The Treaty of à »urawno (; ; ) was signed on 17 October 1676 in the town of à »urawno (or ðzvança, as it was called during the Ottoman occupation of Podolia), in the aftermath of the Battle of à »urawno.
The treaty, signed by the PolishâÂÂLithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman Empire, ended the second phase of the PolishâÂÂOttoman War (1672âÂÂ76). It revised the 1672 Treaty of Buchach, and was more favorable to the Commonwealth, which no longer had to pay tribute, and regained about one third of the Ukrainian territories lost in the Buchach treaty. It also stipulated that the Lipka Tatars were to be given a free individual choice of whether they wanted to serve the Ottoman Empire or the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
In order to ratify the treaty, the Commonwealth sent to Istanbul Jan Gninski, the voivode of Chelmno Voivodeship. He stayed there in 1677âÂÂ1678, but in the meantime, Polish Sejm refused to ratify the document. Soon afterwards, the Great Turkish War broke out. After the Treaty of Karlowitz, Podolia returned to Poland.