Serbian legacy : Battle for Kosovo |

Kiadás Serbia - Hadügyi elemzések - 25 - 13 Jan 21 08:03

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Today is the article about of the 1389 Battle of Kosovo. It’s necessary to specify the year because there have been so many “battles of Kosovo” over the centuries. But this one, in contrast with 1369’s Battle of Kosovo or 1448’s Battle of Kosovo or 1831’s Battle of…well, you get the idea, is the one most people probably think of when you say “the Battle of Kosovo.” This Battle of Kosovo, though tactically inconclusive, was a strategic Ottoman victory that both set the stage for early Ottoman domination of the Balkans and became the touchstone for Serbian national consciousness. It’s an important battle with far-reaching implications that is unfortunately not very well-documented (a common problem in early Ottoman history). But we’ll do the best we can.

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The Growth of the Ottoman Empire through the late 17th century (Wikimedia Commons)

The Ottomans conducted their first military campaigns into Europe under their second ruler, Orhan, though these initial expeditions amounted to no more than some tentative forays into Thrace. When Orhan died and was succeeded by Murad I, in 1362, the Ottomans built on those earlier expeditions. Although Murad lost Gallipoli, in Anatolia, to Amadeo of Savoy in 1366, his westward advance was unaffected. The Byzantine city of Adrianople (modern Edirne) fell to the Ottomans either in 1362 (give or take) or 1369 (more recent scholarship suggests the latter date). Murad, who saw the possibilities that lay to the west, quickly moved his capital to Adrianople from the Anatolian city of Bursa, and it remained there until the Ottomans captured Constantinople in 1453.

Gallipoli, if you’re curious, was given back to the Ottomans in the late 1370s by Byzantine emperor Andronikos IV (d. 1385), a payment for the Ottoman military aid that allowed him to win the throne. But I digress.

Major cities fell to the Ottomans one after the other: Sofia, in Bulgaria, in 1385; Niš, in Serbia, in 1386; and Thessaloniki, in Macedonia (Greek Macedonia today), in 1387. Murad’s Ottoman forces also fought a series of engagements against the Serbs. The Ottomans won a major victory over the short-lived “Serbian Empire” at Maritsa, in 1371, which helped precipitate its breakup, but engagements at Dubravnica (1380 or 1381) and Pločnik (between 1385 and 1387) were won by Moravian Serbia, the most powerful of the empire’s successor kingdoms. In the latter battle, the Serbs were led by their prince, Lazar Hrebeljanović, who would also lead them, and die in the process, at Kosovo. Another battle, in 1388 at Bileća, ended in an Ottoman defeat at the hands of the Bosnians.

The successive defeats at Pločnik and Bileća should have stymied the Ottomans’ advance for a short time, but a dispute involving an Ottoman vassal quickly brought them back into the western Balkans. The vassal in question was the ruler of Zeta (more or less modern Montenegro), Đurađ II (d. 1403). He got into a spat with Tvrtko I (1391), the King of Bosnia (who also claimed to be king of Serbia). Murad probably saw an opening to subjugate Bosnia, so he once again led his army west. However, to get to Bosnia, or to get to the Serbian principality ruled by Vuk Branković (1397), another potential Ottoman target, Murad’s army had to go through Lazar’s territory. Lazar decided to meet him, joined by Branković—and I don’t mean in a friendly, “welcome to the neighborhood” kind of way.


Murad I (Wikimedia Commons)

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As I said, not much is directly attested in terms of how the battle proceeded. Lazar presumably chose the site, so he had the advantage in that sense. The Ottoman army probably outnumbered the Serbs, but not overwhelmingly (upper estimates suggest maybe 40,000 men vs. around 30,000). It’s important to understand that this was not the Ottoman army you might be familiar with from later Ottoman history. It was not a gunpowder-heavy army, it was not infantry-dominated, and the famous Janissary Corps was at this point very small, not much more than an imperial bodyguard. This was a cavalry-centric force where the infantry was expected to absorb the enemy attack at the center while the cavalry rode around the field and did most of the damage. Lazar’s army would have been similarly cavalry-oriented.

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This painting of the battle, done around 1870 by Serbian artist Adam Stefanović, depicts among other things Prince Lazar’s demise, just left of the dashing horseman in the center (Wikimedia Commons)


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Unfortunately, one of the details that’s too sketchy to say much about is precisely how Lazar was killed. We know that the fighting was very fierce and that both armies inflicted substantial damage on each other, and the tide didn’t really shift decisively in the Ottomans’ favor until Lazar fell and, subsequently, Branković fled the field. At that point the Serbian army began to break. We are a little better informed about the death of Murad, though this story has probably gotten somewhat lost in the legend that grew up around it. It seems that under a plan devised before the battle, one Serbian knight named Miloš Obilić rode to the Ottoman lines declaring his intention to defect. He was then given an audience with Murad, at which point he pulled out a dagger and killed the Ottoman ruler before being killed himself. Following the battle Miloš, alongside Lazar, became a Serbian national hero,

