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List of wars involving Serbia

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The following is a list of wars involving Serbia in the Middle Ages as well as 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
  Result of civil or internal conflict
  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

Middle Ages

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Avar-Serbian War (629–632) Serb Settlers
Avar Khaganate Victory
  • The Serbs move through the Avar Khaganate and settle the Balkan Subcontinent
  • Creation of Principality of Serbia
Roman-Frankish War (802–812) Byzantine Empire
Principality of Serbia
Carolingian Empire Victory
  • Pax Nicephori
    • Most of the Adriatic provinces along with Istra are returned to Byzantine rule
    • Serbia expands its borders to Dinara and Una
Bulgarian-Serbian War (839–42) Principality of Serbia
Bulgarian Empire Victory
  • Failure of Khan Presian I to take over Serbia
Bulgarian-Serbian War (853) Principality of Serbia Bulgarian Empire Victory
  • Failure of the Bulgarians to replace the Byzantine overlordship on the Serbs
  • Vladimir-Rasate and 12 Boyars taken prisoner
Bulgarian–Serbian wars of 917–924 Part of the Byzantine–Bulgarian war of 913–927 Principality of Serbia
Bulgarian Empire Defeat
  • Serbia is annexed into Bulgaria
Conquest of Bari Byzantine Empire
Carolingian Empire
Republic of Ragusa
Emirate of Bari
Emirate of Taranto
Aghlabid dynasty
Victory
  • Frankish-Byzantine Siege is successful and any further invasions of Adriatic cities are prevented
Serb Uprising (927)[1][2][3][4] Principality of Serbia
Supported by:

Byzantine Empire

Bulgarian Empire Victory

Časlav takes possession of the country after the uprising and submits suzereinity to the Byzantines

War of unification[1][2] Principality of Serbia Serb tribes in:

Ras
Bosnia
Zachlumia
Pagania
Zeta
Travunia
Konavle

Principality Victory
  • Unification of all the tribes under Časlav as their collective leader
Magyar-Serb conflict (c. 960)
Part of the Hungarian invasions of Europe
Principality of Serbia Magyar tribes Inconclusive
  • Victory at Drina, Hungarian leader Kisa is defeated by the Serbs
  • Defeat at Syrmia, Časlav is killed and thrown into a river
Bulgarian-Serbian War (998) Duklja Bulgarian Empire Defeat
Serb Uprising (1034–1042) Duklja Byzantine Empire Victory
Byzantine-Norman wars (1040–1189) Normans

Duklja
Principality of Serbia
Antioch
Croatia
Lombard duchies
Supported by:
Papal States

Byzantine Empire
Venice
Indecisive
Byzantine–Serbian War (1090–1095) Principality of Serbia Byzantine Empire Inconclusive
  • Several Serbian nobles taken hostage
  • Cessation of hostilities between Serbia and Byzantium until 1106
Byzantine–Hungarian War (1127–29) Kingdom of Hungary Byzantine Empire Inconclusive
  • First phase: Victory of Byzantium
    • Serbia forced to recognize Byzantine suzerainty again
  • Second phase: Victory of Hungarians
    • Restoration of peace
Byzantine-Venetian War (1171–1172) Venice
Principality of Serbia
Diplomatic support:
Kingdom of Hungary
Holy Roman Empire
Byzantine Empire
  • Duklja (as Byzantine vassal) (1171)

Western Knights (under Henry the Lion)

Byzantine Victory
  • Stefan Nemanja begins the fight against Byzantines by annexing their vassal in Zeta[5]
  • Soon after, Venice joins and after early successes suffers a tremendous blow by an epidemic during their stay at Chios in the winter
    • The Serbs soon surrendered to Emperor Manuel
Byzantine campaign in the Middle East (1176)[6]
Part of the Byzantine-Seljuq Wars
Byzantine Empire

Principality of Antioch

Sultanate of Rum Defeat
Emeric's Balkan campaign (1200–1203)
Part of the Fourth Crusade
Grand Principality of Serbia

Bulgarian Empire (1203)

Kingdom of Hungary
Valkan's Clique (as Hungarian vassal)
Papal States[10]
Emeric's Victories
  • Emeric gains suzereinity over Serbia and occupies a couple of Bulgarian cities which he in turn gives to his vassal Valkan
    • Serbo-Hungarian armies are later pushed out of Niš by Bulgarian forces
Hungarian Invasion of Serbia [sr] (1237) Part of the Crusade against Bogumils Grand Principality of Serbia

