Belgrade - Ottoman Conquest and Turk wars
- Written by Portal Editor
For Sultan Mehmed II, after the fall of Constantinople, Belgrade and the completion of the conquest of Serbia were the preconditions for reaching Central Europe.
On July 4, 1456 he commanded the first major siege of Belgrade. The Christian defenders, led by Johann Hunyadi, not only successfully fended off this attack by the new Ottoman world power, but rather drove away the wounded Sultan and the Ottoman army in panic.
A significant factor was the elaborate reconstruction of the castle by Stefan Lazarević previously carried out by the knowledge of Oriental and Crusader constructions, with a tower-rich and moat-fortified castle, with a mighty donjon and an outer moat surrounded by a large double wall, with heavily guarded gates. After the victory, which decided the fate of Christians at the time, Kalixt III. ordered the noon-bell, which sounds up to this day in all churches in the world. The Feast of the Transfiguration of Christ reminds us of this, as the news of the Christian victory arrived in Rome on August 6th.
Belgrade under Ottoman sovereignty
The Hungarian troops withdrew, the Serbian inhabitants were relocated to Constantinople, and some of the Serbian crews of the Danube fleet entered the Ottoman Navy as sailors. The city became the administrative center of the Sanjak Smederevo.
The relic of the Serbian national Saint Sveti Savas
Thus, in addition to the Danube fleet, the Serbian Martolos were also stationed here. The city's Christians did not need to pay taxes but had to look look the fortress. In 1594, a Serb rebellion was forcibly suppressed, and the relic of the Serbian national saint, Sveti Sava, was burned in Vračar in revenge. To commemorate this sacrilege, the commemorative cathedral of Saint Sava was built here in the 20th century.
Only a mosque and a mausoleum (Türbe) outlast the times
Turkish Wars and the Holy League
The Ferman Monument in front of the Stambol Gate in Kalemegdan commemorates April 19, 1867, when a Ferman (decree) of the Sultan Abdul Aziz initiated the withdrawal of the last Turkish fortress commander Ali-Pasha Riza and the Turkish occupation and symbolically hands Prince Mihailo the keys to the city. This ended almost 350 years of Turkish rule in Belgrade.
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Intermediate stop in Belgrade - floating hotel on the Danube
Singidunum - fortification on the Danube limes of Romans
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Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman -
Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman Belgrade Castle to defend the Ottoman
https://www.alaturka.info/en/serbia/belgrade/4301-belgrade-ottoman-conquest-and-turk-wars/amp#sigProId6a39b8d468