List of wars involving Serbia

The following is a list of wars involving Serbia in the late modern period and contemporary history.

The list gives the name, the date, combatants, and the result of these conflicts following this legend:

  Serbian victory
  Serbian defeat
  Another result (e.g. a treaty or peace without a clear result, status quo ante bellum, result of civil or internal conflict, result unknown or indecisive)
  Ongoing conflict

List

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Uprising against the Dahije
(1804)
 Serbia
Dahije Victory
First Serbian Uprising
(18041813)
Part of the Serbian Revolution

Supported by:
 Russia (1807–12)

Dahijas (1804)
Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire (from 1805)

Supported by:
 France[1]

Defeat
Russo-Turkish War (1806–1812)
Part of the Serbian Revolution and Russo-Turkish Wars
 Russian Empire

Moldavia
Wallachia
 Revolutionary Serbia
 Prince-Bishopric of Montenegro (1806–12)

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire

Victory
Tican's Rebellion
(1807)
Serb peasants in Syrmia  Austria Partial Success
  • The rebellion was suppressed
  • Most Rebels granted Amnesty
  • Austrian government forces Feudal Lords to be more lenient
Hadži-Prodan's Revolt
(1814)
Part of the Serbian Revolution
Revolutionary Serbia Serbian rebels Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire Defeat
  • Uprising suppressed
Second Serbian Uprising
(18151817)
Part of the Serbian Revolution
Principality of Serbia Serbian rebels Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire Victory
Niš Rebellion
(1821)
Serbia Serb rebels  Ottoman Empire Defeat
  • Rebellion suppressed by the Ottomans
Serb uprising
(18481849)
Part of the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire
Victory
Herzegovina uprising
(1875–1877)
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis
Serb rebels
Supported by:
 Serbia
 Montenegro
 Ottoman Empire
First Serbian–Ottoman War
(1876–1877)
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis
 Ottoman Empire Victory
  • Political Victory
  • British public opinion turns against the Ottomans
  • Russian-mediated truce
Second Serbian–Ottoman War
(18771878)
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis and the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78)
 Ottoman Empire Victory
Timok Rebellion
(1883)
 Kingdom of Serbia
Royalist victory
  • Rebellion suppressed
Serbo-Bulgarian War
(1885)

Support by:
 Austria-Hungary

 Bulgaria Defeat
First Balkan War
(19121913)
Part of the Balkan Wars
Balkan League: Supported by:

Supported by:
 Austria-Hungary

Victory
Second Balkan War
(1913)
Part of the Balkan Wars
Victory
Ohrid-Debar Uprising
(1913)
Part of the aftermath of the Second Balkan War

Supported by:
 Albania

Victory
  • Suppression of uprising
Serbian campaign and Balkans theatre
(19141918)
Part of the European theatre of World War I
Allied Powers
Central Powers:
Victory
Revolutions and interventions in Hungary
(19181920)
Part of the aftermath of World War I and the Revolutions of 1917–23
Victory
Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia
(19181919)
Part of the aftermath of World War I
 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes  German-Austria Military victory
Christmas Uprising
(1919)
Part of the aftermath of World War I and the creation of Yugoslavia
Montenegrin Whites Victory
  • Uprising suppressed
Invasion of Yugoslavia
(1941)
Part of the Balkans campaign and Mediterranean theatre of World War II
 Yugoslavia Axis Defeat
World War II in Yugoslavia
(19411945)
Part of the European theatre of World War II
Allies Aerial and logistics support:
Former Axis powers:
 Bulgaria (1944–45)
Other factions:
Supported by: Supported by: Western Allies:
Axis
German puppet states and governments: Italian protectorates and dependencies:

 Chetniks (against Partisans)
Yugoslav Partisan Victory
War in Croatia[lower-alpha 2]
(19911995)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
Supported by:
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Supported by:{{plainlist|

Defeat
War in Bosnia[lower-alpha 3]
(19921995)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
Supported by:

 NATO (1995)

Military stalemate
  • Internal partition of Bosnia and Herzegovina according to the Dayton Accords
  • Over 101,000 dead
  • Deployment of NATO-led forces to oversee the peace agreement
Kosovo War
(19981999)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
 FR Yugoslavia UÇK
 NATO (1999)

Supported by:
 Albania

Military Stalemate[3]
Insurgency in the Preševo Valley
(19992001)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
 FR Yugoslavia UÇPMB Victory[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. Acceded to the Tripartite Pact, generally considered Axis powers (see e.g., Facts About the American Wars, Bowman, p. 432, which includes them in a list of "Axis powers", or The Library of Congress World War II Companion, Wagner, Osborne, & Reyburn, p. 39, which lists them as "The Axis").
  2. Direct involvement until early 1992. After the proclamation of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in April 1992, all units of former Yugoslav People's Army were withdrawn from territories of Croatia and Bosnia. Despite this, various paramilitary groups from FRY continued to fight in Croatia
  3. Officially Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (and Serbia as part of it) did not participate in Bosnian War. However, various Serbian paramilitaries were directly involved in conflicts.
  1. Meriage, Lawrence P. (27 January 2017). "The First Serbian Uprising (1804-1813) and the Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Eastern Question". Slavic Review. 37 (3): 421–439. doi:10.2307/2497684. JSTOR 2497684. S2CID 222355180.
  2. Egidio Ivetic, Le guerre balcaniche, il Mulino - Universale Paperbacks, 2006, p. 63
  3. References:
    • Stigler, Andrew L. (Winter 2002–2003). "A clear victory for air power: NATO's empty threat to invade Kosovo". International Security. 27 (3): 124–157. JSTOR 3092116.
    • Biddle, Stephen (2002). "The new way of war? Debating the Kosovo model". Foreign Affairs. 81 (3): 148–139. JSTOR 20033168.
    • Dixon, Paul (2003). "Victory by spin? Britain, the US and the propaganda war over Kosovo". Civil Wars. 6 (4): 83–106. doi:10.1080/13698240308402556.
    • Harvey, Frank P (2006). "Getting NATO's success in Kosovo right: The theory and logic of counter-coercion". Conflict Management and Peace Science. 23 (2): 139–158. JSTOR 26275265.
  4. Holley, David (25 May 2001). "Yugoslavia Occupies Last of Kosovo Buffer". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  5. "Southern Serbia's Fragile Peace". International Crisis Group. 9 December 2003. Archived from the original on 3 June 2012. Retrieved 25 May 2012.
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