Battle of Kosovo (1448)

Battle of Kosovo (1448)

: "For the other Battles of Kosovo, see Battle of Kosovo (disambiguation)"Infobox Military Conflict
conflict= Second Battle of Kosovo


caption=An Akıncı irregular defeating a Hungarian knight.
partof= the Ottoman wars in Europe
date=October 17 - October 20, 1448 (Julian calendar)
place=Kosovo Polje, present-day Kosovo
result= Decisive Ottoman victory
combatant1=Ottoman Empire
combatant2=Kingdom of Hungary Walachia Serbs
commander1=Murad II
commander2=John Hunyadi
strength1= ~ 40,000Bennett, "The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare", p. 182 "Hunyadi led 55,000 men including 10,000 Wallachians, but should have waited to join Scanderbeg's troops before confronting Murad's force of 40,000."] to 60,000Sedlar, "East Central Europe in the Middle Ages", p. 248 "Hunyadi,who was now the richest landowner in Hungary, had raised an army of 24,000 men from his private resources, including German and Bohemian infantrymen armed with handguns to supplement his Hungarian cavalry. [...] This time the sultan brought on to the field a force of at least 60,000 men including Janissaries with muskets and a contingent of artillery."]
strength2= 24,000Turnbull, "The Ottoman Empire 1326-1699", p. 36 "Hunyadi led an army of 24,000 men, including 8,000 Wallachians, but suffered another military defeat without even seeing his Albanian allies."]
casualties1=Unknown
casualties2=Unknown

The Second Battle of Kosovo (Hungarian: "második rigómezei csata", Turkish: "İkinci Kosova muharebesi") (October 17–October 20, 1448) was fought at Kosovo Polje between a Hungarian-led Catholic coalition under John Hunyadi against an Ottoman-led coalition under Sultan Murad II.

Background

At 1448, John Hunyadi saw the right moment to lead a campaign against the Ottoman Empire. After the Defeat of Varna (1444), he raised another army to attack Ottomans. His strategy was based on an expected revolt of the Balkan people, a surprise attack, and destroying the main force of the Ottomans in a single battle. Hunyadi was totally immodest and led his forces without leaving any escort behind.

The Albanian leader Skanderbeg and his troops moved to join the Hungarian coalition but they were intercepted and attacked by the Ottoman vassal Đurađ Branković of Serbia, and delayed from reaching the battlefield.

The battle

When John Hunyadi arrived at the field of Rigómező (Kosovo Field), he realised that the Sultan's troops were occupying the hills behind his own army having been informed of the Sultan's intentions by Serbia's despot, Brankovic [http://books.google.com/books?id=ANdbpi1WAIQC&pg=PA393&dq=brankovic+skanderbeg+kosovo+1448&num=100&sig=eOx5SlcTUmVZ7N7mSOVnMMOMHDg#PPA393,M1] . After a heavy fight a contingent of knights captured the hills and proceeded to build defences there, making use of war wagons.

The next day the battle opened when Hunyadi attacked the Ottoman flanks with mixed cavalry (light and heavy). The Turkish flanks, consisting of soldiers from Rumelia and Anatolia, were losing until Turkish light cavalry arrived to reinforce them. The Christian flanks were subsequently routed and the survivors retreated back to Hunyadi's main force. When Hunyadi saw the defeat of his flanks, he attacked with his main force, composed of knights and light infantry. The janissary corps were not successful and the cavalry made progress through the Turkish center, but were stopped at the Turkish camp. When the main attack was halted, the Turkish infantry regrouped and successfully drove the Hungarian knights back. The light cavalry, who were now without the knights' support were also overcome. Hungarian forces retreated to their camp. During the retreat, the janissaries killed most of the Hungarian nobles and Hunyadi fled. However, Serbs later captured him. During the night, Turkish infantry fired missiles at the Hungarians who replied with cannons. On the next day, a final assault totally annihilated the remaining Hungarian army.

