Great Turkish war
Part of the Ottoman–Habsburg wars, Polish–Ottoman Wars, Croatian–Ottoman wars, Ottoman–Venetian Wars, Ottoman–Hungarian wars and Russo-Turkish Wars
Painting depicting the Battle of Vienna, 1683
The Battle of Vienna, 1683
Date14 July 1683 – 26 January 1699
(15 years, 6 months, 1 week and 5 days)
Location
Result

Holy League Victory

Territorial
changes
  • The Habsburg monarchy wins lands in Hungary, the Principality of Transylvania and the Balkans.
  • Poland-Lithuania captures Podolia.
  • Russia captures the port of Azov.
  • Venice captures Morea and inner Dalmatia.
  • Montenegro gains de facto independence.
Belligerents

Holy Roman Empire

Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Tsardom of Russia

Republic of Venice Republic of Venice
Spanish Empire

Montenegro
Albanian rebels
Serbian rebels
Greek rebels
Bulgarian rebels
Romanian rebels
Croatian rebels

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire
Vassal states:

Commanders and leaders

Ottoman Empire Mehmed IV

| strength1 = 88,100 (annual average)[2] | strength2 = | casualties1 = | casualties2 = | casualties3 = 384,000 soldiers dead on all sides (120,000 killed and 180,000 wounded in combat; other deaths mostly from disease)[3] }} | rank = Captain general | battles = Battle of Hermannstadt
Battle near the Iron Gate
Long campaign
Battle of Nish
Battle of Zlatitsa
Battle of Kunovica
Battle of Varna
Second Battle of Kosvo
Wallachian campaign
Siege of Belgrade | battles_label = Battles/wars }} }}

  1. "Абдусаламов Магомед-паша Балашович Феодальные междоусобицы кумыкских владетелей во второй половине XVII века", ИСОМ, no. 4, C.33, 2014, retrieved 2023-05-26
  2. Wilson 2016, pp. 460–61, table 13.
  3. Clodfelter, M. (2008). "Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015" (2017 ed.). McFarland. Page 59.