Austro-Turkish War (1716-1718)
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Was a war between the Habsburg Domains and the Ottoman Empire.
Chronology
Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation
October 1716: Siege of Temeşvar.
October 1715: The remaining Venetian strongholds, including the last remaining outposts on Crete (Spinalonga and Souda), likewise capitulated in exchange for safe departure. Within a hundred days, the entire Peloponnese had been re-taken by the Ottomans.
August 1717: The Austrian defeat of the Ottomans in the Battle of Belgrade on August 16, 1717, led to the Ottoman cession of their portion of Hungary and much of Serbia.
January 1718: The only permanent Venetian success was the capture of the fortresses of Preveza and Arta in 1717.
Was the treaty that ended the Austro-Turkish War (1716-1718).
July 1718: The Ottoman Empire lost the Banat to Prince Eugene of Savoy and the Habsburg Monarchy in 1718. This marked a significant victory for the Habsburgs in their ongoing conflict with the Ottomans over control of territories in Eastern Europe.
July 1718: Southeastern Syrmia, central part of present-day Serbia (from Belgrade to south of Kruševac), was taken by the Austrians.
July 1718: Northern Bosnia conquered by austria.
July 1718: Part of Wallachia (an autonomous Ottoman vassal) known as the Lesser Wallachia (Oltenia) was also ceded to the Habsburg Monarchy.
July 1718: Venice retained only the Ionian Islands, with Ottoman-occupied Kythera added to them.
July 1718: In 1714 the Republic was forced to confront the Ottomans again as they attempted to penetrate the Adriatic. The war caught the Serenissima politically and militarily unprepared: soon the Morea and the last Aegean colonies fell. [...] The peace of Passarowitz, in 1718, forced Venice to recognize the loss of the Morea.
July 1718: Parga was Venetian since the Peace of Passarowitz of 1718.
January 1719: Venice regained Kythira Island (Cerigo) and Antikythera Island (Cerigotto).
July 1718: In Dalmatia, the Venetians made some small advances, taking the areas of Imotski and Vrgorac in the hinterland.
January 1722: In 1721, the Dalmatian border was definitively stabilized with the definition of the so-called Mocenigo line. This agreement was reached between the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire, with the line being named after Alvise Mocenigo, the Venetian ambassador who negotiated the treaty.
Selected Sources
Tucker, S.C. (2011) Battles that changed History - An Encyclopedia of World Conflict, ABC-CLIO, p.225