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In 1711 Peter the Great, the Tsar of Russia, led a large army of
veterans from Poltava and his other Great Northern War victories
into the Balkans. He aimed to humble the Ottomans in the same way
he had the Swedes a few years before. Victory would secure useful
allies in the Balkans, cement Russia's `Great Power' status and
offer Peter the opportunity to finally gain control over the
Swedish king, Charles XII, thus completing his victory over Sweden.
Yet within a few months, the `backward' Ottomans had forced the
Tsar and his Tsarina and their army of veterans into a humbling
surrender near the Pruth River. The war was the first time that
Russia was strong enough to confront the Ottomans independently
rather than as a member of an alliance. It marked an important
stage in Russia's development. However, it also showed the
significant military strength of the Ottoman Empire and the
limitations of Peter the Great's achievements. The war was of
significance to the allies of both the Russians and the Ottomans.
It was of course of an even greater importance to all those
directly affected by the war such as the Swedish, the Polish, and
the Cossacks, who had taken refuge from the reverses of the Great
Northern War in the Ottoman territory. It would also bring about
the defeat of the Moldavian and Walachian ambitions to shake off
the Ottoman overlordship, elevating Dimitrie Cantemir into the
position of a national hero celebrated to this day by the people of
Romania. The book looks at the causes of this little known war and
its course. Using contemporary and modern sources it examines in
detail the forces involved in the conflict, seeking to determine
their size, actual composition, and tactics, offering the first
realistic determination on the subject in English.
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