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Miloš Obilić

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A lithograph of Miloš Obilić standing before Murad’s tent, by Stefanović and fellow 19th century Serbian artist Pavle Čortanović (Wikimedia Commons)

The final result of the battle was mutual destruction. Both armies were gutted and both leaders lay dead on the field. What determined the outcome was the fact that the Ottomans had the capacity to absorb the loss of nearly an entire army and simply replace it, a capacity that Serbia couldn’t match. Bosnia, somewhat surprisingly, remained out of Ottoman hands until the 1460s, though Tvrtko I’s already dubious claim to the kingship of Serbia was rendered totally fictitious when Stefan Lazarević (d. 1427), Lazar’s son and successor, put Serbia under Ottoman protection. Given the shape his army was in, Lazarević really had no choice but to become an Ottoman vassal. And with that, there ceased to be any principality in the Balkans strong enough that it could realistically hope to ward off Ottoman domination.

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Murad was succeeded by his son, Bayezid I (d. 1403), known as Yıldırım or “Thunderbolt,” who had a very successful reign from a conquest perspective (albeit largely in Anatolia rather than Europe), until he ran into Timur at Ankara in 1402 and was defeated so thoroughly that the whole Ottoman Empire was shattered and remained so for the next decade. That defeat was so thorough that Lazarević immediately seized the opportunity to assert Serbia’s independence again. His Despotate of Serbia would survive until the rebuilt Ottomans ended it in 1459.

In historical terms, Kosovo was important at the time because it confirmed that the Balkans were within the Ottoman Empire’s reach. But its most enduring legacy belongs to the Serbs.Kosovo was later cast as a heroic resistance to Ottoman encroachment and became, for better and for worse, one of the foundations upon which Serbian national identity was built.

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Hozzászólások (25)

13 Jan 21 08:07
elhichko

13 Jan 21 04:09 elhichko cats are gonna sleep today will be late! https://www.edominations.com/en/article/20207

13 Jan 21 08:08
Takeda Shingen

Tt

13 Jan 21 08:35
ToyotaPrius

Napoleon Bonaparte has said” Unite the nations of Balkan and you will see a new empire or divide and rule them”.

13 Jan 21 08:44
Plavaprinceza

O7

13 Jan 21 09:23
SNELE

Thank you!

13 Jan 21 09:27
Komita

Mallakastrioti 👍

13 Jan 21 09:27
Safer

Hail Serbia :P Kosovo is Serbia o7

13 Jan 21 09:38
The Lazarus

@RESPECT you have proven your nick, o7

13 Jan 21 09:41
Monke 69

Hail Serbia

13 Jan 21 10:49
Komlta

o7

13 Jan 21 11:41
Malo Gradjanin

Пре свега братски поздрав! Свака част на чланку брате!! Србија Србима! 🇷🇸 Read dear friends, this is a good history lesson, important one, very important to my people! Much love from Serbia.

13 Jan 21 12:18
El Greco

LEX ORMA TOUS

13 Jan 21 12:42
Plavaprinceza

O7

13 Jan 21 13:18
Vojo

Fantastic article, objective, nice designe, great work!

13 Jan 21 13:49
Carberniqui

allu akbar

13 Jan 21 22:49
Roudoudou loves you

Kosovo is Normandy

14 Jan 21 05:45
Diablo

🖕

14 Jan 21 12:17
noizy1950

kosovo je

14 Jan 21 14:20
Altinkss

Battle of Kosova was a draw between Balkan coalition and Ottomans , both armies lost the leaders and most of the army . We would have won the battle if Brankovic had not betrayed us in the moments when we were reaping victory. He withdrew at crucial moments with most of his loyalists. Aftermath was , Balkan could never regroup again to stop Ottomans. Millosh Kopilic was albanian orthodox prince from the region of Drenica that joined the coalition , his village is called Kopilic even today . He killed Murat during the battle as Murat sent his close bodyguards to fight all in when he thought all is ending well for the Turks , leaving himself not protected well. Millosh got killed at the spot just after he killed the Sultan . Meanwhile after Brankovic left the battle all the left wing of the Ottoman army turned and encircled Lazar getting the upper hand of the battle and Lazar and all the soldiers got killed fighting. Thats all folks .

14 Jan 21 14:35
Imperator

Hahahahahah are you drunk Altinkss? So much BS I read it now and spent my precious time I cant believe how many times albanians are stealing history...

15 Jan 21 00:17
marianila

tltr; Who won?

15 Jan 21 00:28
ULTRASERB1

Kosovo is Serbia o7

15 Jan 21 00:43
Aragonn

Fumáis

15 Jan 21 00:58
the player

vv

15 Jan 21 03:47
revenger81

dfgjstrnxfghtrah