Treaty of Buczacz

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The Treaty of Buczacz was a preliminary peace treaty during the Ottoman-Polish War 1672–1676 , signed on October 18, 1672 in Buczacz (now Buschatsch , Ternopil Oblast , Ukraine ) between Poland-Lithuania on the one hand and the Ottoman Empire on the other has been. The Polish King Michael Wiśniowiecki renounced his rights in the Podolia Voivodeship with Kamieniec Podolski and in the Bracław Voivodeship with Bracław , while the southern part of the Kiev Voivodeship without Kiev , in Ukraine, went to the Zaporozhian Cossacks , as vassals of the Sublime Porte . The militarily weakened Poland also undertook to make tribute payments of 22,000 złoty annually, which, however, were never paid due to the resistance of the Polish Sejm and the outbreak of new armed conflicts under the grand hetman of the Polish crown, Jan Sobieski .

In the Peace of Karlowitz on January 26, 1699, Poland-Lithuania got back the territories conquered by the Ottomans.

See also