Banate of Bosnia Temporary support:
Republic of Ragusa

Kingdom of Hungary

Golden Horde
Chagatai Khanate

Victory
  • During Colomans failed campaign in Bosnia, he penetrated Toljen II [sr]'s land in Serbia, he was kicked out after a brief consultation
    • This event lead to an alliance between Serbia and Split under Domald
Mongol invasion of the Balkans
(1241–1242)
Kingdom of Serbia

Bulgarian Empire
Kingdom of Hungary
Teutonic Order
Templars
Holy Roman Empire

Golden Horde (Mongols) Defeat of the military alliance led by the Kingdom of Hungary
  • Bulgaria enters into vassal relations with the Mongols
  • Mongols pass through Serbia burning and looting
Serbian conflict with the Nogai Horde Kingdom of Serbia Nogai Horde

Bulgarian Empire
Supported by:
Golden Horde

Victory
Epirote–Nicaean conflict
(1258–1261)
Despotate of Epirus
Principality of Achaea
Kingdom of Sicily
Allies:
Kingdom of Serbia

Latin Empire

Empire of Nicaea
Supported by:
Republic of Genoa
Inconclusive
Byzantine-Catalan Wars (1305–1311)[11] Byzantine Empire

Kingdom of Serbia (1305)

Catalan Company
Allies:
Anatolian Turkish Beyliks
Sultanate of Rum
Victory
  • Siege of Hilandar successfully repelled
Serbian-Crusader Conflict Serbian cavalry
Allies:
Genoese fleet
Turcopoles Victory
  • Byzantine and Serbian forces defeat the Turks in a camp at Gallipoli peninsula
    • Turcopoles surrender to the Genoese, some fall into the hands of the Byzantines. Halil Pasha and his men are then slaughtered
Serbian-Anjou War (1318–1320)[13][14] Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of Hungary

Lordship of Durazzo


Muzaka Family (1318)
Supported by
Pope John XXII

Partial Victory
War of Hum (1326–1329) Kingdom of Serbia Banate of Bosnia
Republic of Ragusa
Defeat
  • Bosnia captures Hum
  • Petar Toljenović raised a rebellion in Zachlumia, he lost a battle and was imprisoned and thrown with his horse off a cliff
Bulgarian-Serbian War (1330)
Part of the Byzantine civil war of 1321–1328
Kingdom of Serbia
Supported by:
Andronikos II Palaiologos[19]
Bulgarian Empire
Supported by:
Wallachia
Moldavia
Andronikos III Palaiologos
Victory[20]
  • Balance of power in the Balkans reshaped
    • Peace concluded near Izvor
Serbian Invasion of Macedonia (1342–1343)
Part of the Byzantine civil war of 1341-1347
Kingdom of Serbia
Supported by:
John VI Kantakouzenos
John V Palaiologos
Beylik of Aydin
Zealots of Thessalonica
Victory
Serbian Invasion of Albania (1342–1345)[21][22]
Part of the Byzantine civil war of 1341-1347
Kingdom of Serbia
Bulgarian Empire
Principality of Karvuna
Supported by:
John V Palaiologos
John VI Kantakouzenos

Beylik of Aydin
Ottoman Beylik


Zealots of Thessalonica

Victory
Serbian-Ottoman War (1352)
Part of the Byzantine civil war of 1352–1357
Serbian Empire
Bulgarian Empire
Supported by:
John V Palaiologos
Ottoman Beylik
Supported by:
John VI Kantakouzenos
Defeat
  • Serbia loses the first major battle of the Ottomans which were increasingly becoming a threat to Europe
    • The Ottomans plunder Bulgarian territory and commit a campaign of mass arrests of Christians in Adrianople[23]
Serbian Civil War (1356–1359) Part of the Fall of the Serbian Empire Serbian Empire[24] Empire of Thessaly (until 1359)
Losha Clan
Shpata Family

Despotate of Epir


Byzantine Empire (until 1357)

Loyalist Victory
The Feudal Wars (1356–1373) Serbian Empire
Moravian Serbia
District of Branković
Realm of Altomanović (until 1369)

Anti-Altomanović Coalition:
Moravian Serbia
Banate of Bosnia
Lordship of Zeta
Kingdom of Hungary

Republic of Ragusa

Lordship of Prilep (1369)

Realm of Altomanović (after 1369)


