Karlofça Antlaşması
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Karlofça Antlaşması 1699






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  Treaty of Karlowitz 1699

Treaty of Karlowitz 1699 (B)

Treaty of Karlowitz 1699 (B)

Treaty of Carlowitz, Carlowitz also spelled Karlowitz, (Jan. 26, 1699), peace settlement that ended hostilities (1683-99) between the Ottoman Empire and the Holy League (Austria, Poland, Venice, and Russia) and transferred Transylvania and much of Hungary from Turkish control to Austrian. The treaty significantly diminished Turkish influence in east-central Europe and made Austria the dominant power there.


The official document of the treaty.

In the late summer of 1697, the Ottoman sultan Mustafa II led one last large expedition northward but was defeated decisively by Prince Eugene of Savoy at the Battle of Zenta (September 11). Thus defeated by the Austrians and threatened by the Russians, the sultan agreed to negotiate. A peace congress met in 1698 at the village of Carlowitz (spelling used in the treaty), or Karlowitz (modern Sremski Karlovci. Serb.), near Belgrade for 72 days. For the first time the Turks agreed to negotiate with a coalition of European nations, to accept mediation by neutral powers, and to admit defeat. On Jan. 26, 1699, the Ottoman Empire signed peace treaties with Austria, Poland, and Venice. Austria received all of Hungary (except the Banat of Temesvár, bounded by the Tisza, Mureș, and Danube rivers), Transylvania, Croatia, and Slovenia; the Austro-Turkish treaty was to last for 25 years. Venice acquired the Peloponnese (which the Turks regained in 1715) and most of Dalmatia, including the harbour of Cattaro (Kotor). Poland returned its conquests in Moldavia but regained Podolia as well as part of Ukraine west of the Dnieper River, which the Turks had conquered in 1672. The Turks and the Russians concluded only a two-year armistice at Carlowitz, but in 1700 they signed the Treaty of Constantinople, which gave Azov to Russia (Azov was returned to the Turks in 1711 and restored to Russia only in 1783) and also allowed the tsar to establish a permanent diplomatic mission in Constantinople (Istanbul).

 



Treaty of Karlowitz (W)

Treaty of Karlowitz (W)

Context Great Turkish War of 1683-1697
Drafted from 16 November 1698
Signed 26 January 1699
Location Karlowitz, Military Frontier, Habsburg Empire (now Sremski Karlovci, Serbia)
Signatories
Parties
Languages

The Treaty of Karlowitz was signed on 26 January 1699 in Sremski Karlovci, in modern-day Serbia, concluding the Great Turkish War of 1683-1697 in which the Ottoman Empire had been defeated at the Battle of Zenta by the Holy League. IIt marks the end of Ottoman control in much of Central Europe, with their first major territorial losses after centuries of expansion, and established the Habsburg Monarchy as the dominant power in the region.

Context and terms

Following a two-month congress between the Ottoman Empire on one side and the Holy League of 1684, a coalition of the Holy Roman Empire, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Republic of Venice and Peter the Great, Tsar of Russia, a treaty was signed on 26 January 1699.

On the basis of uti possidetis, the treaty confirmed the then-current territorial holdings of each power. The Habsburgs received from the Ottomans the Eğri Eyalet, Varat Eyalet, much of the Budin Eyalet, the northern part of the Temeşvar Eyalet and parts of the Bosnia Eyalet. This corresponded to much of Hungary, Croatia and Slavonia. The Principality of Transylvania remained nominally independent but was subject to the direct rule of Austrian governors. Poland recovered Podolia, including the dismantled fortress at Kamaniçe.

Venice obtained most of Dalmatia along with the Morea (the Peloponnese peninsula of southern Greece), though the Morea was restored to the Turks within 20 years by the Treaty of Passarowitz. There was no agreement about the Holy Sepulchre, although it was discussed in Karlowitz.

The Ottomans retained Belgrade, the Banat of Temesvár (modern Timișoara), as well as suzerainty over Wallachia and Moldavia. Negotiations with Muscovy for a further year under a truce agreed at Karlowitz culminated in the Treaty of Constantinople of 1700, whereby the Sultan ceded the Azov region to Peter the Great. (Muscovy had to return these territories eleven years later following the failed Pruth River Campaign and the Treaty of the Pruth in 1711.)

Commissions were set up to devise the new borders between the Austrians and the Turks, with some parts disputed until 1703. Largely through the efforts of the Habsburg commissioner Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli, the Croatian and Bihać borders were agreed by mid-1700 and that at Temesvár by early 1701, leading to a border demarcated by physical landmarks for the first time.

The acquisition of some 60,000 square miles (160,000 km2) of Hungarian territories at Karlowitz and of the Banat of Temesvár 18 years later by the Treaty of Passarowitz, enlarged Austrian State of the Habsburgs to its largest extent cementing Austria as a dominant regional power. It increased in size by the acquisition of Polish territories in 1772 and 1795, Dalmatia in 1815 and Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1908.



Political situation in 1568-71, before the treaty. All territories shown are Ottoman eyalets or vassals.


Central Europe in 1683, before the treaty: Habsburg Empire Ottoman Empire.


