Siege of Ostrvica

The Siege of Ostrvica was Mehmed the Conqueror's successful attack on the Ostrvica Fortress in 1454 during his first Serbian campaign.

Siege of Ostrvica
DateApril 1454
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Serbian Despotate
Commanders and leaders
Mehmed II Đurađ Branković
Strength
20,000[1] 6000-7000 Guardian
9000 cavalry[2]

Before the siege

After the death of Sultan Murad II and the conquest of Istanbul, the Serbian despot sent a delegation to the Ottoman ruler who was in Edirne. He presented the keys of some castles that belonged to the Ottomans, as well as congratulating the conquest. But at the same time, with the encouragement of the Pope, he had not neglected to meet with the Hungarians to participate in a new Crusade, which was intended to be prepared against the Ottomans. The Ottomans learned about the Serbian-Hungarian contacts of the Serbian despot against them through their spies and prepared accordingly.[3]

Although the Ottoman court asked the Serbian delegation for the keys of the other castles, which belonged to them but passed to the Serbs, they also received the refusal. Thereupon, a campaign was made on Serbia in the spring of 1454.[4]

Siege

Mehmet led this expedition in 1454. His intention this time was simply to cross enemy territory and destroy everything. During this fast expedition, thousands of prisoners were taken and brought to Istanbul as the new Christian population. Trapped in Smederevo, the cavalry sent against him by the despot (a Venetian visiting John Hunyadi says he had 9,000 horsemen) was easily repulsed. Mehmed the Conqueror arrived in Ostrvica, where Branković had many assets, and easily took the castle.[5]

References

  1. André Clot, Mehmed II, le conquérant de Byzance
  2. Nicolae Iorga, Büyük Türk Fatih Sultan Mehmed
  3. İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Osmanlı tarihi II. Cilt (İstanbul'un Fethinden Kanuni sultan Süleyman'ın Ölümüne Kadar)
  4. İsmail Hakkı Uzunçarşılı, Osmanlı tarihi II. Cilt (İstanbul'un Fethinden Kanuni sultan Süleyman'ın Ölümüne Kadar)
  5. Nicolae Iorga, Büyük Türk Fatih Sultan Mehmed
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.