Principality of Velbazhd


Battle of Maritsa:
Ottoman Empire

Inconclusive
  • The Serbian Army is fragmented at the Battle of Maritsa
  • Further anarchy
Battle of Kosovo (1389) Moravian Serbia
Supported by:
District of Branković[25]
Kingdom of Bosnia[26]
Principality of Muzaka
Jonima family
Knights of Rhodes[27]
Ottoman Empire
Military support:
Isfendiyar Beylik
Inconclusive
  • Both sides claim victory
  • Both armies were destroyed in the battle. Both Lazar and Murad lost their lives, and the remnants of their armies retreated from the battlefield
Crusade of Nicopolis (1396) Ottoman Empire Crusade:
Holy Roman Empire
Kingdom of France[29]

Kingdom of Hungary[29]

Principality of Wallachia[30]
Knights Hospitaller[29] Republic of Venice[29]
Republic of Genoa
Bulgarian Empire[31]
Teutonic Knights
Byzantine Empire
County of Cilli
District of Branković[32][33]

Victory
Ottoman-Timurid War 1399–1402  Ottoman Empire

Black Tatars
Albanian principalities
 Moravian Serbia
District of Branković
 Wallachia
Co-belligerent:
 Mamluks[35]
Kingdom of Georgia Kingdom of Georgia[36]
Knights Hospitaller[37]

 Timurid Empire

Aq Qoyunlu
Germiyanids

Defeat
  • Anatolian Beyliks got independence.
  • Bayezid I is captured by Timur and dies in captivity, leaving the Ottoman Empire without a sultan
  • Ottoman Interregnum begins
  • Ottoman Empire on the brink of collapse
  • Timurid conquests and invasions ends.
Ottoman Interregnum (1402–1413) Mehmed Çelebi

Supported by:
Stefan Lazarević
Đurađ Branković (from 1412)


Süleyman Çelebi Supported by
Vuk Lazarević
Đurađ Branković (until 1412)
Siege of Constantinople (1411)
Byzantine Empire

Musa Çelebi
Wallachia

Supported by:
Kingdom of Hungary


İsa Çelebi
Beylik of Aydin

Victory
Second Scutari War (1419–23) Zeta
Serbian Despotate (after 1421)
Albanian nobility
Republic of Venice Inconclusive
  • Venice captured Ulcinj, Grbalj, and territory of Paštrovići, with Kotor deciding to accept Venetian suzerainty
  • Serbian Despotate captured Drivast and returned its suzerainty over Bar, Budva, and Luštica
Despotate-Ottoman Wars (1425–1459)[38] Part of the Ottoman Invasions of Serbia and Hungarian–Ottoman Wars Serbian Despotate
Kingdom of Hungary

Taborite mercenaries
Grand Duchy of Lithuania
Kingdom of Bosnia (after 1425)[39]
Wallachia (briefly)
Crusade of Varna:
Papal States
Bulgarian rebels
Teutonic Knights
Naval support:
Duchy of Burgundy
Republic of Ragusa
Republic of Venice (temporary)
Military support:
League of Lezhë (temporary)


Holy Roman Empire[40]

Ottoman Empire

Crimean Khanate
Supported by:
Republic of Venice
Principality of Moldavia


Principality of Kastrioti[41]
Hunyadi's Army[42]

Eventual Defeat
  • The Serbian Despotate officially falls in Smederevo and is later reinstated multiple times as a rump-state as a buffer against Ottoman advance
    • About 200,000 immigrate to Hungarian Srem until its partition
  • Beginning of Serbian guerilla warfare against the Ottoman Empire

Partitioned Serbia

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Uprising of Jovan Nenad (1526–1527) Part of the Hungarian Civil War Empire of Jovan Nenad [sr]

Holy Roman Empire

Ottoman Empire Defeat
  • Tsar Jovan Nenad of Vojvodina is murdered on his retreat towards Senta
  • The Serbian army disperses, some return to their duties in the Ottoman Empire and some turn to the Habsburgs
Uprising in Banat (1594)

Part of the Long Turkish War

Orthodox Serb rebels
Supported by:
Archduchy of Austria

Principality of Transylvania

Ottoman Empire

Crimean Khanate

Defeat
Serb uprising in Herzegovina (1596–1597)

Part of the Long Turkish War

Ottoman Empire Defeat
Bocskai's War of Independence (1604–1606) Part of the Long Turkish War and European wars of religion Loyalists

Holy Roman Empire

Spanish Empire
Zaporozhian Host

Serbian, Wallonian, Italian, German and Romanian mercenaries

Revolutionaries

Moldavia

Hungarian, Slovak, Rusyn, Polish and Székely mercenaries


Ottoman Empire

Peace treaty
Cretan War
(1645–1669)
Republic of Venice[43]

Papal States
Kingdom of France
Naval Support:
Knights of Malta
Greek uprisings:
Greek Revolutionaries

