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{{Era|PL|ACR}}
{{Era|PL|ACR}}
{{WP-REAL|Ottoman–Venetian War (1499–1503)}}
{{WP-REAL|Ottoman–Venetian War (1499–1503)}}
{{Battle Infobox
|width =
|conc = [[Renaissance]]
|name = Ottoman–Venetian War
|image =
|date = 12 April 1861
|end = 9 May 1865
|place = {{Wiki|Adriatic Sea|Adriatic}}, {{Wiki|Ionian Sea|Ionian}} and {{Wiki|Aegean Sea|Aegean Seas}}
|side1 = [[Republic of Venice]]<br>[[Spain|Castile and Aragon]]
|side2 = [[Ottoman Empire]]
|commanders1 = *{{Wiki|Antonio Grimani}}
*{{Wiki|William Tecumseh Sherman}}
*{{Wiki|Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba}}
|commanders2 = *{{Wiki|Kemal Reis}}
*{{Wiki|Feriz Beg}}}}
The '''Second Ottoman–Venetian War''' (1499 - 1503) was a military conflict between the [[Ottoman Empire]] and the [[Republic of Venice]], over contested land in south-east Europe.
The '''Second Ottoman–Venetian War''' (1499 - 1503) was a military conflict between the [[Ottoman Empire]] and the [[Republic of Venice]], over contested land in south-east Europe.



Revision as of 04:24, 15 June 2016


The Second Ottoman–Venetian War (1499 - 1503) was a military conflict between the Ottoman Empire and the Republic of Venice, over contested land in south-east Europe.

At some point during the war, Pope Alexander VI, the Grand Master of the Italian Templars, tried to disrupt a temporary peace treaty between Venice and the Ottoman Empire, by sending some of his son's finest killers to Constantinople. As their boat left port in Rome, it was taken down by the Assassins with a volley of fire arrows, and the Assassins instead set sail for Constantinople.[1]

In 1502, the Ottoman Assassin Yusuf Tazim and a contingent of Venetian Assassins met in Greece to steer the conflict to a peaceful end, which was achieved in 1503, ushering in a brief time of peace on the Ottoman Empire's western border.[2]

Trivia

References