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    • 1691

      • The Habsburg forces, unable to sustain their advance, retreated back across the Sava, leaving the native population seriously exposed to Turkish reprisals. In 1691 Archbishop Arsenije III Crnojević of Peć led a migration of 30,000–40,000 Serbs from “Old Serbia” and southern Bosnia across the Danube and Sava.
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  2. The First Great Migration occurred during the Habsburg-Ottoman War of 1683–1699 under Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Crnojević as a result of the Habsburg retreat and the Ottoman reoccupation of southern Serbian regions, which were temporarily held by the Habsburgs between 1688 and 1690. [4]

  3. Serbia was united with other Austro-Hungarian provinces into a pan-Slavic State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs; the Kingdom of Serbia joined the union on 1 December 1918 and the country was named the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Serbia achieved its current borders at the end of World War II, when it became a federal unit within the ...

  4. Prince Eugene of Savoy captures Belgrade, 1717. From 1718 until 1739 the country was known as the Kingdom of Serbia (1718–1739). The fall of Habsburg Serbia was followed by the Great Migrations of the Serbs from the Ottoman Empire into the Austrian Empire.

  5. Nov 28, 2022 · 28 November 2022. A chronology of key events. 1389 - Serb nobility decimated in battle of Kosovo Polje as Ottoman Empire expands. 15th - 18th Centuries - Serbia absorbed by Ottoman Empire. 1817 -...

  6. Serbian revolution or Revolutionary Serbia refers to the national and social revolution of the Serbian between 1804 and 1817, during which Serbia managed to emancipate from the Ottoman Empire and exist as a sovereign European nation-state.

  7. One of the principal consequences of the wars of 1804–15 was an extension and deepening of channels of communication between the Serbs living in Serbia and the prečani, Serbs living in diaspora across the Danube and throughout the Habsburg lands.

  8. The powerful Ottoman Empire made inroads into Serbia during the 14th century and eventually conquered it in 1459. The region remained under Ottoman control for three and a half centuries, until the successful Serbian Revolution of the early 1800s.

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