Ottoman Empire Defeat
Great Turkish War
(1683–1699)
Holy Roman Empire Holy Roman Empire

Republic of Venice Republic of Venice
Montenegro

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire

Kuruc

Victory
  • Partial Liberation of Serbia
  • Ottoman decline in Europe
Morean War
(1684–1699)
Part of the Great Turkish war and Croatian-Slavonian-Dalmatian theater in the Great Turkish War
Republic of Venice

Papal States
Duchy of Savoy
Order of Saint Stephen
Naval Support:
Knights of Malta
Greek uprisings:
Greek Revolutionaries

Military support:
Holy Roman Empire

Montenegro

Ottoman Empire

Maniots

Venetian and Holy League victory
  • Liberation of Slavonia and Lika and part of the Pounje from the Ottomans
  • Morea ceded to Venice; Venetian gains in inland Dalmatia
    • Ottomans pushed out of Central Europe
Rákóczi's War of Independence Holy Roman Empire Kuruc

Supported by:
Polish and Ruthenian mercenaries
Kingdom of France
Ottoman Empire

Victory
War of Sinj
(1714–1718)
Part of the Austro-Turkish War (1716-1718) and Ottoman-Portuguese confrontations
Holy League:

Republic of Venice

Holy Roman Empire
Kingdom of Portugal
Knights of Malta
Papal States

Ottoman Empire Defeat
Austro-Turkish War
(1716–1718)
Habsburg monarchy Austria

Electorate of Bavaria

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire Victory
Austro-Turkish War
(1737–1739)
Habsburg monarchy Austria Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire Inconclusive
Austro-Turkish War
(1788–1791)
Holy Roman Empire Habsburg monarchy

 Russian Empire

Montenegro

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire

Sheikh Mansur Movement

Austrian Victory

Modern period

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Uprising against the Dahije
(1804)
 Serbia
Dahije Victory
First Serbian Uprising
(1804–1813)
Part of the Serbian Revolution

Supported by:
 Russia (1807–12)

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

Supported by:
 France[45]

Inconclusive
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[46]
Hadži-Prodan's rebellion
(1814)
Serbia Serb rebels  Ottoman Empire Defeat
  • The Ottomans increase their persecution of Serbs.
  • The outbreak of the Second Serbian Uprising.
Second Serbian Uprising
(1815–1817)
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. Serbian civilians massacred.
Serbian Involvement in the Greek Revolution
Part of the Greek War of Independence
Greek Revolutionaries

Serbian Revolutionaries
Montenegrin Revolutionaries
After 1821:
First Hellenic Republic

Military Support:
Russian Empire
Kingdom of France[50][51]
United Kingdom

Ottoman Empire Greek Victory
  • Greek Independence achieved
    • Serbo-Montenegrin volunteers return home, some stay and are Hellenized
Serb uprising
(1848–1849)
Part of the Revolutions of 1848 in the Austrian Empire
Serbian Vojvodina

Supported by:
Austrian Empire

Kingdom of Hungary (until 14 April 1849)
Hungarian State (after 14 April 1849)
Victory
Herzegovina uprising
(1875–1877)
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis
Serb rebels
Supported by:
 Serbia
 Montenegro
 Ottoman Empire Inconclusive
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
(1877–1878)
Part of the Great Eastern Crisis and the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78)
 Ottoman Empire

Albanian volunteers

Victory
Russo-Turkish War
(1877–1878)
Russian Empire Russian Empire

Principality of Romania
Principality of Serbia
Principality of Montenegro
Bulgarian Legion
Serbian rebels

 Ottoman Empire

Poland Polish volunteers
Albanian volunteers
Circassia Circassian volunteers[54]
Chechen rebels
Abkhazian rebels

Coalition Victory
Timok Rebellion
(1883)
 Kingdom of Serbia People's Radical Party Victory
  • Victory of King Milan.
  • Rebellion Suppressed
Serbo-Bulgarian War
(1885)

Supported by:
 Austria-Hungary

 Bulgaria Defeat
Macedonian struggle
(1901)
Serbian Chetniks
Supported by:
 Serbia
VMRO
 Ottoman Empire
Inconclusive
First Balkan War
(1912–1913)
Part of the Balkan Wars
Balkan League: Supported by:
Victory[64]
Serbian invasion of Albania
(1912–1913)
Part of the Balkan Wars
Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of Serbia
Kingdom of Montenegro Kingdom of Montenegro
Independent Albania Independent Albania

