Joseph II dispatches twenty thousand four hundred…
August 1788 CE
A Serbian freikorps of five thousand soldiers had been established in the Banat, composed of refugees that had fled earlier conflicts in the Ottoman Empire.
The Corps will fight for the liberation of Serbia and unification under Habsburg rule.
The main commander is Austrian major Mihailo Mihaljević.
There are several freikorps along the Habsburg-Ottoman frontier.
Mihaljević's Free Corps, the most notable, is active from Šumadija to Podrinje, and across the Morava is the Braničevo Free Corps; in Croatia the St. George Free Corps; in Bosnia they are called Seressaner.
Other Serb militias ware the Kozara Militia and Prosar Militia, established in Bosnia in 1788, composed of one thousand soldiers each.
Among the volunteers were Aleksa Nenadović and Karađorđe Petrović, Stanko Arambašić and the prominent Radič Petrović and most distinguished of all, Koča Anđelković.
The Orthodox clergy in Serbia supports the rebellion.
Koča's militia quickly takes over Palanka and Batočina, attacks Kragujevac, and reaches the Constantinople road, cutting off the Ottoman army from the Sanjak of Niš and the Sanjak of Vidin.
The Corps will fight for the liberation of Serbia and unification under Habsburg rule.
The main commander is Austrian major Mihailo Mihaljević.
There are several freikorps along the Habsburg-Ottoman frontier.
Mihaljević's Free Corps, the most notable, is active from Šumadija to Podrinje, and across the Morava is the Braničevo Free Corps; in Croatia the St. George Free Corps; in Bosnia they are called Seressaner.
Other Serb militias ware the Kozara Militia and Prosar Militia, established in Bosnia in 1788, composed of one thousand soldiers each.
Among the volunteers were Aleksa Nenadović and Karađorđe Petrović, Stanko Arambašić and the prominent Radič Petrović and most distinguished of all, Koča Anđelković.
The Orthodox clergy in Serbia supports the rebellion.
Koča's militia quickly takes over Palanka and Batočina, attacks Kragujevac, and reaches the Constantinople road, cutting off the Ottoman army from the Sanjak of Niš and the Sanjak of Vidin.
Groups
Germans
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Serbs (South Slavs)
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Austria, Archduchy of
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Russians (East Slavs)
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Ottoman Empire
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Turkish people
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Serbia, Ottoman
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Bosnia, Sanjak of
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Moldavia (Ottoman vassal), Principality of
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Russian Empire
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Transylvania, (Austrian) Grand Principality of
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