7. François Grata, etched by Romeyn de Hooghe, Clades Turcarum ad Tyram Fluvium ubi ab invictissimo Joanne Sobieski… Castris atque arte Chocimo… Leiden, 1729. COLLBN Port 164 N 109
The treaty of Andrusovo (1667) partitioned Cossack Ukraine in a East-bank plus Kyiv part under Muscovite rule and a West-bank part under Poland. Thus Peter Doroshenko, who wanted to restore the Hetman state on both sides of the Dnieper, turned to the Ottoman Sultan. This led to the Battle of Khotyn where the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth clashed with the Ottoman Empire. Another version of this bird's eye view describes: "Exact plan of the fortifications of the castle of Khotyn on the Dniester, with the ports and the entrenchments of the Turk army which was defeated in 1673 by John Sobiesky, general commander of the Poles, later king of Poland ...." The Turkish forces had to withdraw from Poland but they retained for decades a large part of western Ukraine.