Ottoman Empire Ottoman Empire
Albanian guerrillas
Albanian Tribesmen

Victory
  • Serbia and Montenegro invade and defeat Ottoman forces and capture Kosovo, Macedonia, Northern Albania and Central Albania.
  • The Serbian army commits massacres against Albanians living in the occupied territories.
  • Serbia forms Drač County and other counties on Albanian-populated lands captured from the Ottomans.
  • Essad Pasha hands Shkodër over to Montenegro in return for Montenegrin support for the foundation of the Republic of Central Albania.
  • Treaty of London Serbia annexes large parts Kosovo and Macedonia and continues to occupy parts of northern Albania until 1920.
  • Albania gains Independence but loses half of its claimed territories gained after the Albanian revolt of 1912.
Tikveš Uprising
(1913)
 Serbia
Chetniks
IMRO
Supported by:
 Bulgaria
Victory
  • The uprising is brutally suppressed and the Bulgarian population is terrorized
Second Balkan War
(1913)
Part of the Balkan Wars
Victory
Ohrid-Debar Uprising
(1913)
 Serbia
Chetniks
 Greece
IMRO
Kachaks
Victory
  • The uprising is brutally suppressed
  • Thousands of Bulgarians and Albanians are killed
  • 30,000 Bulgarians expelled
  • 25,000 Albanians expelled
Third Peasant Revolt in Albania
(September–October 1914)
Republic of Central Albania
Support:
Kingdom of Serbia
Kingdom of Italy Kingdom of Italy
Principality of Albania Serbo-Italian backed Republic of Central Albania Victory
  • Toptani invades and captures Central Albania and Dibër with Italian and Serb support and reforms the Republic of Central Albania.
  • Durrës is captured by Toptani unopposed.
Serbian campaign and Balkans theatre
(1914–1918)
Part of the European theatre of World War I
Allied Powers
Central Powers:
Victory
Revolutions and interventions in Hungary
(1918–1920)
Part of the aftermath of World War I and the Revolutions of 1917–23
Victory
Impresa di Pola
(1918)
Part of the Adriatic Campaign in 1918 and the Adriatic question
Defeat
1918–1920 unrest in Split
(1918–1920)
Part of the Adriatic question
 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
 United States
 Italy
Kingdom of Italy Italian nationalists renegades

Italian Regency of Carnaro

Inconclusive
Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia
(1918–1919)
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
Drenica-Dukagjin Uprisings
(1919–1924)
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Kosovar Albanians
Committee for the National Defence of Kosovo
Diplomatic support:
AlbaniaAlbania
Victory
Koplik War
(1920–1921)
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Principality of Albania Inconclusive
  • Yugoslav army invades Northern Albania
  • Yugoslavs are eventually forced to withdraw due to international pressure
  • United Kingdom insists on slight adaptations in the regions of Debar, Prizren and Kastrati in the interest of Yugoslavia.
Albanian-Yugoslav Border War
(1921)
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Kingdom of Greece
Republic of Mirdita
Principality of Albania Inconclusive
  • Yugoslav Recognition of Albanian sovereignty and Border
  • Slight adjustments of the Albanian border in favor of Yugoslavia
  • Mirdita rebels disbanded
Zogu Invasion of Albania
(1924)
Albania Ahmet Zogu supporters (Mati Tribesmen)
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Fan Noli supporters (Albanian peasants)
Principality of Albania
Committee for the National Defence of Kosovo
Zogu-Yugoslav Victory
  • Fan Noli is ousted from power.
  • Ahmet Zogu forms the Albanian Republic and is made dictator.
  • Zogu's forces assassinate the leadership of the Committee for the National Defence of Kosovo.
Invasion of Yugoslavia
(1941)
Part of the Balkans campaign and Mediterranean theatre of World War II
 Yugoslavia Axis Defeat
World War II in Yugoslavia
(1941–1945)
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
Yugoslav Involment in the Years of Lead (1970s-1980s) Red Brigades
Front Line
October 22 Group
PAC
Continuous Struggle
Workers' Power
Workers' Autonomy

Foreign supporters:
border=no RAF[65]
Sigurimi (alleged)
Palestine Liberation Organization PLO (alleged)
KGB (alleged)[66][page needed]
East Germany Stasi (alleged)
Mukhabarat el-Jamahiriya (alleged)[67]
Yugoslavia (UDBA)

Supported by:
border=no Propaganda Due[69][70]
SISMI (factions)[71]
Magliana Gang[72]
CIA
Cosa Nostra (alleged)


Italy Italian Government

Supported by:
Gladio
CIA

Defeat

  • Most militant groups feel apart or were disarmed
  • Establishment of strong ties between UDBA and the Red Brigades

