Turco-Theodoran Wars: Difference between revisions
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| combatants_header = | | combatants_header = | ||
| combatant1 = [[Theodorous and the Parathalassias|Theodoro]] <br> • [[wikipedia:Republic of Genoa|Genoa]] (1475-1479) <br> • [[wikipedia:Ottoman Civil War (1509–1513)|Selim]] (1511-1513) <br> • [[wikipedia:Tsardom of Russia|Russia]] (1699-1701) | | combatant1 = [[Theodorous and the Parathalassias|Theodoro]] <br> • [[wikipedia:Republic of Genoa|Genoa]] (1475-1479) <br> • [[wikipedia:Ottoman Civil War (1509–1513)|Selim]] (1511-1513) <br> • [[wikipedia:Tsardom of Russia|Russia]] (1699-1701) | ||
| combatant2 = [[wikipedia:Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Empire]] <br> • [[wikipedia:Republic of Naples|Naples]] (1568-1569) | | combatant2 = [[wikipedia:Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Empire]] <br> • [[wikipedia:Ottoman Civil War (1509–1513)|Ahmed]] (1511-1513)<br> • [[wikipedia:Republic of Naples|Naples]] (1568-1569) | ||
| combatant3 = | | combatant3 = | ||
| commander1 = Alexander I (1st) <br> C. Augustus I (2nd) <br> Isaac VII (3rd) <br> Lucas I (4th) <br> Joseph III (5th) <br> Joseph IV (6th) | | commander1 = Alexander I (1st) <br> C. Augustus I (2nd) <br> Isaac VII (3rd) <br> Lucas I (4th) <br> Joseph III (5th) <br> Joseph IV (6th) |
Revision as of 20:28, 18 May 2024
Turco-Theodoran Wars | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Theodoro • Genoa (1475-1479) • Selim (1511-1513) • Russia (1699-1701) |
Ottoman Empire • Ahmed (1511-1513) • Naples (1568-1569) | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Alexander I (1st) C. Augustus I (2nd) Isaac VII (3rd) Lucas I (4th) Joseph III (5th) Joseph IV (6th) |
The Turco-Theodoran Wars, also known as the Romano-Ottoman Wars or, within Theodorous and the Parathalassias, as the Turkish Wars (Greek: Tourkikoí Pólemoi), were a series of wars and other conflicts between Theodoro in its various forms and the Ottoman Empire. Beginning in 1475 as a continuation of the earlier Byzantine–Ottoman wars, the period of conflict between the two states continued, albeit interrupted by several temporary detentes, until 1878. The period of conflict between the two states thus lasted for more than four centuries; if Theodoro was to be considered as the successor to the Byzantine Empire, the entire period of Romano-Ottoman conflict lasted for more than six centuries.