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The causes of the Polish-Ottoman War of 1672–1676 can be traced to 1666. Petro Doroshenko Hetman of Zaporizhian Host, aiming to gain control of Ukraine but facing defeats from other factions struggling over control of that region, in a final bid to preserve his power in Ukraine, signed a treaty with Sultan Mehmed IV in 1669 that recognized the Cossack Hetmanate as a vassal of the Ottoman Empire.
The Polish–Ottoman War or the War of the Holy League was the Polish side of the conflict otherwise known as the Great Turkish War. The conflict began with a Polish victory at the Battle of Vienna in 1683, and ended with the Treaty of Karlowitz , restoring to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth lands lost in the previous Polish-Ottoman War ...
This includes Polish or Ottoman intervention in wars such as the Hungarian–Ottoman War (1437–1442) or the Battle of Verbia. Note that this list doesn't only contain wars, but armed conflicts as a whole. Therefore, single battles or raids are allowed to be on here. Polish or Polish–Lithuanian victory Ottoman victory
Polish–Ottoman War (1485–1503) Jan Olbracht's Moldavian expedition of 1497 and Ottoman's retribution raid a year later; Moldavian Magnate Wars, a period of near constant warfare at the end of the 16th century and the beginning of the 17th century. Jan Zamoyski's expedition to Moldavia; Polish–Ottoman War (1620–21) Polish–Ottoman War ...
Battles of the Polish–Ottoman War (1683–1699) (9 P) Pages in category "Battles of the Polish–Ottoman wars" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.
After the fall of Kamieniec Podolski, the Turkish-Tatar-Cossack army advanced deep into Poland. The Tatars and some Cossack and Turkish troops took part in ravaging the country. Lviv was besieged on September 20 by the Cossack army of Petro Doroshenko and the Turkish army of Kaplan Pasha (a total of about 50,000 soldiers
Difficulties arose when Jan Zamoyski took advantage of the Ottoman–Habsburg war in Hungary to invade Moldavia in 1595, [2] in the Moldavian Magnate Wars. The Treaty of Jaruga was signed in 1617, restraining Polish interventions in the Danubian principalities, [2] but open conflict later erupted with the Polish–Ottoman War (1620–1621).
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