Contemporary period

Conflict Combatant 1 Combatant 2 Results
Croatian War of Independence[c]
(1991–1995)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
Supported by:
Defeat
War in Bosnia[d]
(1992–1995)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
Supported by:

 NATO (1995)

Inconclusive
  • 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
(1998–1999)
Part of the Yugoslav Wars
 FR Yugoslavia UÇK
 NATO (1999)

Supported by:
 Albania

Military Stalemate[74]
Insurgency in the Preševo Valley
(1999–2001)
[citation needed]Part of the Yugoslav Wars
 FR Yugoslavia UÇPMB Victory[75]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ As well as Serbian garrison troops during the Battle of Petrovaradin[citation needed]
  2. ^ 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").
  3. ^ 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
  4. ^ 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. ^ Banned, some joined Ordine Nero.
  2. ^ Banned. Its members joined Ordine Nero.
  3. ^ Dismantled.
  4. ^ Dissolved by police. Used by NAR as a cover name later on.

References

  1. ^ a b Porphyrogenitus, Constantine VII (ed.). De Administrando Imperio.
  2. ^ a b Станојевић, Станоје (ed.). "I Прве српске државе" Историја српскога народа. Београд.
  3. ^ Веселиновић, Андрија; Љушић, Радош, eds. (2001). Српске династије. Нови Сад: Плантонеум. ISBN 86-83639-01-0.
  4. ^ Острогорски, Георгије, ed. (1993). Историја Византије (II фототипско издање оригинала 1959). Београд.
  5. ^ Arnold of Lübeck left negative remarks on the Serbs in his chronicles after an attack on Western knights and Pilgrims, even going as far as naming the "Sons of Belial"
  6. ^ Острогорски, Георгије, ed. (1993). Историја Византије (II фототипско издање оригинала 1959). Београд.
  7. ^ Serbia's role in the Byzantine campaigns against the Seljuqs was through Stefan Nemanja's role of being a vassal. Auxiliary troops were sent as a form of tribute towards the Byzantine emperor Manuel I Komnenos in order to aid him in battle.
  8. ^ Острогорски, Георгије, ed. (1993). Историја Византије (II фототипско издање оригинала 1959). Београд.
  9. ^ Hendy, Michael, ed. (1985). Studies in the Byzantine Monetary Economy c. 300–1450. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 128. ISBN 0-521-24715-2.
  10. ^ Curta, Florin, ed. (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500–1250. Cambridge University Press. p. 389. ISBN 978-0-521-89452-4.
  11. ^ Hilandar ...Following the end of the Latin Occupation of this part of Byzantium, a new wave of raids hit the monastic republic. In the early 14th century, pirate mercenaries of the Catalan Grand Company repeatedly raided the Holy Mountain, while looting and sacking numerous monasteries, stealing treasures and Christian relics, and terrorizing monks. Of the 300 monasteries and monastic communities on Athos, Hilandar was among only 35 that survived the violence of the first decade of the 14th century.
  12. ^ Vásáry, István, ed. (24 March 2005). Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. Cambridge University Press. pp. 109–110. ISBN 1139444085.
  13. ^ Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr., ed. (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. pp. 219–262. ISBN 9781850439776.
  14. ^ Živković, Tibor; Kunčer, Dragana, eds. (2008). Roger - the forgotten Archbishop of Bar (PDF). Историјски часопис. 56. pp. 191–209.
  15. ^ Станојевић, Станоје, ed. (1989). Историја српскога народа" (треће издање, репринт издања из 1926). Београд. ISBN 978-86-83639-01-4.
  16. ^ Фајфрић, Жељко, ed. (1998). Света лоза Стефана Немање. Шид.
  17. ^ Ћоровић, Владимир, ed. (1989). Историја српског народа (рукопис из 1941). Београд.
  18. ^ Ћоровић, Владимир, ed. (1989). Историја српског народа (рукопис из 1941). Београд.
  19. ^ Vásáry, István, ed. (24 March 2005). Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. Cambridge University Press. p. 112. ISBN 1139444085.
  20. ^ Vásáry, István, ed. (24 March 2005). Cumans and Tatars: Oriental Military in the Pre-Ottoman Balkans, 1185–1365. Cambridge University Press. p. 113. ISBN 1139444085.
  21. ^ Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr., ed. (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. p. 301. ISBN 9781850439776.
  22. ^ Soulis, George Christos, ed. (1984). The Serbs and Byzantium during the reign of Tsar Stephen Dušan (1331–1355) and his successorst. Dumbarton Oaks. p. 19.
  23. ^ Nicol, Donald MacGillivray, ed. (1996). The Reluctant Emperor: A Biography of John Cantacuzene, Byzantine Emperor and Monk, C. 1295–1383. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521522014.
  24. ^ The Serbian Empire of Stefan V fragmented into a conglomeration of principalities, some of which did not even nominally acknowledge his rule.
  25. ^ Fine Jr., John V. A., ed. (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
  26. ^ Lazar sought aid from his neighbors Tvtrko and Vuk Brankovic. Trtvko sent a large contingent under the command of Vlatko Vukovic. Vuk Brankovic came himself, leading his own men. Thus the Serbian army was composed of three contingents under these three leaders, none of whom was then a Turkish vassal.
  27. ^ Budak, Neven, ed. (2001). "John of Palisna, the Hospitaller Prior of Varna". In Hunyadi, Zsolt; Laszlovszky, Jozsef (eds.). The Crusades and the Military Orders: Expanding the Frontiers of Medieval Latin Christianity. Central European University Press. ISBN 9639241423.
  28. ^ Alexandru Madgearu, The Wars of the Balkan Peninsula: Their Medieval Origins, ed. Martin Gordon, (Scarecrow Press, 2008), 90.
  29. ^ a b c d e Tuchman, Barbara W. (1978). A Distant Mirror: the Calamitous 14th Century. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 548. ISBN 0-345-28394-5.
  30. ^ The Crusades and the military orders: expanding the frontiers of Latin Christianity; Zsolt Hunyadi page 226
  31. ^ Valerii︠a︡ Fol, Bulgaria: History Retold in Brief, (Riga, 1999), 103.
  32. ^ (Djokić 2023, p. 128)

