Battle of Petrovaradin

Battle of Petrovaradin
Part of the Austro-Turkish War (1716–1718)

Battle of Peterwardein
by Georg Philipp Rugendas
Date5 August 1716
Location45°15′9″N 19°51′45″E / 45.25250°N 19.86250°E / 45.25250; 19.86250
Result Habsburg victory
Belligerents
Habsburg monarchy
Württemberg[1]

Ottoman Empire

Hungarian Kuruc

 Wallachia[a]
Commanders and leaders
Strength
60,000 men[3][4][b] 150,000 men[3][5][c]
Casualties and losses
4,500 killed and wounded[7][d] 20,000 killed[9][e]
Map
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Maps: terms of use
200km
124miles
11
11 Uprising in Vučitrn from fall 1717 to summer 1718
11 Uprising in Vučitrn from fall 1717 to summer 1718
7
7 Siege of Belgrade (1717) from 18 June 1717 to 21 August 1717
7 Siege of Belgrade (1717) from 18 June 1717 to 21 August 1717
5
5 Siege of Trebinje on 26 November 1716
5 Siege of Trebinje on 26 November 1716
3
3 Siege of Temeşvar (1716) from 31 August 1716 to 12 October 1716
3 Siege of Temeşvar (1716) from 31 August 1716 to 12 October 1716
2
  Battle
2 = Karlowitz & Petrovaradin
  Siege
3 = Temeșvar, 5 = Trebinje, 7 = Belgrade
  Other
11 = Vučitrn

The Battle of Petrovaradin also known as the Battle of Peterwardein, took place on 5 August 1716 during the Austro-Turkish War when the Ottoman army besieged the Habsburg-controlled fortress of Petrovaradin on the Military Frontier of the Habsburg monarchy (today Novi Sad, Vojvodina, Serbia). The Ottomans attempted to capture Petrovaradin, the so-called Gibraltar on the Danube, but experienced a great defeat by an army half the size of their own, similar to the defeat they had experienced in 1697 at the Battle of Zenta. Ottoman Grand Vizier Damad Ali Pasha was fatally wounded, while the Ottoman army lost 20,000 men and 250 guns to the Habsburg army led by Field Marshal Prince Eugene of Savoy.

The Austrians consolidated this victory by marching into the Banat and conquering Temesvár, the last remaining Turkish fortress in Hungary, followed by Belgrade.[11]

  1. ^ A military history of the Hungarian nation.
  2. ^ a b McKay, Baker & von Savoyen 1977, p. 223.
  3. ^ a b Tucker 2010, p. 721.
  4. ^ Campbell 1737, p. 216.
  5. ^ Campbell 1737, p. 214.
  6. ^ Harris 1841, p. 5.
  7. ^ Ágoston 2011, p. 104.
  8. ^ Andreas Thürheim: Gedenkblätter aus der Kriegsgeschichte der K. K. oesterreichischen Armee. Vol. 2. Verlag der Buchhandlung für Militär-Literatur, Vienna, 1880, p. 480.
  9. ^ Harbottle & Bruce 1979, p. 197.
  10. ^ Heinrich Dyck 2020.
  11. ^ Finkel 2012, p. 647.


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