Siege of Hatvan (1594)

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Date20 April – 2 July 1594
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Siege of Hatvan (1594)
Part of the Long Turkish War

Depicition of the siege by Wilhelm Peter Zimmermann (1603)
Date20 April – 2 July 1594
Location
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Ottoman Empire Holy Roman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Sokulluzade Hasan Pasha Christoph von Teuffenbach
Strength
15,000 30,000
Casualties and losses
3,000–4,000 1,000–2,000

The siege of Hatvan was a siege that took place in 1594. The German army, under the command of Christoph von Teuffenbach, Governor of Styria of the Holy Roman Empire, was defeated and the siege was lifted before Hatvan, which they besieged between 20 April and 2 July 1594.

In the first year of the war between the Ottoman Empire and the Holy Roman Empire, which began in 1593, the sides occupied some minor fortresses on both sides, while in the spring of 1594, two German armies laid siege to the important Ottoman fortresses Esztergom and Hatvan.[1] The army besieging Hatvan was led by the Governor-General of Styria Christoph von Teuffenbach, and Esztergom was led by Emperor Holstein II. Rudolf's brother Archduke Matthias (future Holy Roman Emperor) was in command.[2]

Siege

Aftermath

References

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