Want this question answered?
The Ottoman Empire's military defeats in the Second Siege of Vienna and the naval Battle of Lepanto prevented further Ottoman expansion.
Siege of Vienna, Battle of Mohács, the Battle of Lepanto, the Battle of Sevastopol, and the Battle of Gallipoli.
The Ottoman Empire's failure to effect a successful Siege at Vienna. Particularly, the Polish army under Jan III Sobieski routed the Ottoman Encampment at Vienna and forced the Ottoman Empire to retreat. Previously, the Austrian and Hungarian armies had themselves been routed by the Ottomans at the Battle of Mohacs.
The Battle of Grocka took place on August 29, 1739. It was fought between the Austrian Empire and the Ottoman Empire during the Austro-Russian-Ottoman War of 1735-1739. The battle resulted in an Ottoman victory.
Battle of Vienna happened on 1683-09-12.
The Ottoman Empire's military defeats in the Second Siege of Vienna and the naval Battle of Lepanto prevented further Ottoman expansion.
Siege of Vienna, Battle of Mohács, the Battle of Lepanto, the Battle of Sevastopol, and the Battle of Gallipoli.
The Ottoman Empire's failure to effect a successful Siege at Vienna. Particularly, the Polish army under Jan III Sobieski routed the Ottoman Encampment at Vienna and forced the Ottoman Empire to retreat. Previously, the Austrian and Hungarian armies had themselves been routed by the Ottomans at the Battle of Mohacs.
The Battle of Grocka took place on August 29, 1739. It was fought between the Austrian Empire and the Ottoman Empire during the Austro-Russian-Ottoman War of 1735-1739. The battle resulted in an Ottoman victory.
Battle of Vienna happened on 1683-09-12.
The Ottoman empire.
Vienna is the capital city of Austria. During the medieval era of Europe, the Ottoman Empire was a very large and powerful country in the Middle East, and was difficult for the European countries to stop. In 1453 the Ottomans conquered the city of Constantinople and officially ended the Roman Empire. In less than 100 years, they had conquered the entire region known as the Balkans, right up to Vienna. So Vienna, in a way, marked the border between the Ottoman Empire and the rest of western Europe. In 1529 the Ottoman Empire made a major effort to conquer Vienna but failed, and historians generally consider that battle to have been the peak of their empire- they never again would be as powerful as they were up to that point. Again, in 1683, allied armies from Poland and Germany fought the Ottomans against near Vienna, defeating them and ushering in the long decline of the Ottoman Empire, which would ultimately end with the empire being dismantled after World War I. During World War I, Austria and the Ottoman Empire were allies as part of the "Central Powers" along with Germany and Bulgaria. They fought together against the Allies (England, France, Russia until 1917, USA starting in 1917, and so on).
They stopped it at the naval battle of Lepanto
The Ottoman Empire fought in many wars. You may have to be more specific (such as a time frame, opponents, battle-region, etc.).
After recapturing Yerevan (1635) and Baghdad (1639), the Ottoman Empire was marked by the "Koprulu Era" (1656–1703), whose military success led to control of Transylvania, Crete (1669), and southern Ukraine (1676). However this period of renewed assertiveness came to a calamitous end in 1683 when Koprulu's Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa Pasha led a huge army to attempt a second Ottoman siege of Vienna in the Great Turkish War of 1683–1687. When the final Turkish assault was fatally delayed, the Ottoman forces were swept away by allied Habsburg, German and Polish forces spearheaded by the Polish king Jan 111 Sobieski at the 1683 Battle of Vienna.
Ottoman Sultan SULEIMAN THE MAGNIFICENT led the Siege on Vienna in 1529. The Battle of Vienna in 1683 (also between the Ottomans and Habsburgs) occurred during the time of Sultan Mehmet IV, although it was his Grand Vizier, Kara Mustafa Pasha, who actually led the assault.
Timur the lame halted the expansion of the Ottoman Empire in 1402 when he crushed ottoman forces in the battle of Ankara