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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Vienna#Staging_the_battle
For the siege of Vienna in 1529 see
Siege of Vienna

For the battle of Vienna in
1945 see
Vienna
Offensive

Battle of Vienna
Part of the Great Turkish War and the Ottoman-Habsburg wars

Battle of Vienna on September 11, 1683
Date September 11, 1683
Location Vienna, Austria
Result Decisive Holy League victory
Belligerents
Holy League:

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Austria
Saxony
Bavaria
Franconia
Swabia
Zaporizhian Sich

Ottoman Empire
Ottoman vassals:
Khanate of Crimea
Principality of Transylvania
Principality of Wallachia
Principality of Moldavia
Commanders
John III Sobieski
Lorraine" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_V,_Duke_of_Lor...
Kara Mustafa Pasha
Strength
c. 84,450 troops
  • 152 cannons
c. 90,000 troops
  • 12,000 Janissaries
  • 300 cannons
Casualties and losses
2,000 dead,
2,500 wounded
at least 10,000 dead,
at least 5,000 wounded,
about 5,000+ prisoners taken,
all cannons lost

The Battle of Vienna (German: Schlacht am Kahlenberg, language" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_language"">P...:
Bitwa pod Wiedniem or Odsiecz Wiedeńska, Turkish: İkinci
Viyana Kuşatması
), Ukrainian: Віденська
відсіч (Viděns'ka Vidsič)
took place on September
11
, 1683 after Vienna
had been besieged by the Ottoman Empire
for two months. The battle broke the advance of the Ottoman Empire
into Europe, and marked the political hegemony of the Habsburg dynasty
in Central Europe.

The large-scale battle was won by Polish-Austrian-German forces led by King of Poland John III Sobieski against the Ottoman Empire
army commanded by Grand Vizier Merzifonlu Kara Mustafa
Pasha
.

The siege itself began on 14 July 1683, by the Ottoman Empire army of approximately 90,000 men. The sieging force was composed by 60
ortas of Jannisaries (12,000
men paper strength) with an observation army of c.70,000 men watching
the countryside. The decisive battle took place on 11
September
, after the united relief army of 84,450 men had arrived,
pitted against the Ottoman army.

The battle marked the turning point in the 300-year struggle between the forces of the Central European kingdoms and the Ottoman Empire. Over the sixteen years following the battle, the Habsburgs of Austria gradually
occupied and dominated southern Hungary and Transylvania, which
had been largely cleared of the Turkish forces.

Contents

Prelude

Strength of Holy League forces:

Banner of the Holy Roman Emperor
Troops Infantry Cavalry and Dragoons Cannons Total
Poland 16,300 20,550 28 + 150 men 37,000
Austria 8,100 10,350 70 18,400
Saxony 7,000 2,000 16 9,000
Bavaria 7,500 3,000 26 10,500
Swabia and Franconia 7,000 2,500 12 9,500
Grand total: 45,900 38,350 152 84,450

The capture of the city of Vienna had long been a strategic aspiration of the Ottoman Empire, due to its inter-locking control over Danubean (Black Sea-to-Western Europe) southern Europe, and
the overland (Eastern Mediterranean-to-Germany) trade routes. During
the years preceding the second siege (the of Vienna" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Vienna"">first
one
was in 1529), under the auspices
of grand viziers from the influential Köprülü
family
, the Ottoman Empire undertook extensive logistical
preparations this time, including the repair and establishment of roads
and bridges leading into Austria and logistical centers, as well as the
forwarding of ammunition, cannon and other resources from all over the
Empire to these logistical centers and into the Balkans.

