Siege of Nicomedia

Fall of Byzantine Nicomedia to the Ottoman Empire
Siege of Nicomedia
Part of the Byzantine-Ottoman wars
Date1337
Location
Nicomedia, Opsikion, Byzantine Empire
(modern-day İzmit, Kocaeli, Turkey)
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents
Byzantine Empire Byzantine Empire Ottoman Sultanate
Commanders and leaders
Unknown Orhan
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown
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Byzantine–Ottoman wars

After its foundation by Osman I in about 1299, the Ottoman Empire expanded across Bithynia in north-west Anatolia by capturing territory from the Byzantine Empire. Osman was succeeded by his son Orhan in about 1324 and, following long sieges, he took the important cities of Bursa (1326) and Nicaea (1331). Next, Orhan besieged Nicomedia from 1333 to 1337. The Byzantine garrison surrendered due to lack of food and resources. Orhan's victory sealed Ottoman control of Bithynia.

Siege

Following the loss of Nicaea in 1331, Byzantine emperor Andronikos III Palaiologos proposed the payment of tribute to Orhan. Andronikos needed a free hand in the Balkans where Albania, Serbia and Bulgaria were in revolt against Byzantine rule. Orhan rejected his overtures and laid siege to Nicomedia (modern İzmit). In 1337, Andronikos effectively abandoned Nicomedia as he led his army to Albania. The besieged garrison was desperately short of food and supplies by then and so Nicomedia surrendered to Orhan.[1] The inhabitants were allowed to leave the city for Constantinople.[2]

Aftermath

The fall of Nicomedia enabled Orhan to overrun Bithynia and extend Ottoman rule to the eastern shore of the Bosporus. Apart from Constantinople and some territory in Greece, mainly the Peloponnese, the Byzantines were left with an empire in name only.


References

  1. ^ İnalcık, Halil (2010). Kuruluş Dönemi Osmanlı Sultanları (1302-1481). İstanbul: Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslam Araştırmaları Merkezi. p. 50-51.
  2. ^ İnalcık, Halil (2009). Devlet-i ‘Aliyye Osmanlı İmparatorluğu Üzerine Araştırmalar-I. İstanbul: Kültür Yayınları. p. 41.

Additional source

  • R.G. Grant, Battle: A Visual Journey Through 5,000 Years of Combat, Dorling Kindersley Publishers Ltd, 2005. ISBN 0-7566-1360-4
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Ottoman Empire Major sieges involving the Ottoman Empire by century
13th-14th
15th
  • 1411 Constantinople
  • 1422 Constantinople
  • 1422–1430 Thessalonica
  • 1428 Golubac
  • 1440 Belgrade
  • 1440–41 Novo Brdo
  • 1448 Svetigrad
  • 1450 Krujë
  • 1453 Constantinople
  • 1455 Berat
  • 1456 Belgrade
  • 1461 Trebizond
  • 1462 Mytilene
  • 1463 Jajce
  • 1464 Jajce
  • 1467 Krujë
  • 1470 Negroponte
  • 1474 Scutari
  • 1477–78 Krujë
  • 1478–79 Scutari
  • 1480 Rhodes
  • 1481 Otranto
  • 1484 Chilia
16th
17th
  • 1601 Nagykanizsa
  • 1621 Khotyn
  • 1638 Baghdad
  • 1663 Uyvar
  • 1664 Novi Zrin
  • 1648–1669 Candia
  • 1672 Kamenets
  • 1683 Vienna
  • 1684 Buda
  • 1684 Santa Maura
  • 1685 Érsekújvár
  • 1686 Buda
  • 1686 Pécs
  • 1688 Negroponte
  • 1688 Belgrade
  • 1690 Belgrade
  • 1695 Azov
  • 1696 Azov
18th
  • 1711 Brăila
  • 1715 Nauplia
  • 1716 Corfu
  • 1716 Temeşvar
  • 1717 Belgrade
  • 1733 Baghdad
  • 1734–35 Ganja
  • 1737 Ochakov
  • 1739 Belgrade
  • 1788 Ochakov
  • 1788 Khotin
  • 1789 Belgrade
  • 1789–90 Izmail
  • 1799 El Arish
  • 1799 Jaffa
  • 1799 Acre
19th
20th
  • 1912–13 Scutari
  • 1912–13 Adrianople
  • 1915 Van
  • 1915–16 Kut
  • 1916–1919 Medina
Ottoman defeats shown in italics.


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