Political situation in 1699, after the treaty: Habsburg Empire Ottoman Empire.


The Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1686, before the treaty.


The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in 1699, after the treaty. Note the Ottoman loss of territory at the bottom of the map..

 







  Austria as a great power

Austria as a great power

Austria as a great power (B)

After the Thirty Years’ War, Austrian rulers were understandably reluctant to enter into another military conflict. In 1654 Ferdinand IV, the eldest son of the emperor, died. His brother, the future emperor Leopold I, who had been destined for a church career, was then considered as heir to the throne and was recognized as such by Austria, Bohemia, and Hungary. In Germany, however, difficulties arose when France declared itself against Leopold. Nevertheless, following the death of Emperor Ferdinand, Leopold was finally elected (1658) after having conceded constitutional limitations that restricted his liberty of action in foreign politics. West German princes under Johann Philipp von Schönborn, archbishop of Mainz, formed the French-oriented League of the Rhine. At the same time, Austria was engaged in the northeast when it intervened in the war between Sweden and Poland (1658) in order to prevent the collapse of Poland. There were some military successes, but the Treaty of Oliva (1660) brought no territorial gains for Austria, though it stopped the advance of the Swedes in Germany.

During the Thirty Years’ War the Turkish front had been quiet, but in the 1660s a new war broke out with the Turks (1663-64) because of a conflict over Transylvania, where a successor had to be appointed for György II Rákóczi. who had been killed fighting against the Turks. The Turks conquered the fortress of Neuhäusel in Slovakia. but the imperial troops succeeded in throwing them back. The Austrian military success was not, however, reflected in the terms of the Treaty of Vasvár: Transylvania was given to Mihály Apafi, a ruler of pro-Turkish sympathies. A minor territorial concession was also made to the Turks. The year after the Turkish peace, Tirol and the Vorlande reverted to Leopold I (1665), and the second period of the Habsburg partition (1564-1665) came to an end.

In Hungary dissatisfaction with the results of the Turkish war spread. Not only the Protestants, who were threatened by the Counter-Reformation, but also many Catholic nobles were alarmed by Habsburg absolutism. A group of Hungarian nobles and Steiermark’s Count Hans Erasmus of Tattenbach entered into a conspiracy. The Austrian government, informed of their activities, had four of the ringleaders executed — an action that led to a rising by rebels known as Kuruzen (Crusaders).

In the meantime, the position of the Habsburgs in the west had again deteriorated. At first, Leopold I’s leading statesmen, Johann Weikhart, Fürst (prince) von Auersperg (dismissed in 1669), and the president of the Court Council of War, Wenzel Eusebius, Fürst von Lobkowitz, remained rather passive in view of the expansionist policies of Louis XIV of France. They also stayed outside the Triple Alliance of Holland, England, and Sweden that was concluded in order to ward off the attacks of Louis against the Spanish Netherlands. When Louis actually invaded Holland, the emperor finally entered the war, but, in the ensuing Treaties of Nijmegen (1679), he had to cede Freiburg im Breisgau to France.

Another and still more menacing danger appeared in the southeast. After some deliberation the leader of the Hungarian rebels, Imre Thököli, had asked the Turks for help, whereupon the grand vizier Kara Mustafa Pasa organized a large Turkish army and marched it toward Vienna. Habsburg diplomats succeeded in concluding an alliance between Austria and Poland. Meanwhile, imperial troops under Charles IV (or V) Leopold, duke of Lorraine and Bar, tried to hold back the Turks but had to retreat. From July 17 to September 12, 1683, Vienna was besieged by the Turks. Deciding against a direct assault, the Turks had begun to drill tunnels underneath the bastions of the city when relief columns arrived from Bavaria, Saxony, Franconia, and Poland. King John III Sobieski of Poland took over the command of the relieving army, which descended upon the Turks and dispersed them. The emperor concluded a pact with Poland and the Venetian republic known as the Holy League. In 1685 Neuhäusel was won back, and in September 1686 Ofen (Buda) was captured despite fierce Turkish resistance.

In 1687 the Hungarian diet recognized the hereditary rights of the male line of the Habsburgs to the Hungarian throne. In 1688 Belgrade, Serbia, was conquered, and Transylvania was secured by imperial troops. Meanwhile, Louis XIV had begun an offensive against the German Palatinate that grew into the War of the Grand Alliance. This war meant that no further troops could be spared for the Turkish war, and in 1690 all recent conquests in the south, including Belgrade, were lost again. A victory of the imperial and the allied German troops under Margrave Louis William I of Baden-Baden near Slankamen, Serbia, (1691) prevented the Turks from advancing farther, but then the margrave was ordered to the Rhine front. Eventually Prince Eugene of Savoy took over the command and gained a decisive victory over the Turks in the Battle of Zenta (1697). After another offensive against Bosnia, the Turks finally decided to negotiate a peace. In the Treaty of Carlowitz (1699). Hungary, Transylvania, and large parts of Slavonia (now in Croatia) fell to the Habsburg emperor. Meanwhile, the war in the west, overshadowed already by the question of the Spanish succession, had come to an end with the Treaty of Rijswijk (1697).

 







 
 
 
 
 


 


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