the Italian coasts 15 The raid was so spectacular that Sultan Murad III discussed exterminating the Christians of Constantinople in revenge He finally decided to order the expulsion of all unmarried Greeks from the city 16 In the following years Spanish fleets continued to raid the Levant waters but large scale naval warfare between Christians and Ottomans did not resume 17 Instead privateers such as Alonso de Contreras took on the role of harassing Ottoman ships 15 17 On the eastern front of the war Michael the Brave prince of Wallachia started a campaign against the Ottomans in the autumn of 1594 conquering several castles near the Lower Danube including Giurgiu Brăila Harsova and Silistra while his Moldavian allies defeated the Ottoman armies in Iasi and other parts of Moldova 18 Michael continued his attacks deep within the Ottoman Empire taking the forts of Nicopolis Ribnice and Chilia 19 and even reaching as far as Adrianople 20 At one point his forces were only 24 kilometres 15 mi from the Ottoman capital Constantinople nbsp The execution of mutinous Walloon mercenaries in 1600He was however forced to fall back across the Danube and the Ottomans in turn led a massive counter offensive 100 000 strong which aimed to not only take back their recently captured possessions but also conquer Wallachia once and for all The push was initially successful managing to capture not only Giurgiu but also Bucharest and Targoviște despite fierce opposition at Călugăreni 23 August 1595 At this point the Ottoman command grew complacent and stopped pursuing the retreating Wallachian army focusing instead on fortifying Targoviște and Bucharest and considering their task all but done Michael had to wait almost two months for aid from his allies to arrive but when it did his counter offensive took the Ottomans by surprise managing to sweep through the Ottoman defences on three successive battlefields at Targoviște 18 October Bucharest 22 October and Giurgiu 26 October The Battle of Giurgiu in particular was devastating for the Ottoman forces which had to retreat across the Danube in disarray 21 The war between Wallachia and the Ottomans continued until late 1599 when Michael was unable to continue the war due to poor support from his allies The turning point of the war was the Battle of Mezokeresztes which took place in the territory of Hungary on October 24 26 1596 The combined Habsburg Transylvanian force of 45 50 000 troops was defeated by the Ottoman army The battle turned when Christian soldiers thinking they had won the battle stopped fighting in order to plunder the Ottoman camp citation needed This battle was the first significant military encounter in Central Europe between a large Christian army and the Ottoman Turkish Army after the Battle of Mohacs Nevertheless Austrians recaptured Gyor and Komarom in 1598 In 1599 the Turks and their Tatar allies attacked Prievidza Topoľcany and other towns in the Nitra river valley in Upper Hungary in what is now Slovakia and took thousands of people into slavery 1601 06 edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The siege of Buda in 1602In August 1601 at the Battle of Guruslău Giorgio Basta and Michael the Brave defeated the Hungarian nobility led by Sigismund Bathory in Transylvania who accepted Ottoman and Polish protection After the assassination of Michael the Brave by mercenary soldiers under Basta s orders 22 the Transylvanian nobility led by Mozes Szekely was again defeated at the Battle of Brasov in 1603 by the Habsburg Empire and Wallachian troops led by the voivode of Wallachia Radu Serban Hence the Austrian Habsburgs seemed to be able to win a decisive victory clarification needed In September 1601 armies of the Holy Roman Empire laid siege to Nagykanizsa Despite the numerical superiority coalition armies had to abandon the siege 2 months later due to heavy losses The last phase of the war from 1604 to 1606 corresponds to the uprising of the Prince of Transylvania Stephen Bocskay When Rudolf mostly based on false charges citation needed started prosecutions against a number of noble men in order to fill up the court s exhausted treasury Bocskay an educated strategist resisted He collected desperate Hungarians together with disappointed members of the nobility to start an uprising against the Habsburgs ruler The troops marched westwards supported by the Hajduk of Hungary won some victories and regained the territories that had been lost to the Habsburg army until Bocskay was first declared the Prince of Transylvania Marosvasarhely February 21 1605 and later also of Hungary Szerencs April 17 1605 clarification needed The Ottoman Empire supported Bocskay with a crown that he refused being Christian As Prince of Hungary he accepted negotiations with Rudolf II and concluded the Treaty of Vienna 1606 Aftermath editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The peace negotiations in Zsitvatorok in 1606The Long War ended