On the political front, the Ottoman Empire had been providing military assistance to the Hungarians and to non-Catholic minorities in Habsburg-occupied portions of Hungary. There, in
the years preceding the siege, widespread unrest had become open
rebellion upon Leopold
I
's pursuit of Counter-Reformation
principles and his desire to crush Protestantism.
In 1681, Protestants and other anti-Habsburg Kuruc
forces, led by Imre Thököly,
were reinforced with a significant force from the Ottomans, who
recognized Imre as King of "Upper Hungary" (eastern Slovakia
and parts of northeastern present-day Hungary, which he had earlier
taken by force of arms from the Habsburgs). This support went so far as
explicitly promising the "Kingdom of Vienna" to the Hungarians if it
fell into Ottoman hands.

Sultan Mehmed IV
Sultan Mehmed IV

Yet, before the siege, a state of peace had existed for twenty years between the Habsburgs and the Ottoman Empire, as a result of the Peace of Vasvár.

In 1681 and 1682, clashes between the forces of Imre Thököly and the Habsburgs' military frontier (which was then northern Hungary) forces intensified, and the incursions of Habsburg forces into Central Hungary
provided the crucial argument of Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha in
convincing the Sultan, Mehmet
IV
and his Divan, to allow the
movement of the Ottoman Army. Mehmet IV authorized Kara Mustafa Pasha to
operate as far as Győr (Turkish: Yanıkkale,
German: Raab)
and Komarom (Turkish: Komaron,
German: Komorn)
castles, both in northwestern Hungary, and to besiege them. The Ottoman
Army was mobilized on January 21, 1682,
and war was declared on August 6, 1682.

The logistics of the time meant that it would have been risky or impossible to launch an invasion in August or September 1682 (a three month campaign would have got the Turks to Vienna just as winter set
in). However this 15 month gap between mobilization and the launch of a
full-scale invasion allowed ample time for the Habsburg forces to
prepare their defense and set up alliances with other Central European
rulers, and undoubtedly contributed to the failure of the campaign. It
proved most decisive that the Habsburgs and Poland concluded a treaty
during this winter in which Roman Emperor" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopold_I,_Holy_R...
would support Poland" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_III_of_Poland"">...
if the Turks attacked Kraków; in return,
the Polish Army would
come to the relief of Vienna, if attacked.

On March 31, 1683 another declaration, sent by Kara Mustafa on behalf of Mehmet IV, arrived at the Imperial Court in Vienna. On the next day the forward
march of Ottoman army
elements began from Edirne in Thracia. The troops
reached Belgrade by early May,
then moved toward the city of Vienna. About 40,000 Crimean Tatar
forces arrived 40km east of Vienna on 7 July, twice as many as the
Austrian forces in that area. After initial fights, Leopold retreated to
Linz
with 80,000 inhabitants of Vienna.

The King of Poland prepared a relief expedition to Vienna during the summer of 1683, honoring his obligations to the treaty. He went so far as to leave his
own nation virtually undefended when departing from Kraków on 15 August.
Sobieski covered this with a stern warning to Imre Thököly,
the leader of Hungary, whom he
threatened with destruction if he tried to take advantage of the
situation — which Thököly did.

Tags: 1683, Battle, Sept, Vienna, Zaustria, Zimperialism, qfightback

Seitenaufrufe: 2525

Antworten auf diese Diskussion

Events during the siege
Sipahis (cavalry knights) of the Ottoman Empire at Vienna

The main Turkish army finally invested Vienna on 14 July. On the same day, Kara Mustafa sent the traditional demand for surrender to the city.[5]

Ernst Rüdiger Graf von Starhemberg, leader of the remaining 11,000 troops and 5,000 citizens and volunteers with 370 cannons, refused to capitulate. Only days before, he had received news of the mass slaughter at Perchtoldsdorf[6], a town south of Vienna whose citizens had handed over the keys of the city after having been given a similar choice.

The Viennese had demolished many of the houses around the city walls and cleared the debris, leaving an empty plain that would expose the Turks to defensive fire if they tried to rush the city. Kara Mustafa Pasha solved that problem by ordering his forces to dig long lines of trenches directly toward the city, to help protect them from the defenders as they advanced steadily toward the city.

