The Austro-Polish War or Polish-Austrian War was a part of the War of the Fifth Coalition in 1809. In this war, Polish forces of the Napoleon-allied Duchy of Warsaw and assisted by forces of the Kingdom of Saxony, fought against the Austrian Empire. In June, the Russian Empire joined against Austria. Polish troops withstood the Austrian attack on Warsaw defeating them at Raszyn, then abandoned Warsaw in order to reconquer parts of pre-partition Poland including Kraków and Lwów, forcing the Austrians to abandon Warsaw in futile pursuit.
Polish–Ottoman Wars can refer to one of the several conflicts between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire: Crusade of Varna (1443–1444)
This is a List of wars between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and Sweden. Broadly construed, the term refers to a series of wars between 1562 and 1814
The Polish–Russian War was a conflict fought between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Tsardom of Russia from 1609 to 1618. Russia had been experiencing
The Polish–Ottoman War (1620–1621) was a conflict between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire over the control of Moldavia. It ended
German submarine of the First or Second World War, or any Austro-Hungarian submarine of the First World War. (shipping) A narrow utility cart with tall
(historical) The son or male-line grandson of an emperor of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. World War I traditionally started with the assassination of Archduke
the First or Second World War, or any Austro-Hungarian submarine of the First World War) Declension of U-Boot U-Boot in Polish dictionaries at PWN U-Boot
and to the Porte in Constantinople, a military commander in the Austro-Turkish wars, a polyhistor and a learned man. 1997, Eckhart Gillen, quoting Henry
sufficient space for the co-existence and co-operation of the German and Austro-Hungarian national economies through the exchange of goods and through an
no one can know what will happen tomorrow. Just like the Ottoman and the Austro-Hungarian Empires it may tear itself apart or shrink in size. Those peoples
he read "The Use of Knowledge in Society," a now-famous essay written by Austro-libertarian economist and Nobel laureate Friedrich von Hayek. The essay