Hungarian–Ottoman Wars

The Hungarian–Ottoman wars were a series of battles between the Ottoman Empire and the medieval Kingdom of Hungary. Following the Byzantine Civil War, the Ottoman capture of Gallipoli, and the decisive Battle of Kosovo, the Ottoman Empire was poised to conquer the entirety of the Balkans. It also sought and expressed desire to expand further north into Central Europe, beginning with the Hungarian lands.

Hungarian–Ottoman Wars
Part of the Ottoman wars in Europe

Clockwise, From top left: The Battle of Hermannstadt, The Battle of Varna, The Battle of Kosovo, The Siege of Belgrade, The Battle of Breadfield, The Battle of Mohács
Date1366 – 29 August 1526
Location
Central Europe (Kingdom of Hungary), Eastern Europe (Moldavia), Balkans (Wallachia and Ottoman-occupied areas)
Result

Ottoman victory

  • Start of Ottoman–Habsburg wars
  • Destruction of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and its partition between the Ottomans and the Habsburgs
Belligerents

Ottoman Empire
vassals:

European allies:

Commanders and leaders
  • Ottoman Army
  • Serbian Despotate
  • Voivodes of Wallachia
  • Voivodes of Moldavia
  • etc.
  • Kings of Hungary
  • Serbian Despotate
  • Voivodes of Wallachia
  • Voivodes of Moldavia
  • etc.

The initial Hungarian success culminated in the Crusade of Varna, though without significant outside support the Hungarians were defeated. Nonetheless the Ottomans suffered more defeats at Belgrade, even after the conquest of Constantinople. In particular, Vlad the Impaler, with limited Hungarian help, resisted Ottoman rule until the Ottomans placed his brother, a man less feared and less hated by the populace, on the throne of Wallachia. Ottoman success was once again halted at Moldavia due to Hungarian intervention, but the Turks finally succeeded when Moldavia and then Belgrade fell to Bayezid II and Suleiman the Magnificent, respectively. In 1526 the Ottomans crushed the Hungarian army at Mohács with King Louis II of Hungary perishing along with 26,000 soldiers.

Following this defeat, the eastern region of the Kingdom of Hungary (mainly Transylvania) became an Ottoman tributary state, constantly engaged in civil war with Royal Hungary. The war continued with the Habsburgs now asserting primacy in the conflict with Suleiman and his successors. The northern and most of the central parts of Hungary managed to remain free from Ottoman rule, but the Kingdom of Hungary, the most powerful state east of Vienna under Matthias I, was now divided and constantly threatened by Ottoman ambitions in the region.

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