Eisenachi csata: Różnice pomiędzy wersjami
Przejdź do nawigacji
Przejdź do wyszukiwania
| Linia 1: | Linia 1: | ||
| − | [[Kategoria: | + | [[Kategoria:1a]] |
{{Uwaga| | {{Uwaga| | ||
|strona = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Eisenach_(908) | |strona = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Eisenach_(908) | ||
| Linia 40: | Linia 40: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Campaignbox Hungarian invasions of Europe}} | {{Campaignbox Hungarian invasions of Europe}} | ||
| − | |||
| − | == | + | <small><small><small><small>The '''Battle of Eisenach''' in 908,<ref>Csorba, Csaba (1997). Árpád népe (Árpád’s people). Budapest: Kulturtrade. p. 193. {{ISBN|963-9069-20-5}}.</ref> was a crushing victory by a [[Hungarians|Hungarian]] army over a [[East Francia|German]] army composed of troops from Franconia, Saxony, and Thuringia. </small></small></small></small> |
| + | |||
| + | == Źródła == | ||
''Gesta Regum Francorum excerpta, ex originali ampliata''. | ''Gesta Regum Francorum excerpta, ex originali ampliata''. | ||
| − | == | + | == Tło == |
{{Main|Hungarian invasions of Europe}} | {{Main|Hungarian invasions of Europe}} | ||
{{See also|Battle of Pressburg}} | {{See also|Battle of Pressburg}} | ||
| − | |||
| − | == | + | <small><small><small><small>This battle is a part of the Hungarian - German war which started in 900, after the Hungarian conquest of [[Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin|Pannonia]] ([[Transdanubia]]), and lasted until 910, the battles of [[Battle of Lechfeld (910)|Augsburg]] and [[Battle of Rednitz|Rednitz]], both ending in disastrous German defeats, which forced the German king [[Louis the Child]], and the German duchies to accept the territorial losses, and pay tribute to the Hungarians.<ref name='Szabados'>{{cite web|first=György |last=Szabados |url=http://epa.oszk.hu/01300/01343/00044/nemzet.html | title=Vereség háttér nélkül? Augsburg, 955 | accessdate=2014-08-02| url-status= live|language=hu}}</ref> </small></small></small></small> |
| − | After the [[Battle of Pressburg]] ended with a catastrophical defeat of the attacking [[East Francia]]n armies led by [[Luitpold, Margrave of Bavaria|Luitpold prince of Bavaria]], the Hungarians following the nomadic warfare philosophy: destroy your enemy completely or force him to submit to you, first forced [[Arnulf of Bavaria|Arnulf]] prince of Bavaria to pay them tribute, and let their armies cross the lands of the duchy to attack other German and Christian territories,<ref name='Bóna'>{{cite book | last = Bóna | first = István | authorlink = | title = A magyarok és Európa a 9-10. században ''("The Hungarians and Europe in the 9th-10th centuries")'' | publisher = História - MTA Történettudományi Intézete | language=Hungarian | year = 2000 | location = Budapest | page = 36| url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 963-8312-67-X}}</ref> then started long range campaigns against the other East Francian duchies. [[File:Europe and the Hungarian campaign of 908.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|The Hungarian campaign of 908, and the battle of Eisenach]] The first of these was the attack of one Hungarian army to [[Duchy of Thuringia|Thuringia]] and [[Duchy of Saxony|Saxony]]. However this was not the first attack of the Hungarians in [[Saxony|Saxonia]], because two years earlier two Hungarian armies devastated one after another the duchy, being asked to come by the Slavic tribe of Dalamanci, which lived near [[Meissen]], which were threatened by the Saxons attacks and plunderings. In their campaign of 908, the Hungarians used again the Dalamancian territory to attack [[Thuringia]] and [[Saxony|Saxonia]], coming from [[Bohemia]] or [[Silesia]], where Slavic tribes lived, like they did in 906.<ref name="Bóna"/> The Thuringian and Saxonian forces, under the lead of [[Burchard, Duke of Thuringia]] met the Hungarians on the battlefield at [[Eisenach]]. The number of the forces are unknown, and the leader of the Hungarian forces neither, although it is possible that it was the same commander who led the Hungarians to great victories in the battles of [[Battle of Pressburg|Pressburg]] in 907, [[Battle of Lechfeld (910)|Augsburg]] and [[Battle of Rednitz|Rednitz]] in 910, because of the categorical outcome of those battles (annihilation of the enemy forces together with their leaders). | + | |
| + | == Preludium == | ||
| + | |||
