
Deli-Marko (, "Wild Marko"; 1596–1619) or Marko Segedinac (, "Marko of Segedin"), was a Serb hajduk and military commander in Habsburg service, active during the Long Turkish War.
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Deli-Marko (, "Wild Marko"; 1596–1619) or Marko Segedinac (, "Marko of Segedin"), was a Serb hajduk and military commander in Habsburg service, active during the Long Turkish War.
He was mentioned for the first time after 1590, as a youngster commanding a band of Serb soldiers in the service of Sigismund Báthory, the Prince of Transylvania. Báthory's army which headed to liberate Timișoara included notable Serbs, such as Đorđe Rac, Deli-Marko, and Sava Temišvarac. The army managed to conquer the Serbian part of the town. These Serb leaders, including Starina Novak, fought as part of the Transylvanian Army, but carried out independent raids south of the Danube, into what is today Bulgaria and Serbia, even managing to raid as deep as Plovdiv and Adrianople. Deli-Marko's bold maneuvers in Ottoman territory enraged the Ottoman government. He raided merchant caravans and ships, and even went as far as across the Balkan Mountains and to the Maritsa river. The Serb commanders mainly operated outside Transylvania, with the support of the Emperor. The Serb soldiers and refugees were taken care of by the War Council in Vienna.
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