Ottoman–Hungarian Wars
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Ottoman–Hungarian Wars
Summary
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars is a series of wars[1]. It draws 536 Wikipedia views per month (series_of_wars category, ranking #42 of 151).[2]
Key Facts
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars's instance of is recorded as series of wars[3].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place at Central Europe[4].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place at Balkans[5].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place at Kingdom of Hungary[6].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place at Moldova[7].
- The location of Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Wallachia[8].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place at Ottoman Empire[9].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars's Commons category is recorded as Ottoman–Hungarian Wars[10].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars comprises Battle of Kosovo[11].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars comprises Battle of Breadfield[12].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars began on 1366[13].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars ended on 1526[14].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars occurred on August 29, 1526[15].
- A participant in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Kingdom of Hungary[16].
- A participant in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth[17].
- Among those involved in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Croatia in personal union with Hungary[18].
- A participant in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Wallachia[19].
- Among those involved in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Principality of Moldavia[20].
- Among those involved in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Serbian Despotate[21].
- Among those involved in Ottoman–Hungarian Wars was Ottoman Empire[22].
- Ottoman–Hungarian Wars's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Hungarian–Ottoman wars[23].
Body
When and Where
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars took place on August 29, 1526[15]. It began on 1366[13]. It ended on 1526[14]. Recorded location include Central Europe[4], Balkans[5], Kingdom of Hungary[6], Moldova[7], Wallachia[8], and Ottoman Empire[9].
Context
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars's instance of is recorded as series of wars[3].
Participants
Recorded participant include Kingdom of Hungary[16], Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth[17], Croatia in personal union with Hungary[18], Wallachia[19], Principality of Moldavia[20], and Serbian Despotate[21].
Why It Matters
Ottoman–Hungarian Wars draws 536 Wikipedia views per month (series_of_wars category, ranking #42 of 151).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 16 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]