Siege of Sofia explained

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Conflict:Siege of Sofia
Partof:the Bulgarian-Ottoman Wars
Date:1382 or 1385
Place:Sofia, Bulgaria
Result:Ottoman victory
Combatant1: Bulgarian Empire
Combatant2: Ottoman Empire
Commander1:Yanuka
Commander2:Lala Shahin Pasha
Strength1:Unknown
Strength2:Unknown
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:Unknown

The siege of Sofia took place in 1382 or 1385[1] [2] during the course of the Bulgarian–Ottoman wars. Unable to defend his country from the Ottomans, in 1373 the Bulgarian emperor Ivan Shishman agreed to become an Ottoman vassal and to marry his sister Kera Tamara to their sultan Murad I, while the Ottomans were to return some conquered fortresses.[1] Despite the peace, in the beginning of the 1380s the Ottomans resumed their campaigns and besieged the important city of Sofia which controlled major communication routes to Serbia and Macedonia. There are little records about the siege. After the futile attempts to storm the city, the Ottoman commander Lala Shahin Pasha considered to abandon the siege.[1] However, a Bulgarian renegate managed to lure the city governor ban Yanuka out of the fortress to hunt and the Turks captured him. Leaderless, the Bulgarians surrendered.[2] The city walls were destroyed and an Ottoman garrison was installed. With the way to the north-west cleared, the Ottomans pressed further and captured Pirot and Niš in 1386, thus wedging between Bulgaria and Serbia.[2]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Андреев, p. 283
  2. Web site: 20. The Decline of the Second Bulgarian Empire. Bulgarian. 8 August 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20111008182605/http://212.39.92.39/e/prosveta/istoria_11/20.html. 8 October 2011. dmy-all.