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Louis annexed Moldavia in 1352 and established a vassal principality there, before conquering Vidin in 1365.
From 1859 to 1877, Romania evolved from a personal union of two vassal principalities (Moldavia and Wallachia) to a full-fledged independent kingdom.
After defeating major Bangkok's vassal principalities along the route, Anouvong captured Korat, the main defensive stronghold of Siam in the northeast.
Their spiritual jurisdiction extended over the Kingdom of Imereti and its vassal principalities - Guria, Mingrelia, Svaneti, and Abkhazia.
Thoma Villarvattom was a Nasrani King of Villarvattom, a vassal principality of the Kingdom of Cochin.
In 1330, however, Imereti and its vassal principalities were reintegrated by the resurgent King of Georgia, George V "the Brilliant", to whom Dadiani offered his submission.
In the course of time, their territories were divided into a number of petty vassal principalities, chief among them Cannanore and Laccadives, Cotiote and Wynad, Cartinad (Badagara), Irvenaad, and Randaterra.
In the 17th century Kara Mustafa conquered more vast areas from the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary and its vassal Principality of Transylvania, but did not succeed in conquering Vienna in 1683.
Serbo-Turkish War was the struggle for independence of vassal principality Serbia, fought between the Ottoman Empire and the Principality of Serbia after uprising "Rifle of Nevesinje" in Herzegovina, which took place in 1875.
The Kingdom of Hungary's lance-armed, armour-clad hussar troops existed first in the armies of Hungary and her vassal principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia and later in the Habsburg armies until the early 17th century.
Fazıl Mustafa Pasha's victory at Belgrade was a major military achievement that gave the Ottomans hope that the military debacles of the 1680s-which had led to the loss of Hungary and Transylvania, an Ottoman vassal principality ruled by pro-Istanbul Hungarian princes- could be reversed.
From the middle of the 14th century, Bulgaria fell prey to the aspirations of the Angevin king Louis I of Hungary, who annexed Moldavia in 1352 and established a vassal principality there, before conquering Vidin in 1365, and taking Ivan Sratsimir and his family into captivity.
The state was formed in ca. 1091 out of a vassal principality of Duklja, a Serb state which had itself emerged from the early medieval Serbian principality that was centred in Raška until 960, when it was left in obscurity in sources after the Byzantine-Bulgarian wars.