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* Athelingdom of Upper Ungarland |
* Athelingdom of Upper Ungarland |
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− | ! colspan="2" |Waldhavers and |
+ | ! colspan="2" |Waldhavers and Leaders |
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|John III Sobieski |
|John III Sobieski |
Revision as of 00:20, 31 August 2018
Slaught of Ween | |||||||||
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Deal of the Great Turkish Struggle, the Osman–Habsburg struggles, and the Polish–Osmanish Struggle | |||||||||
Slaught of Ween, 12 September 1683 | |||||||||
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Fighters | |||||||||
Polish–Lithowish Gemeanwealth
Holy Romish Rike
Habsburg Ungarland Zaporozhish Cossacks
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Osmanish Rike
Underling States:
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Waldhavers and Leaders | |||||||||
John III Sobieski
(Supreme Commander of the Christian Coalition Army) Hetman Jabłonowski Hetman Sieniawski Earl Marcin Kątski
(Relief Force)
Earl Ernest Rothgar of Starhembergh
(Garrison)
Carl of Ludhering
John George III of Saxland
Georg Frederick of Waldeck
Julius Francis, Hertogh of Saxe-Lauenburgh
Maximilian II Emanuel of Bayerland
Eugene of Savoy
Livio Odescalchi
Antonio Caraffa |
Great Wisir Kara Mustafa Pasha
Kara Mehmed of Diyarbakir
Ibrahim of Buda
Abaza Sari Hüseyin
Pasha of Karahisar
Murad Giray | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
Slaught of Ween (Hightdutch: Schlacht am Kahlen Berge or Kahlenberg; Polish: bitwa pod Wiedniem or odsiecz wiedeńska (The Relief of Vienna); Modern Turkish: İkinci Viyana Kuşatması, Ottoman Turkish: Beç Ḳalʿası Muḥāṣarası) took stead at Mount Kahlenberg near Ween on 12 September 1683 after the rikestown had been beset by the Osmanish Rike for two months. The slaught was fought by the Habsburg Onewald, the Polish–Litowish Gemeanwealth and the Holy Romish Rike, under the wald of King John III Sobieski against the Osmans and their underling- and gavelstates. The slaught marked the first time the Gemeanwealth and the Holy Romish Rike had fought together against the Osmans, and it is often seen as a crossroads in history, after which "the Osmanish Turks stopped being a threat to the Christen world". In the following struggle that lasted until 1699, the Osmans lost almost all of Ungarland to Kaiser Leopold I.