Austro-Turkish War (1788–1791)

Austro-Turkish War (1788–1791)
Part of the Ottoman–Habsburg wars

The main Ottoman army led by the Grand Vizier with 80,000 men advancing from Sofia in May 1788
DateFebruary 1788 – 4 August 1791
Location
Result See Outcomes
Territorial
changes
Ottoman Empire Cedes Orșova and Croatian borderlands to the Habsburg monarchy
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Emperor Joseph II (d. 1790)
Emperor Leopold II
Freiherr von Laudon #
Paul Kray
Merveldt
Anton von Elsnitz
Eugène-Guillaume Argenteau
Franz von Lauer
Andreas von Ballinlough
Heinrich XV of Greiz
Johann von Schmitt
Karl von Futak
Heinrich von Bellegarde
Peter von Bátorkéz
Franjo Jelačić
Antun Pejačević
Koča Anđelković 
Joseph Maria von Colloredo
Karl von Pellegrini

Abdul Hamid I (d. 1789)

Selim III
Cenaze Hasan Pasha

The Austro-Turkish War, also known as the Habsburg–Ottoman War, was fought from 1788 to 1791, between the Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire. During the conflict, Habsburg armies succeeded in taking Belgrade (1789) and liberating much of central Serbia, also capturing several forts in central Croatia and in the Pounje region of the Ottoman Bosnia. Much of those gains were lost in the later stages of the war, that ended by the Treaty of Sistova (1791), with minor territorial changes in favor of the Habsburg side. The war was fought concomitantly with the Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792).