The Battle of Leskovac took place on September 24, 1454, during the Ottoman invasion of Serbia. Two Serbian armies were set up to defend the Despotate, the first commanded by Nikola Skobaljić in Dubočica, near Leskovac, and the second on the banks of the Sitnica River in Kosovo.

Battle of Leskovac

Serbian Despotate 1451, part of the Ottoman wars in Europe
DateSeptember 24, 1454
Location
near Leskovac, present-day Serbia
Result Serbian victory
Belligerents
Serbian Despotate Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Nikola Skobaljić Unknown
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

An initial invading Ottoman force heading from Sofia cut off Skobaljić's army from Serbia's north. Despot Đurađ Branković suggested that Skobaljić either surrender, or hide from the Ottoman army until John Hunyadi was able to reinforce or liberate the trapped half of the Serbian army, which would render the Ottomans to pillage and raze the rich southern part of the despotate with no resistance. The young voivode disobeyed the despot, and the invading Ottoman army coming from Macedonia was met by Skobaljić near Banja. The Serbs scored a decisive victory against the Ottoman army, employing guerrilla tactics.

Skobaljić continued his resistance against the Ottomans, operating in Southern Serbia and the Leskovac area, and scored another victory against the armies of the Sultan in the Battle of Kruševac with the help of John Hunyadi. The failure of his generals to beat the small army of Skobaljić rendered Mehmed II to deal with the Serbian voivode personally.[1] He reinforced his armies and finally confronted Skobaljić on November 16, 1454, defeating his army at Tripolje (near Novo Brdo), where Voivode Nikola was captured and executed via impalement.[2]

Notes

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  1. ^ Mihailović, Konstantin (2012). "Yirmi Yedinci Kısım: Mehmed Despotla Olan Antlaşmasına Nasıl İhanet Etti" [Chapter Twenty Seven: How Mehmed Betrayed His Treaty With The Despot]. In Kıcıroğlu, Nuri Fudayl; Ekim, Behiç Anıl (eds.). Bir Yeniçerinin Hatıraları [Memoirs of a Janissary] (PDF) (in Turkish). Ayrıntı Yayınları. pp. 85–86. ISBN 978-975-539-754-2.
  2. ^ Babinger, Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time, (Princeton University Press, 1978), 110.