Although the Turks had 300 good cannons, the fortifications of Vienna were very strong and up to date, and the Turks had to find a more effective use for their gunpowder: mining. Tunnels were dug under the massive city walls to blow them up with explosives.

The lack of urgency by the Ottomans at this point, combined with the delay in advancing their army after declaring war, eventually allowed a relief force to arrive. Historians have speculated that Kara Mustafa wanted to take the city intact for its riches, and declined an all-out attack in order to prevent the right of plunder which would accompany an assault.[7]

The Ottoman siege cut virtually every means of food supply into Vienna,[8] and the garrison and civilian volunteers suffered extreme casualties. Fatigue became such a problem that Graf Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg ordered any soldier found asleep on watch to be shot. Increasingly desperate, the forces holding Vienna were on their last legs when in August, Imperial forces under Charles V, Duke of Lorraine beat Imre Thököly of Hungary at Bisamberg, 5 km northeast of Vienna.

On 6 September, the Poles under Jan III Sobieski crossed the Danube 30 km north west of Vienna at Tulln, to unite with the Imperial forces; additional troops from Saxony, Bavaria, Baden, Franconia and Swabia answered the call for a Holy League that was supported by Pope Innocent XI. Only Louis XIV of France, Habsburg's rival, not only declined to help, but used the opportunity to attack cities in Alsace and other parts of southern Germany, as in the Thirty Years' War decades earlier.

During early September, the experienced 5,000 Turkish sappers repeatedly blew up large portions of the walls, the Burg bastion, the Löbel bastion and the Burg ravelin in between, creating gaps of about 12m in width. The Austrians tried to counter by digging their own tunnels, to intercept the depositing of large amounts of gunpowder in subterranean caverns. The Turks finally managed to occupy the Burg ravelin and the Nieder wall in that area on 8 September. Anticipating a breach in the city walls, the remaining Austrians prepared to fight in Vienna itself.
[edit] Staging the battle
Sobieski at Vienna by Juliusz Kossak

The relief army had to act quickly to save the city from the Turks, and to prevent another long siege in which they might take it. Despite the international composition and the short time of only six days, an effective leadership structure was established, indisputably centered on the King of Poland and his heavy cavalry. The motivation was high, as this war was not as usual for the interests of kings, but for Christian faith. And, unlike the Crusades, the battleground was in the heart of Europe.

Kara Mustafa Pasha, on the other hand, was less effective, despite having months of time to organize his forces, ensure their motivation and loyalty, and prepare for the expected relief army attack. He had entrusted defense of the rear to the Khan of Crimea and his cavalry force, which numbered about 30 - 40,000.
Polish hussars armour, dating to the first half of the 17th century, Polish Army Museum, Warsaw.

There are serious questions as to how much the Tatar forces participated in the final battle at Vienna. Their Khan felt humiliated by repeated snubs by Kara Mustafa. He reportedly refused to attack the Polish relief force as it crossed the mountains, where the Tatar light horse would have had an advantage over the Polish heavy cavalry.[7] Nor were they the only component of the Ottoman army to defy Mustafa openly or refuse assignments.

This left vital bridges undefended and allowed passage of the combined Polish army, which arrived to relieve the siege. Critics of this account say that it was Kara Mustafa Pasha, and not the Crimean Khan, who was held responsible for the failure of the siege.

Also, the Ottomans could not rely on their Wallachian and Moldavian allies. These peoples resented the Ottomans, who extracted heavy tributes from their countries. The Ottomans also intervened in the internal politics of these countries, seeking to replace their ruling princes with men who would be mere Turkish puppets. When George Ducas, Prince of Moldavia and Şerban Cantacuzino, Prince of Wallachia learned of the Turkish plans, they tried to warn the Habsburgs. They also tried to avoid participating in the campaign, but the Ottomans insisted that they send troops. There are a great number of popular legends about the Wallachian and Moldavian forces in the siege. Almost invariably, these legends describe them loading their cannons with straw balls, in order to make no impact upon the walls of the besieged city.