    Not all Serb magnates fought and died as Ottoman vassals. Vuk Branković, who survived the Kosovo battle, and who continued to rule over his realm that included Kosovo, joined a large Christian coalition led by Hungary, which now represented the 'bulwark of Christianity' and included Wallachian, Venetian, Bulgarian, Croatian, French and English troops. The Christian coalition was defeated by Ottomans at Nicopolis, Bulgaria in 1396. Branković died as an Ottoman prisoner the following year, but is ironically portrayed in the Serbian folklore as a Judas-like figure.

  33. ^ (Cerović 2002, p. 228)

    Вук Бранковић, син Бранков, оженио се Маром, кћерком кнеза Лазара. Његови поседи протезали су се од Скопља до Копаоника и Сјенице, до горњих токова Таре и Мораче. После битке на Косову, примио је вазални однос према Турској. У бици код Никопоља учествовао је на страни Угарске, када га је заробио султан Бајазит и одвео га у заробљеништво, где је умро, 1397. године.

  34. ^ "Battle of Nicopolis". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-18.
  35. ^ Siege of Damascus (1400)
  36. ^ Timurid invasions of Georgia
  37. ^ Siege of Smyrna
  38. ^ In 1471, the Serbian Despotate was renewed in exile as a vassal of Hungary. Up until its demise in 1540, it spent its entirety fighting the Turks. The state provided support and auxiliary troops to the Kingdom of Hungary.
  39. ^ Stefan Lazarević and other Serbian Despots had brief conflicts with Bosnia
  40. ^ Battle of Kosovo (1448)
  41. ^ Skanderbeg's Serbian Campaign
  42. ^ During the Second battle of Kosovo, Hunyadis forces ravaged the Serbian countryside which lead to his arrest
  43. ^ Many Serbs served as Venetian generals during the Cretan war, these include Stojan Janković, Ilija Smiljani, Krsto Vicković, etc.
  44. ^ Vuk Mandušić and other rebel leaders lead multiple uprisings in Herzegovina 1647-1648
  45. ^ 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.
  46. ^ a b Davis, G. Doug; Slobodchikoff, Michael O. (2018). Cultural Imperialism and the Decline of the Liberal Order: Russian and Western Soft Power in Eastern Europe. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 88. ISBN 9781498585873.
  47. ^ Even though the organization officially permitted only Greeks, many Serbs (and even Karađorđe himself) would become members ("brothers") of this organization by the end of the First Serbian Uprising, it is said that Filiki Eteria had a sector in Niš
  48. ^ Vukov Blog: Graditelj Ćele kule. 29 May 2013.
  49. ^ ..in the likes of Anastasije Dmitrijević
  50. ^ A tactical detachment of some 250~ Serbs served under the command of Charles Nicolas Fabvier, a French Philhellene
  51. ^ Loukatos. pp. 105–107.
  52. ^ Benbassa, Esther; Rodrigue, Aron, eds. (2000). Sephardi Jewry: A History of the Judeo-Spanish Community, 14th-20th Centuries. University of California Press. p. 66. ISBN 9780520218222.
  53. ^ Torsten Ekman (2006). Suomen kaarti 1812–1905 (in Finnish). Helsinki: Schildts. ISBN 951-50-1534-0.
  54. ^ Daur, Soner. Plevne'de Çerkesler
  55. ^ Crampton, Richard; Crampton, Benjamin (2016). Atlas of Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century. Routledge. p. 15. ISBN 9781317799528.
  56. ^ Egidio Ivetic, Le guerre balcaniche, il Mulino - Universale Paperbacks, 2006, p. 63
  57. ^ "Там /в Плевенско и Търновско/ действително се говори, че тези черкези отвличат деца от българи, загинали през последните събития." (Из доклада на английския консул в Русе Р. Рийд от 16.06.1876 г. до английския посланик в Цариград Х. Елиот. в Н. Тодоров, Положението, с. 316)