| + | <small><small><small><small>After the [[Battle of Pressburg]] ended with a catastrophical defeat of the attacking [[East Francia]]n armies led by [[Luitpold, Margrave of Bavaria|Luitpold prince of Bavaria]], the Hungarians following the nomadic warfare philosophy: destroy your enemy completely or force him to submit to you, first forced [[Arnulf of Bavaria|Arnulf]] prince of Bavaria to pay them tribute, and let their armies cross the lands of the duchy to attack other German and Christian territories,<ref name='Bóna'>{{cite book | last = Bóna | first = István | authorlink = | title = A magyarok és Európa a 9-10. században ''("The Hungarians and Europe in the 9th-10th centuries")'' | publisher = História - MTA Történettudományi Intézete | language=Hungarian | year = 2000 | location = Budapest | page = 36| url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 963-8312-67-X}}</ref> then started long range campaigns against the other East Francian duchies. [[File:Europe and the Hungarian campaign of 908.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|The Hungarian campaign of 908, and the battle of Eisenach]] The first of these was the attack of one Hungarian army to [[Duchy of Thuringia|Thuringia]] and [[Duchy of Saxony|Saxony]]. However this was not the first attack of the Hungarians in [[Saxony|Saxonia]], because two years earlier two Hungarian armies devastated one after another the duchy, being asked to come by the Slavic tribe of Dalamanci, which lived near [[Meissen]], which were threatened by the Saxons attacks and plunderings. In their campaign of 908, the Hungarians used again the Dalamancian territory to attack [[Thuringia]] and [[Saxony|Saxonia]], coming from [[Bohemia]] or [[Silesia]], where Slavic tribes lived, like they did in 906.<ref name="Bóna"/> The Thuringian and Saxonian forces, under the lead of [[Burchard, Duke of Thuringia]] met the Hungarians on the battlefield at [[Eisenach]]. The number of the forces are unknown, and the leader of the Hungarian forces neither, although it is possible that it was the same commander who led the Hungarians to great victories in the battles of [[Battle of Pressburg|Pressburg]] in 907, [[Battle of Lechfeld (910)|Augsburg]] and [[Battle of Rednitz|Rednitz]] in 910, because of the categorical outcome of those battles (annihilation of the enemy forces together with their leaders). </small></small></small></small> | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Bitwa == | ||
| − | + | <small><small><small><small>We do not know many details about this battle, but we know that it was a crushing defeat for the Germans, and the leader of the Christian army: [[Burchard, Duke of Thuringia]] was killed, along with [[Egino, Duke of Thuringia]] and [[Rudolf I, Bishop of Würzburg]], together with the most part of the German soldiers. The Hungarians then plundered [[Thuringia]] and [[Saxony|Saxonia]] as far north as [[Bremen]],<ref name='Tarján'>Tarján Tamás, [http://www.rubicon.hu/magyar/nyomtathato_verzio/908_augusztus_3_a_kalandozo_magyarok_gyozelme_eisenach_mellett// 908. augusztus 3. A kalandozó magyarok győzelme Eisenach mellett], Rubicon</ref> returning home with many spoils.<ref>Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991., p. 129</ref><ref name='Chronicon Hermanni Contracti'>Chronicon Hermanni Contracti: Ex Inedito Hucusque Codice Augiensi, Unacum Eius Vita Et Continuatione A Bertholdo eius discipulo scripta. Praemittuntur Varia Anecdota. Subiicitur Chronicon Petershusanum Ineditum. 1, Typis San-Blasianis, 1790, p. CVIII, Text from: ''Gesta Francorum excerpta, ex originali ampliata'', Latin text: "''908 [...] Ungari in Saxones. Et Burchardus dux Toringorum, et Reodulfus epsicopus, Eginoque aliique quamplurimi occisi sunt devastata terra.."''. English translation: "''908 [...] The Hungarians against the Saxons. And Burchard duke of the Thuringia, bishop Rudolf, and Egino were killed with many others and [the Hungarians] devastated the land"</ref> </small></small></small></small> | |