The Holy League forces arrived on the "Kahlen Berg" (bare hill) above Vienna, signaling their arrival with bonfires. In the early morning hours of 12 September, before the battle, a Mass was held for the King of Poland and his nobles.
[edit] The battle
Battle of Vienna, painting by Józef Brandt
Polish soldiers 1674-1696

The battle started before all units were fully deployed. Early in the morning, at 4 AM, the Turks attacked, seeking to interfere with the deployment of the Holy League troops. Charles of Lorraine moved forward with the Austrian army on the left and the German forces in the center.

Mustafa Pasha launched a counter-attack, with most of his force, but held back some of the elite Janissary and Sipahi units for a simultaneous assault on the city. The Turkish commanders had intended to take Vienna before Sobieski arrived, but time ran out. Their sappers had prepared another large and final detonation under the Löbelbastei,[9] to breach the walls. While the Turks hastily finished their work and sealed the tunnel to make the explosion more effective, the Austrian "moles" detected the tunnel in the afternoon. One of them entered and defused the load just in time.

At that time, above the "subterranean battlefield", a large battle was going on, as the Polish infantry launched a massive assault upon the Turkish right flank. Instead of focusing on the battle with the relief army, the Turks tried to force their way into the city, carrying their crescent flag.

After twelve hours of fighting, the Poles held the high ground on the right. The Holy League cavalry waited on the hills, and watched the infantry battle for the whole day. Then at about 5 PM King of Poland ordered the attack, the cavalry attacked in four groups. One group was Austrian-German, and the other three were Polish. Over 20,000 men charged down the hills (the largest cavalry charge in history). The charge was planned and led by King of Poland Jan III Sobieski at the head of 3,000 Polish heavy lancers, the famed "Winged Hussars". The Lipka Tatars who fought on the Polish side wore a sprig of straw in their helmets to distinguish themselves from the Tatars fighting on the Turkish side. The charge broke the lines of the Ottomans, who were tired from the long fight on two sides. In the confusion, the cavalry headed straight for the Ottoman camps, while the remaining Vienna garrison sallied out of its defenses and joined in the assault.

The Ottoman troops were tired and dispirited following the failure of both the sapping attempt and the brute force assault on the city. The arrival of the cavalry turned the tide of battle against them, sending them into retreat to the south and east. In less than three hours after the cavalry attack, the Christian forces had won the battle and saved Vienna.

After the battle, Sobieski paraphrased Julius Caesar's famous quote by saying "Venimus, Vidimus, Deus vincit" - "We came, We saw, God won".
Return from Vienna by Józef Brandt, Polish army returning with loot of the Ottoman forces.
[edit] Aftermath

The Turks lost at least 15,000 men dead and wounded in the fighting, plus at least 5,000 men captured and all cannons, compared to approximately 4,500 dead and wounded for the Habsburg-Polish forces.

The loot that fell into the hands of the Holy League troops and the Viennese was as huge as their relief, as King Sobieski vividly described in a letter to his wife a few days after the battle:

Ours are treasures unheard of ... tents, sheep, cattle and no small number of camels ... it is victory as nobody ever knew of, the enemy now completely ruined, everything lost for them. They must run for their sheer lives ... Commander Starhemberg hugged and kissed me and called me his savior.[citation needed]

This emotional expression of gratitude did not distract Starhemberg from ordering the immediate repair of Vienna's severely damaged fortifications, guarding against a possible Turkish counter-strike. However, this proved unnecessary. The victory at Vienna set the stage for Prince Eugene of Savoy's re-conquering of Hungary and (temporarily) some of the Balkan countries within the following years. Austria signed a peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire in 1697.

Long before that, the Turks had disposed of their defeated commander. On 25 December 1683, Kara Mustafa Pasha was executed in Belgrade (in the approved manner, by strangulation with a silk rope pulled by several men on each end) by order of the commander of the Janissaries.
[edit] Significance
"Sobieski Sending Message of Victory to the Pope" by Jan Matejko
"Sobieski meeting Leopold I" by Artur Grottger

Although no one realized it at the time, the battle shaped the outcome of the entire war as well. The Ottomans fought on for another 16 years, losing control of Hungary and Transylvania in the process, before finally giving up. The end of the conflict was finalized by the Treaty of Karlowitz.

