Battle of Nish (1443)

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Battle of Nish
Part of the Crusade of Varna
DateEarly November 1443
Location
Result Crusader victory[1]
Belligerents
Principality of Wallachia
Moldavia
Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
John Hunyadi
Đurađ Branković
Strength
12,000 cavalry[2]
  • 12,000 sipahi cavalry under direct command of Kasim Pasha[3]
  • frontier army of unknown number
Casualties and losses
unknown

6,000


2,000 killed[4]
4,000 captured[4]
Skanderbeg and 300 Albanian cavalrymen deserted

The Battle of Nish (early November 1443) was fought between the

Sultan Murad II at Snaim
(Kustinitza). The impatience of the king and the severity of the winter then compelled him (in February 1444) to return home.

Background

In 1440

Kasim Pasha.[11] Władysław and Brankovic were left in camp with the war wagons.[11]

Battle

The battle for Nish was not one, but five different battles. The first engagement was a battle against a small garrison in Nish and the Crusaders captured, pillaged, and burned the town.[12] This was followed by three battles against three different Ottoman armies advancing on Nish. Finally there was one against the remnants of the three Ottoman armies.

The last battle took place on the plain between

Isak-Beg.[14] After the Ottoman defeat, the retreating forces of Kasim Pasha and Turakhan Beg burned all of the villages between Nish and Sofia.[15] The Ottoman sources explain the Ottoman defeat as due to a lack of cooperation between the different Ottoman armies which were led by different commanders.[16]

Aftermath

According to

Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg who deserted the Ottoman army along with his nephew Hamza Kastrioti and 300 Albanians and after capturing Krujë started a twenty-five-year-long struggle against the Ottoman Empire.[18][19][20][21][22][23]

Murad II signed a treaty for ten years, and abdicated in favour of his son Mehmed II. When the peace was broken the next year, Murad returned to the Balkans and won the Battle of Varna in November 1444.[24]

Citations

  1. ^ Riley-Smith, Jonathan, The Crusades: A History, (Continuum International Publishing Group, 1987), 275.
  2. ^ Jefferson 2012, p. 325.
  3. ^ Konstantin Mihailović (1975). Memoirs of a Janissary. Published under the auspices of the Joint Committee on Eastern Europe, American Council of Learned Societies, by the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Michigan. p. 214.
  4. ^ a b Jefferson 2012, p. 329.
  5. ^ Riley-Smith, 275.
  6. ^ Hupchick, Dennis P., The Balkans: From Constantinople to Communism, (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), 117.
  7. . John Hunyadi accompanied by the cardinal-legate Giuliano Cesarini.
  8. ^ Jefferson 2012, pp. 207–209.
  9. OCLC 475548809
    , The whole army estimated to consist of 25,000 men, included an important mercenary force hired with funds given by Serbian despot, and in addition, a contingent of 8,000 Serbs and 5,000 Polish soldiers
  10. ^ Babinger, Frank and Ralph Manheim, William C. Hickman, Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time, (Princeton University Press, 1978), 25.
  11. ^ a b Jefferson 2012, pp. 325–326.
  12. ^ Jefferson 2012, p. 326.
  13. OCLC 475548809
    , the most important battle of the whole campaign took place at Bolvani, in the plain of Nish on November 3, 1443
  14. , The combined host met Ottoman forces first on November 3, 1443, between the castle of Bolvan (near Aleksinac) and the city of Niš. Here Kasim Bey, then governor of Rumelia, Ishak Bey and other standard bearers were defeated.
  15. , In the course of their flight Kasim and Turahan burned all villages between Niš and Sofia.
  16. , The Ottoman sources in general emphasize the disagreement and lack of cooperation between frontier Ottoman forces under Turakhan and sipahi army under Kasim
  17. , retrieved 4 January 2012, Comme nous le dit Chalcocondy- las après la retraite des Ottomans dans les Balkans en 1443 devant l'Hunyade, les anciens seigneurs se dépêchèrent de tous les côtés à rentrer en possession des domaines de leurs pères....(As Chalcocondyles tells us, "Weary after Hunyadi forced the Ottomans to retreat in the Balkans in 1443, the old lords hurried on all sides to regain possession of their fathers' fields".)
  18. ^ Encyclopaedia of the Muslim World, Ed. Taru Bahl, M.H. Syed, (Anmol Publications, 2003), 45.
  19. ^ Dialogue, Volume 5, Issues 17-20. Dijalog. 1996. p. 78. Retrieved 27 March 2012. Posle bitke kod Pirota, Skenderbeg zajedno sa sinovcem Hamzom, sinom svog starijeg brata Staniše ...
  20. ^ Skënderbeu: Jeta dhe vepra by Kristo Frashëri, p. 130.
  21. , "In the beginning of November 1443, Turakhan Beg commanded one of the Ottoman corps in the battle against John Hunyadi.
  22. , The combined host met Ottoman forces first on November 3, 1443, between the castle of Bolvan (near Aleksinac) and the city of Niš. Here Kasim Bey, then governor of Rumelia, Ishak Bey and other standard bearers were defeated.
  23. ^ Sir Hamilton Alexander Rosskeen Gibb; Bernard Lewis; Charles Pellat; Joseph Schacht (1973). The Encyclopaedia of Islam. Brill. p. 139. ... Iskender, fleeing from the camp of Kasim, the beglerbey of Rumeli...
  24. ^ The Historians' History of the World By Henry Smith Williams - Page 439

References

  • Jefferson, John (2012). The Holy Wars of King Wladislas and Sultan Murad: The Ottoman-Christian Conflict from 1438–1444. .

Further reading