| − | We do not know many details about this battle, but we know that it was a crushing defeat for the Germans, and the leader of the Christian army: [[Burchard, Duke of Thuringia]] was killed, along with [[Egino, Duke of Thuringia]] and [[Rudolf I, Bishop of Würzburg]], together with the most part of the German soldiers. The Hungarians then plundered [[Thuringia]] and [[Saxony|Saxonia]] as far north as [[Bremen]],<ref name='Tarján'>Tarján Tamás, [http://www.rubicon.hu/magyar/nyomtathato_verzio/908_augusztus_3_a_kalandozo_magyarok_gyozelme_eisenach_mellett// 908. augusztus 3. A kalandozó magyarok győzelme Eisenach mellett], Rubicon</ref> returning home with many spoils.<ref>Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991., p. 129</ref><ref name='Chronicon Hermanni Contracti'>Chronicon Hermanni Contracti: Ex Inedito Hucusque Codice Augiensi, Unacum Eius Vita Et Continuatione A Bertholdo eius discipulo scripta. Praemittuntur Varia Anecdota. Subiicitur Chronicon Petershusanum Ineditum. 1, Typis San-Blasianis, 1790, p. CVIII, Text from: ''Gesta Francorum excerpta, ex originali ampliata'', Latin text: "''908 [...] Ungari in Saxones. Et Burchardus dux Toringorum, et Reodulfus epsicopus, Eginoque aliique quamplurimi occisi sunt devastata terra.."''. English translation: "''908 [...] The Hungarians against the Saxons. And Burchard duke of the Thuringia, bishop Rudolf, and Egino were killed with many others and [the Hungarians] devastated the land"</ref> | + | |
| + | == Następstwa == | ||
| − | |||
{{See also|Battle of Rednitz}} | {{See also|Battle of Rednitz}} | ||
{{See also|Battle of Lechfeld (910)}} | {{See also|Battle of Lechfeld (910)}} | ||
| − | After this victory the Hungarian campaigns against the German duchies continued until 910, the battles of [[Battle of Lechfeld (910)|Augsburg]] and [[Battle of Rednitz|Rednitz]], ended with disastrous German defeats, after which the German king [[Louis the Child]] concluded peace with the [[Principality of Hungary]], accepting to pay tribute to the latter, and recognizing the Hungarian territorial gains during the war.<ref name="Szabados"/> | + | |
| + | <small><small><small><small>After this victory the Hungarian campaigns against the German duchies continued until 910, the battles of [[Battle of Lechfeld (910)|Augsburg]] and [[Battle of Rednitz|Rednitz]], ended with disastrous German defeats, after which the German king [[Louis the Child]] concluded peace with the [[Principality of Hungary]], accepting to pay tribute to the latter, and recognizing the Hungarian territorial gains during the war.<ref name="Szabados"/> </small></small></small></small> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
Wersja z 10:37, 12 sie 2020
| Strona | Autorzy | Nota |
| [1] | [2] | Ten artykuł został przetłumaczony z Wikipedii w języku angielskim. Treści pochodzące z Wikipedii w języku angielskim są oparte na licencji Creative Commons 3.0 – Uznanie Autorstwa – Na tych samych warunkach. Kopiując je lub tłumacząc, należy podać ich autorów i udostępnić na tych samych warunkach. |
Szablon:Campaignbox Hungarian invasions of Europe The Battle of Eisenach in 908,[1] was a crushing victory by a Hungarian army over a German army composed of troops from Franconia, Saxony, and Thuringia. Spis treściŹródłaGesta Regum Francorum excerpta, ex originali ampliata. TłoThis battle is a part of the Hungarian - German war which started in 900, after the Hungarian conquest of Pannonia (Transdanubia), and lasted until 910, the battles of Augsburg and Rednitz, both ending in disastrous German defeats, which forced the German king Louis the Child, and the German duchies to accept the territorial losses, and pay tribute to the Hungarians.[2] PreludiumAfter the Battle of Pressburg ended with a catastrophical defeat of the attacking East Francian armies led by Luitpold prince of Bavaria, the Hungarians following the nomadic warfare philosophy: destroy your enemy completely or force him to submit to you, first forced Arnulf prince of Bavaria to pay them tribute, and let their armies cross the lands of the duchy to attack other German and Christian territories,[3] then started long range campaigns against the other East Francian duchies.Plik:Europe and the Hungarian campaign of 908.jpg The Hungarian campaign of 908, and the battle of Eisenach BitwaWe do not know many details about this battle, but we know that it was a crushing defeat for the Germans, and the leader of the Christian army: Burchard, Duke of Thuringia was killed, along with Egino, Duke of Thuringia and Rudolf I, Bishop of Würzburg, together with the most part of the German soldiers. The Hungarians then plundered Thuringia and Saxonia as far north as Bremen,[4] returning home with many spoils.[5][6] NastępstwaSzablon:See also Szablon:See also After this victory the Hungarian campaigns against the German duchies continued until 910, the battles of Augsburg and Rednitz, ended with disastrous German defeats, after which the German king Louis the Child concluded peace with the Principality of Hungary, accepting to pay tribute to the latter, and recognizing the Hungarian territorial gains during the war.[2] References
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||