The Battle of Maritsa, also known as the Battle of Chernomen (; ; "Second Battle of Maritsa"), was fought on 26 September 1371 near the Maritsa River, close to the village of Chernomen (present-day Ormenio, Greece). The conflict pitted the Ottoman forces under Lala à Âahin Pasha and Hacñ ðlbey against a coalition of Serbian lords, led by King Vukaà ¡in MrnjavÃÂeviàand his brother Despot Jovan Ugljeà ¡a who sought to halt the Ottomans' westward advance. The battle ended in a decisive Ottoman victory in which both Serbian commanders were killed, marking the decline of Serbian power in Macedonia and paving the way for Ottoman expansion into the central Balkans.
The Battle of Maritsa took place during the formative phase of the Ottoman Empire's expansion into the Balkans. In 1354, the Ottomans crossed into Europe and seized Gallipoli. From there, they advanced through Thrace, capturing Demotika, Philippopolis, and finally Adrianople by 1369. From the Ottoman perspective, these campaigns were regarded as part of a holy war for the spread of Islam and were accompanied by the settlement of Turkish nomads and the creation of frontier provinces under commanders such as Lala à Âahin Pasha. By 1370, most of Thrace, stretching from the Rhodope to the Balkan Mountains, was under Ottoman control, bringing them into direct contact with the lands of the Serbian lords.
The Serbian Empire had entered a period of decline following the death of Emperor Stefan Duà ¡an in 1355. His successor, Stefan Uroà ¡ V, was unable to maintain central authority, and the empire fragmented as its vassals asserted independence. Recognising the growing Turkish threat, Despot Ugljeà ¡a, the Serbian ruler of Serres, sought to form a coalition to drive them out of Europe, but his efforts to secure Byzantine and Bulgarian support failed. Most other Serbian nobles were preoccupied with internal rivalries, and only his brother Vukaà ¡in joined him.
In the summer of 1371, Vukaà ¡in marched to the Principality of Zeta to support his relative ÃÂuraàBalà ¡iàin a conflict with Nikola AltomanoviÃÂ. His army was in Skadar (modern Shkodër) preparing for action when Ugljeà ¡a summoned him. Believing Ottoman control in the region was weak while Murad I was in Asia Minor, Ugljeà ¡a saw an opportunity to launch a surprise attack on the Ottoman capital, Adrianople (modern Edirne). Vukaà ¡in left Skadar to join him, and the combined Serbian forces advanced east across the Thracian plain, meeting the Ottoman army near the Maritsa River at Chernomen (modern Ormenio). The Ottoman force was not a centrally led imperial army, as Sultan Murad was campaigning elsewhere, but a mixed provincial contingent under the command of Lala à Âahin Pasha and Hacñ ðlbey.
Estimates of the armies' sizes vary widely and are regarded as unreliable, as no contemporary source provides dependable figures for the battle. The 14th-century Serbian Monk Isaiah claimed 60,000 Serbs, a figure generally treated by modern historians as rhetorical exaggeration. In the 15th century, the Byzantine scholar Laonikos Chalkokondyles wrote of 800 Ottomans under a commander named "Süleyman", an anachronism likely derived from later Ottoman narrative traditions. Later Ottoman chroniclers similarly offered highly asymmetrical figures, often claiming 60,000 Serbian troops against 4,000 Ottomans.
John Fine argues that while the Christian coalition was probably large by contemporary standards, it was "nowhere near" Isaiah's total. Aleksandar à  opov regards medieval numerical claims as exaggerated, observing that in the late 14th century even armies of a few thousand men were considered large and that the forces at Maritsa most probably did not exceed ten thousand soldiers.
The battle took place near the Maritsa River, about 20 miles west of Adrianople. Ottoman ghazi warriors attacked the Serbian camp at night while most of the soldiers were asleep. The army was massacred along with its commanders. The engagement resulted in the annihilation of the Serbian forces, described by Fine as a crushing defeat attributed in later accounts to the Serbs being caught unprepared.
Donald Nicol characterises the engagement as a catastrophic blow for the Serbs and for the whole cause of eastern Christendom, citing Konstantin JireÃÂek, who wrote that both princes perished and that their men were slaughtered "in such numbers that the river ran red with their blood." Alexander Mikaberidze similarly concludes that, despite the Serbs' attempted surprise attack, superior Ottoman tactics produced a decisive victory. Turkish historian and Ottomanist Abdülkadir ÃÂzcan notes that Ottoman accounts claiming that à Âahin Paà Âa and Hacñ ðlbey defeated the Christian army by a sudden raid are questionable. Nicol also argues that "it is hard to maintain that this was a victory for the Ottomans", even though it proved disastrous for the Serbs.
The Battle of Maritsa marked a significant stage in the Ottoman expansion across the Balkans. With the forces of King Vukaà ¡in and Despot Ugljeà ¡a defeated and both leaders killed, Ottoman troops advanced into Macedonia and parts of central Serbia. According to historian Ion Grumeza, the Serbian Empire lost a large proportion of its ruling aristocracy as a result of the battle. In the aftermath, several regional lords, including Vukaà ¡in's son Prince Marko, became Ottoman vassals, obliged to provide tribute and military service.
The defeat deepened the political fragmentation of the Serbian lands. Emperor Uroà ¡ V died childless later that year, ending the Nemanjiàline, while nobles such as Prince Lazar, the Balà ¡iÃÂi and the BrankoviÃÂi established their own principalities. Ottoman expansion continued into Macedonia, Bulgaria and Greece, where some rulers also accepted vassalage. Over the following decades, fragmented resistance continued among regional rulers, culminating in Prince Lazar's stand against the Ottomans at the Battle of Kosovo in 1389.