Battle of Grotniki

Final battle of the Hussite Wars
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Battle of Grotniki
Part of Post-Hussite Wars
Date4 or 6 May 1439
Location
Grotniki, Poland
Result Royal army victory
Belligerents
Polish Hussites Polish Crown
Commanders and leaders
Spytko III of Melsztyn Hińcza of Rogów
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Hussite Wars
(1419–1434)
and afterwards

The Battle of Grotniki took place either on 4[1] or 6[2] May 1439 in the vicinity of Grotniki Duże, a village near Nowy Korczyn, currently in Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship.

The battle was fought between the Hussite confederates under Spytko III of Melsztyn against the royal forces of King Władysław III of Poland under Hińcza of Rogów and de facto regent bishop Zbigniew Oleśnicki. The defeat of the non-Catholic forces marked the end of militant Hussite movement in Poland and the beginning of a complete consolidation of power in the Polish Kingdom, led by bishop Zbigniew.

50°18′10″N 20°48′38″E / 50.30278°N 20.81056°E / 50.30278; 20.81056

Bibliography

Secondary sources

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General and related


Piast Poland
Mongol invasions
Jagiellon Poland
Polish–Teutonic wars
Commonwealth
Polish–Swedish wars
Polish–Ottoman wars
  • Moldavian campaign (1497–1499)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1620–1621
    • Battle of Chocim (1621)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1633–1634
  • Polish–Cossack–Tatar War (1666–1671)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1672–1676
    • Battle of Chocim (1673)
  • Great Turkish War
Poland partitioned
Second Republic
World War II in Poland
Ghetto uprisings
People's Republic
Third Republic

References

  1. ^ Jazowski 2004, p. 66.
  2. ^ "Bitwa pod Grotnikami - Polish History Museum in Warsaw". muzhp.pl.


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