ich hab mal aus der Reihe "Osmanische Geschichtsschreiber" dieses gelesen:
Band 07: Molla und Diplomat.Der Bericht des Ebu Sehil Nu`man Efendi über die österreichisch-osmanische Grenzziehung nach dem Belgrader Frieden 1740/41. Graz Styria Verlag 1972.
sehr interessanter Bericht von der "Front", also der Militärgrenze, und viele Klischees entkräftend. Aber inwieweit der Krieg noch ne Rolle darin spielt, hab ich vergessen.
vielleicht steht hier mehr drin:
Nouzille, Jean: Histoire des frontières, L’Autriche et l’Empire ottoman (Paris: Berg International 1991). (Basiert auf Österreichisches Archiv Material)
und hier noch was mit Lit.Tipps (mehr in Bereich Osm. Reich):
Jonathan Dewald (Hrsg.)
EUROPE 1450 TO 1789. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE EARLY MODERN WORLD
THE OTTOMAN WAR WITH RUSSIA AND
AUSTRIA (1736–1739)
The Habsburg emperor Charles VI (ruled 1711–
1740) agreed with the tsar in 1734 to cooperate
secretly against the Ottomans. This agreement took
effect when the Ottomans, encouraged by the
French, declared war in May 1736 on both Austria
and Russia to protest the placement of a pro-Russian
candidate on the Polish throne. The Austrians
tried to retake territory that they had given up at
Passarowitz and captured Belgrade and Nisˇ. Over
the next two years, however, the Ottomans won a
series of victories against them, leading them to sign
the 1739 Treaty of Belgrade, which restored the
border agreed upon at Carlowitz. The Russians,
now deprived of the help of their Austrian allies, had
to end their own hostilities with the Ottomans and
soon signed a treaty that gave Azov back to the
Ottomans.
RUSSO-OTTOMAN WAR OF 1736–1739
The next Russo-Ottoman conflict broke out in
1736, when Russia determined to put a stop to
Crimean Tatar attacks on its territories and finally to
establish a presence on the Black Sea. After Russia
had resolved its then outstanding conflicts with
other European nations, the tsar denounced Ottoman
negligence of the Treaty of Pruth as a pretext
for war. Encouraged by the French, the Ottomans
declared war on both Russia and Austria in May
1736 to protest the placement of a pro-Russian
candidate on the Polish throne.
The first result was that the Russians, who were
better mobilized, invaded the Crimea and took
Azov within three months. However, they soon had
to withdraw because of poor logistics. Russia then
shifted focus to Moldavia and Walachia when its ally
Austria captured Nisˇ in 1737. Soon, though, the
Austrians were pushed back so decisively that they
were forced to sign a treaty with the Ottomans in
1739 at Belgrade, giving up most of the territory
they had been assigned at Passarowitz in 1718.
As this agreement was being signed, the Russians
were in the midst of trying to incite a Balkan
Christian revolt against the Ottomans, had advanced
deep into Moldavia, and were preparing to
conquer Walachia, but news of the treaty ended
these plans. With Austrian assistance gone, the Russians
also signed an agreement with the Ottomans
and relinquished Azov again.
B I B L I O G R A P H Y
Fisher, Alan. The Crimean Tatars. Stanford, 1978.
Goffman, Daniel. The Ottoman Empire and Early Modern
Europe. Cambridge, U.K., and New York, 2002.
Kurat, A. N., and Bromley, J. S. ‘‘The Retreat of the Turks,
1683–1730.’’ In A History of the Ottoman Empire to
1730, edited by M. A. Cook, pp. 178–219. Cambridge,
U.K., and New York, 1976.
Shaw, Stanford J. History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern
Turkey. Cambridge, U.K., and New York, 1976
und hier mal ne Karte vom Feldzug:
Изображение:Russian-turkey-war1735-1739.jpg — ’икипедиÑ