total 60,000[1] 40,000 infantry[1] 20,000 cavalry[1]
35.000[2]
Casualties and losses
unknown
unknown
v
t
e
Great Turkish War
Central Europe
Vienna
Párkány
1st Esztergom
Visegrád
Vác
1st Buda
Eperjes
2nd Esztergom
Érsekújvár
Kassa
2nd Buda
Pécs
Mohács
Székesfehérvár
Szigetvár
Kanizsa
Balkans
Virovitica
Santa Maura
Vrtijeljka
Coron
Navarino
Modon
Nauplia
Patras
Acropolis of Athens
Derventa
1st Belgrade
Negroponte
Kostajnica
Batočina
1st Niš
Vidin
Skopje
Štip
Kačanik
Mytilene
2nd Niš
2nd Belgrade
Slankamen
3rd Belgrade
Petrovaradin
Oinousses
Chios
Zeytinburnu
Andros
Cenei
Olasch
Bihać
Action of 6 July 1697
Zenta
Sarajevo
Samothrace
Eastern Europe
Chițcani
Reni
1st Crimean
2nd Crimean
Zernest
Oradea
Hodów
Ustechko
Azov campaigns
Lugos
Podhajce
v
t
e
Ottoman–Habsburg wars
Hungary and the Balkans
Mohács (1526)
Hungarian campaign (1527–28)
Hundred Years' Croatian-Ottoman War (1527-1593)
Hungary (1529)
Vienna (1529)
Little Wars in Hungary
(1529–1533) (1540–1547) (1551–1562) (1565–1568)
Long War (1593–1606)
Bocskai uprising (1604–1606)
Austro-Turkish War (1663–64)
Great Turkish War (1683–1699)
Austro-Turkish War (1716–1718)
Russo-Turkish War (1735–1739)
Austro-Turkish War (1788–91)
Mediterranean
Cephalonia (1500)
Balearics (1501)
1st Algiers (1516)
Tlemcen (1518)
2nd Algiers (1519)
3rd Algiers (1529)
Formentera (1529)
Cherchell (1531)
Coron (1532-1534)
1st Tunis (1534)
2nd Tunis (1535)
Mahón (1535)
Preveza (1538)
Castelnuovo (1539)
Girolata (1540)
Alborán (1540)
4th Algiers (1541)
Nice (1543)
1st Mostaganem (1543)
Lipari (1544)
Naples (1544)
2st Mostaganem (1547)
Cullera (1550)
Mahdia (1550)
1st Gozo (1551)
Tripoli (1551)
Ponza (1552)
Corsica (1553-1559)
Viste (1554)
Béjaïa (1555)
Oran (1556)
Balearics (1558)
3rd Mostaganem (1558)
Djerba (1560)
Orán and Mers-el-Kébir (1563)
Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera (1563)
Granada (1563)
Malta (1565)
3rd Tunis (1569)
2nd Gozo (1570)
Lepanto (1571)
Navarino (1572)
4th Tunis (1573)
5th Tunis (1574)
Sori (1584)
Canary Islands (1585)
Chios (1599)
Hammamet (1605)
Cape Corvo (1613)
Malta (1614)
Cape Celidonia (1616)
The Battle of Cenei (1696) took place in the Banat of Temeswar (Timișoara/Temeshvar) between the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg Empire. The Ottomans were victorious.[3] The Habsburg army numbered at most 40,000 infantry and 20,000 cavalry.[1] The Ottoman army was led by Sultan Mustafa II. The Habsburg troops were led by Frederick August I of Saxony.
^ abcdMurphey, Rhoads (1999). Ottoman Warfare 1500–1700. Taylor & Francis. p. 214. ISBN 9780203015971.
^The Siege of Vienna, Holt, Rinehart & Winston p;200 (New York, NY), 1965, new edition, Birlinn (Edinburgh, Scotland)
^Young, William (2004). International Politics And Warfare In The Age Of Louis Xiv And Peter The Great: A Guide To The Historical Literature. iUniverse. p. 439. ISBN 9780595329922.
Cenei (Hungarian: Csene; German: Tschene; Serbian: Ченеј, romanized: Čenej; Croatian: Čenej) is a commune in Timiș County, Romania. It is composed of...
consecutive victories at the Battle of Lugos (1695), Battleof Ulaş (1696), and BattleofCenei (1696) while the Venetians lost Chios (1695). On 18 April...
the Ottoman troops defeated the Habsburg army in the Battleof Ulaş and in the BattleofCenei. After these victories the Ottoman troops captured Timișoara...
List of the main battles in the history of the Ottoman Empire are shown below. The life span of the empire was more than six centuries, and the maximum...