Battle of Kassa
Battle of Kassa | |||||||
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Part of Great Turkish War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Holy Roman Empire | Ottoman Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Aeneas de Caprara | Abdi Pasha the Albanian |
- v
- t
- e
Great Turkish War
- Central Europe
- Vienna
- Párkány
- 1st Esztergom
- Visegrád
- Vác
- 1st Buda
- Eperjes
- 2nd Esztergom
- Érsekújvár
- Kassa
- 2nd Buda
- Pécs
- Mohács
- Székesfehérvár
- Szigetvár
- Kanizsa
- Balkans
- Virovitica
- Santa Maura
- Vrtijeljka
- Coron
- Kalamata
- Navarino
- Modon
- Nauplia
- Patras
- Acropolis of Athens
- Derventa
- 1st Belgrade
- Negroponte
- Kostajnica
- Batočina
- 1st Niš
- Vidin
- Skopje
- Štip
- Kačanik
- Mytilene
- Kanina
- 2nd Niš
- 2nd Belgrade
- Slankamen
- 3rd Belgrade
- Petrovaradin
- Chios
- Oinousses
- Zeytinburnu
- Andros
- Cenei
- Olasch
- Bihać
- Action of 6 July 1697
- Zenta
- Sarajevo
- Samothrace
- Eastern Europe
The Battle of Kassa was fought on October 18, 1685, in the city of Kassa in the Kingdom of Hungary (now Košice in Slovakia), between the armies of the Ottoman Empire and of the Holy Roman Empire.[1]
The Austrian Commander, Field Marshal Aeneas de Caprara, defeated the Ottoman Army near the city and with this victory regained Habsburg control of which had been lost in 1682 to the Kuruc leader Imre Thököly. Košice at the time was defended by a modern pentagonal fortress (citadel) built by the Habsburgs south of the city in the 1670s.
References
- ^ Etényi, Nóra G. (2021-04-30). "Protestant "Athleta Christi" in the Propaganda of the Great Turkish War: The Demise of Georg Friedrich, Duke of Wurttemberg at Košice, 1685". Historical Studies on Central Europe. 1 (1): 97–128. doi:10.47074/HSCE.2021-1.05. ISSN 2786-0922.