with the Peace of Zsitvatorok on November 11 1606 with meagre territorial gains for the two main empires the Ottomans won the fortresses of Eger Esztergom and Kanisza but gave the region of Vac which they had occupied since 1541 to Austria The treaty confirmed the Ottomans inability to penetrate further into Habsburg territories It also demonstrated that Transylvania was beyond Habsburg power Although Emperor Rudolf had failed in his war objectives he nonetheless won some prestige thanks to this resistance to the Ottomans by presenting the war as a victory The treaty stabilized conditions on the Habsburg Ottoman frontier Also Bocskay managed to retain his independence but he also agreed to give up the title of King of Hungary Rudolf portrayed himself as victorious in the Long War but this did not protect him from the Habsburg family s internal politics Rudolf by the end of the war had massive debts to lenders border troops and the field army made concessions with the Hungarian nobility and disappointed the princes of the Holy Roman Empire who had subsidized the Habsburg Ottoman frontier Once peace was concluded with the Ottomans the Habsburgs turned on one another This struggle forced the family to confront the unresolved matter of Rudolf s successor and culminated in the childless Emperor Rudolf being pitted against his brother Matthias in the Brothers Quarrel 23 Battles edit nbsp Siege of Buda nbsp Siege of Esztergom in 1595 nbsp Recapture of Papa in 1597Battle of Sisak Siege of Veszprem 1593 Siege of Tata 1593 Battle of Szekesfehervar 1593 Battle of Romhany Uprising in Banat 1594 Siege of Gyor Turkish Yanik Kala burned place as a reference to the enormous damages caused by the siege 24 Battle of Călugăreni Battle of Giurgiu 1596 Siege of Esztergom Battle of Brest 1596 Siege of Eger 1596 Battle of Keresztes Serb Uprising of 1596 97 1597 Siege of Tata 1598 Siege of Gyor 1599 Siege of Buda Battle of Selimbăr Kanizsa Battle of Mirăslău Battle of Guruslău 1601 Siege of Szekesfehervar Battle of Brasov 1603 Siege of BudaReferences edit a b Csorba Csaba Estok Janos Salamon Konrad 1998 Magyarorszag Kepes Tortenete Budapest Hungarian Book Club pp 62 64 ISBN 963 548 961 7 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Spencer C Tucker 2009 p 547 Attila Weiszhar Balazs Weiszhar Csatak kislexikona Small lexicon of the Battles Maecenas Publisher 2000 ISBN 963 645 080 3 The Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 6 Mahk Mid p 1030 Ervin Liptai Magyarorszag hadtortenete I 1984 ISBN 963 326 337 9 Zsigmond Pach Magyarorszag tortenete 1526 1686 1985 ISBN 963 05 0929 6 Cathal J Nolan 2006 The age of wars of religion 1000 1650 an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization Greenwood Publishing Group p 846 ISBN 978 0313337345 Retrieved 2012 03 23 Turkce Bilgi 1593 1606 Osmanli Avusturya Savasi Turkce Bilgi Great Turkish War 1683 1699 Military History Books Helion Retrieved 2023 03 19 Wilson Peter H 2009 Europe s Tragedy A History of the Thirty Years War Allen Lane p 98 Rajko L Veselinovic 1966 1219 1766 Udzbenik za IV razred srpskih pravoslavnih bogoslovija Yu 68 1914 Sv Arh Sinod Srpske pravoslavne crkve pp 70 71 a b c d Nikolaj Velimirovic 1989 The Life of St Sava St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 159 ISBN 978 0 88141 065 5 Editions speciales Naucno delo 1971 via Google books Mugnai Bruno Flaherty Christopher 2014 Der Lange Turkenkrieg 1593 1606 The long Turkish War Vol 1 ebook Soldiershop Publishing ISBN 978 889651991 2 p 67 a b Braudel Fernand 1995 The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II Volume 2 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 52020330 5 p 1229 Hutton William Holden 1900 Constantinople the story of the old capital of the empire London J M Dent amp Co p 172 a b Teneti Alberto 1967 Piracy and the Decline of Venice 1580 1615 Berkeley University of California Press p 47 Constantin C Giurescu Istoria Romanilor Bucharest Editura All 2007 Romanian p 183 Coln Emporungen so sich in Konigereich Ungarn auch in Siebenburgen Moldau in der der bergischen Walachay und anderen Oerten zugetragen haben 1596 Marco Venier correspondence with the Doge of Venice 16 July 1595 Florin Constantiniu O istorie sinceră a poporului roman ISBN 973 8240 67 0 Bucharest Editura Univers Enciclopedic 2002 Romanian pp 128 129 Michael prince of Walachia Britannica Peter Wilson The Thirty Years War Europe s Tragedy Gyor ostroma Borovszky Samu Magyarorszag varmegyei es varosai Kezikonyvtar Arcanum in Hungarian Retrieved 2018 09 26 Sources editFinkel Caroline 1988 The Administration of Warfare The Ottoman Military Campaigns in Hungary 1593 1606 Vienna VWGO ISBN 3 85369 708 9 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 40514291 5 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Long Turkish War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Long Turkish War amp oldid 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