  58. ^ Hacısalihoğlu, Mehmet. Kafkasya'da Rus Kolonizasyonu, Savaş ve Sürgün (PDF). Yıldız Teknik Üniversitesi.
  59. ^ BOA, HR. SYS. 1219/5, lef 28, p. 4
  60. ^ Karataş, Ömer. The Settlement of the Caucasian Emigrants in the Balkans during lkans duringthe 19th Century Century
  61. ^ Gawrych, George (2006). The Crescent and the Eagle: Ottoman rule, Islam and the Albanians, 1874–1913. IB Tauris. p. 202. ISBN 9781845112875. "When the First Balkan War broke out, a majority of Albanians, even habitual rebels such as Isa Boletin, rallied in defense of the din ve devlet ve vatan in order to preserve intact their Albanian lands. Lacking a national organization of their own, Albanians had no choice but to rely on Ottoman institutions, its army, and its government for protection from partition. Both failed them miserably in the face of four invading Balkan armies, and as a result foreign invasion and occupation severed that link between the Albanian Eagle and the Ottoman Crescent."
  62. ^ Kondis, Basil (1976). Greece and Albania, 1908–1914. Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies. p. 84. ISBN 9798840949085. The Albanian forces fought on the side of Turkey not because they desired a continuance of Turkish rule but because they believed that together with the Turks, they would be able to defend their territory and prevent the partition of "Greater Albania
  63. ^ Hall, Richard C. (4 January 2002). The Balkan Wars 1912-1913: Prelude to the First World War. Routledge. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-134-58363-8. Retrieved 19 April 2022. Ottoman regulars supported by Albanian irregulars continued in central and southern Albania even after the signing of the armistice in December 1912
  64. ^ Anagnostopoulos, Archimandrite Nikodemos (2017). Orthodoxy and Islam: Theology and Muslim–Christian Relations in Modern Greece and Turkey. Taylor & Francis. p. 75. ISBN 9781315297927.
  65. ^ Document unitaire RAF – BR – PCC (1987) date=March 22, 2013 Archived 2013-03-22 at the Wayback Machine
  66. ^ Christopher, Andrew; Mitrokhin, Vasili (2000). The Sword and the Shield: the Mitrokhin archive and the secret history of the KGB. Basic Books.
  67. ^ "Gaddafi: A vicious, sinister despot driven out on tidal wave of hatred". The Guardian. 23 August 2011.
  68. ^ It was dismantled and became inactive.
  69. ^ "Italian minister falls victim to corruption". The Independent. February 11, 1993. Archived from the original on 2022-05-07.
  70. ^ Willan, Puppetmasters, p. 161
  71. ^ Vulliamy, Ed (1990-12-05). "Secret agents, freemasons, fascists ... and a top-level campaign of political 'destabilisation'". The Guardian. Retrieved 2021-06-10.
  72. ^ "NAR: lo spontaneismo armato neofascista". Ariannaeditrice.it.
  73. ^ "Croats and Serbs still bitter after genocide verdict". BBC News. 2015-02-03. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
  74. ^ 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. doi:10.1162/01622880260553651. JSTOR 3092116.
    • Biddle, Stephen (2002). "The new way of war? Debating the Kosovo model". Foreign Affairs. 81 (3): 148–139. doi:10.2307/20033168. 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. doi:10.1080/07388940600665842. JSTOR 26275265.
  75. ^ a b 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.
  76. ^ "Southern Serbia's Fragile Peace". International Crisis Group. 9 December 2003. Archived from the original on 3 June 2012. Retrieved 25 May 2012.