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Siege of Sofia

Coordinates: 42°42′N 23°20′E / 42.700°N 23.333°E / 42.700; 23.333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

42°42′N 23°20′E / 42.700°N 23.333°E / 42.700; 23.333 The siege of Sofia took place in between 1380–1382[1][2] during the course of the Bulgarian–Ottoman wars.

Siege of Sofia
Part of the Bulgarian-Ottoman Wars
Date1380–1382
Location
Sofia, Bulgaria
Result
  •  • Bulgarian victory – 1st siege
  •  • Ottoman victory – 2nd siege
Belligerents
Bulgarian Empire Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Yanuka  Lala Shahin Pasha
Ince Balaban bey
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

In 1373 the Bulgarian emperor Ivan Shishman agreed to become an Ottoman vassal and to marry his sister Kera Tamara to their sultan Murad I, while the Ottomans were to return some conquered fortresses.[1]

First siege

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Despite the peace, in the beginning of the 1380s the Ottomans resumed their campaigns and besieged the important city of Sofia which controlled major communication routes to Serbia and Macedonia. There are little records about the siege. After the futile attempts to storm the city, the Ottoman commander Lala Shahin Pasha considered to abandon the siege.[1] All attacks led by the Ottomans were repelled by Yanuka.[3]

Second siege

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In 1382 a Bulgarian renegade called Usunca Syondök managed to lure the city governor ban Yanuka out of the fortress to hunt and the Turks, led by Ince Balaban bey, captured him. Leaderless, the Bulgarians surrendered.[2] The city walls were destroyed and an Ottoman garrison was installed. With the way to the north-west cleared, the Ottomans pressed further and captured Pirot and Niš in 1386, thus wedging between Bulgaria and Serbia.[2]

After the capture of the city, Sofia became a sanjak. Ince Balaban who has also been referred to as 'the conqueror of Sofia',[4] became its first sanjakbey.

Citations

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  1. ^ a b c Андреев, p. 283
  2. ^ a b c "20. The Decline of the Second Bulgarian Empire" (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  3. ^ История на българите (in Bulgarian). TRUD Publishers. 2009. p. 182. ISBN 978-954-528-752-7.
  4. ^ Gradeva, Rosit︠s︡a (2004). Rumeli under the Ottomans, 15th-18th centuries: institutions and communities. Isis Press. p. 34.

Sources

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  • Андреев (Andreev), Йордан (Jordan); Милчо Лалков (Milcho Lalkov) (1996). Българските ханове и царе (The Bulgarian Khans and Tsars) (in Bulgarian). Велико Търново (Veliko Tarnovo): Абагар (Abagar). ISBN 954-427-216-X.