The battle ended in a tactical draw, however, after Augustus is compelled to lift the siege of Temesvár, the Sultan claimed victory and was thus able to achieve operational success. According to historian Tony Sharp it is hard to come up with any other result for the battle than a scoredraw, British historian
Robert William Seton-Watson called it an "indecisive battle", while according to the Encyclopædia Metropolitana, the encyclopedic work published from 1817 to 1845, "the Turks claimed the victory though no decided advantage accrued to either side". The imperial army took over the Bega and united with the separate corps at Titel. As early as the autumn of 1696, Augustus resigned from his position and went home to obtain the royal throne of Poland after the death of
John Sobieski. The same year,
Emperor Leopold appointed the brilliant young military strategist
Prince Eugene of Savoy, who had returned from the Rhine front, as the new commander-in-chief. On 11 September 1697, a greatly outnumbered Imperial army led by Prince Eugene faced the Turks at
Zenta on the
Tisza which resulted in the Ottoman Empire's greatest defeats. ==Notes==