The battle marked the historic end of the expansion into Europe of the declining Ottoman Empire.

The behavior of Louis XIV of France also set the stage for centuries to come: German-speaking countries had to fight wars simultaneously in the West and the East. While German troops were fighting for the Holy League, Louis ruthlessly used the occasion, before and after the battle of Vienna, to annex territories in western Europe, such as Luxembourg, Alsace with Strasbourg, etc. Due to the ongoing war against the Turks, Austria could not support the interest of German allies in the West. The biography of Ezechiel du Mas, Comte de Melac illustrates the devastations of large parts of Southern Germany by France.
Plaque at the Polish Congregatio Resurrectionis church on Kahlenberg
Plaque memorializing the 300th anniversary of successful defense against the Turks at the gates of Vienna

In honor of Sobieski, the Austrians erected a church atop a hill of Kahlenberg, north of Vienna. The train route from Vienna to Warsaw is also named in Sobieski's honour. The constellation Scutum Sobieskii (Sobieski’s Shield) was named to memorialize the battle.[10] Because Sobieski had entrusted his kingdom to the protection of the Blessed Virgin (Our Lady of Czestochowa) before the battle, Pope Innocent XI commemorated his victory by extending the feast of the Holy Name of Mary, which until then had been celebrated solely in Spain and the Kingdom of Naples, to the universal Church; it is celebrated on 12 September.

The period of Polish-Austrian friendship did not last long, as Charles V of Lorraine began downplaying the role of John III Sobieski and his troops in the battle. Neither Sobieski nor the Commonwealth profited significantly from saving Austria; on the contrary, the battle of Vienna cleared the path towards the forming of the future Austrian Empire (1804 to 1867) and the destruction of the Commonwealth. In 1772 and 1795 the Habsburg Monarchy took part in the first and third partitions of Poland, which wiped the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth off the maps of Europe.
[edit] Religious significance

The feast of the Holy Name of Mary is celebrated on 12 September on the liturgical calendar of the Catholic Church in commemoration of the victory in this battle of Christian Europe over the Muslim forces of the Ottoman Empire. Before the battle King John had placed his troops under the protection of the Blessed Virgin Mary. After the battle Pope Innocent XI, wishing to honor Mary, extended the feast to the entire Church.
[edit] Legends

Several culinary legends are related to the Battle of Vienna:

* One legend is that the croissant was invented in Vienna, either in 1683 or during the earlier siege in 1529, to celebrate the defeat of the Turkish attack of the city, with the shape referring to the crescents on the Turkish flags. This version of the origin of the croissant is supported by the fact that croissants in French are referred to as Viennoiserie, and the French popular belief that Vienna-born Marie Antoinette introduced the pastry to France in 1770.
* Another legend from Vienna has the first bagel as being a gift to King John Sobieski to commemorate the King's victory over the Turks that year. It was fashioned in the form of a stirrup, to commemorate the victorious charge by the Polish cavalry. The veracity of this legend is uncertain, as there is a reference in 1610 to a bread with a similar-sounding name, which may or may not have been the bagel.
* After the battle, the Austrians discovered many bags of coffee in the abandoned Turkish encampment. Using this captured stock, Franciszek Jerzy Kulczycki opened the third coffeehouse in Europe and the first in Vienna,[11][12] where, according to legend, Kulczycki himself or Marco d'Aviano, the Capuchin friar and confidant of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, added milk and honey to sweeten the bitter coffee, thereby inventing cappuccino.

It is also said that when the Turks were pushed away from Vienna, the military bands left their instruments on the field of battle and that is how the Holy Roman Empire (and therefore the rest of Western countries) acquired cymbals, bass drums, and triangles.

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