The two-day battle in Kosovo saw both sides taking heavy casualties and left the Ottoman force in command of the field at the end of second day.The Hungarians were supposed to be 24,000 and the Turkish around 40,000 to 60,000. The casualties probably were around 5,000 Ottoman soldiers and 15,000 Hungarians.Fact|date=November 2007

Aftermath

This battle demonstrated that the Janissary corps even if their lines are broken through would not run away from the field if defending the Sultan himself. Otherwise, one major defeat of the Turkish army could have caused only a short turmoil - it would have needed several defeats in a series to break the power of the Ottomans.

The Christian Balkan states were unable to resist the Ottomans after this defeat, eventually falling under control of the Ottoman Empire. Hunyadi successfully defended the Kingdom of Hungary against the Ottoman campaigns. Skanderbeg also successfully continued his resistance in Albania until his death in 1468, 12 years later the country fell to full Ottoman control.

Notes

References

* Stephen R. Turnbull, "The Ottoman Empire 1326-1699", Osprey Publishing, 2003.
* Jean W. Sedlar, "East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, 1000-1500", University of Washington Press, 1994.
* Matthew Bennett, "The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient & Medieval Warfare", Taylor & Francis, 1998.

External links

* [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9046113/Battle-of-Kosovo Second Battle of Kosovo "The Encyclopedia Britannica"]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Battle of Kosovo (disambiguation) — The Battle of Kosovo could refer to several conflicts: * Battle of Kosovo (1389) * Battle of Kosovo (1448) * Battle of Kosovo (1831) * Battle of Kosovo (1915) * Kosovo Operation (1944) * Kosovo War (1999) …   Wikipedia

  • 1448 — Year 1448 was a leap year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.Events of 1448* January 5/6 Christopher of Bavaria, King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden dies with no designated heir, leaving all three… …   Wikipedia

  • Kosovo, Battle of — Either of two battles fought in the Serbian province of Kosovo. The first (June 13, 1389), between the Serbs under Prince Lazar and the Ottoman Empire led by Sultan Murad I, ended despite Murad s death in the defeat of Serbia and the encirclement …   Universalium

  • Battle of Vienna — This article is about the 1683 battle. For the earlier Ottoman siege of 1529, see Siege of Vienna. For the 1485 Hungarian siege, see Siege of Vienna (1485). For 1945 battle, see Vienna Offensive. Battle of Vienna Part of the Great Turkish War,… …   Wikipedia

  • History of Medieval Kosovo — Great migrations and interregnums Slavs came to the territories that form modern Kosovo in the seventh century migrations of White Serbs, with the largest influx of migrants in the 630s; although the region was increasingly populated by Serbs… …   Wikipedia

  • History of Kosovo — The Kosovo region in the Balkans in antiquity was known as Dardania, and from the 1st century AD formed part of the Roman province of Moesia. It was part of Medieval Serbia from 1180 to 1455, when it was conquered into the Ottoman Empire. The… …   Wikipedia

  • Serbs in Kosovo — Ethnic group group=Serbs of Kosovo caption=Serb inhabited places in Kosovo poptime= Kosovo (Serbia): 111 000cite web|url=http://www.ks gov.net/ESK/esk/pdf/english/population/Demographic%20changes%20of%20the%20Kosovo%20population%201948… …   Wikipedia

  • Schlacht auf dem Amselfeld (1448) — Die dritte Schlacht auf dem Amselfeld (ungarisch: második rigómezei csata, türkisch: İkinci Kosova muharebesi) fand zwischen dem 17. und dem 20. Oktober 1448 auf dem Kosovo Polje (Amselfeld) zwischen dem Königreich Ungarn, das eine römisch… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Битва на Косовом поле (1448) — Турецкий всадник акынджи сбрасывает с коня венгерского рыцаря Битва на Косовом поле 1448 года проходила с 17 по …   Википедия

  • Medieval warfare — Battle of Crécy (1346) between the English and French in the Hundred Years War. Warfare …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”