Battle of Slobozia: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|1811 battle of the Russo-Turkish war}} |
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| image = Капкан при Слободзее.jpg |
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| caption = The capture of the Ottoman army at Slobozia |
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| date = 28 August – 14 November 1811 |
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| commander1 = [[Mikhail Kutuzov]]<br>[[Yevgeni Ivanovich Markov|Yevgeny Markov]] |
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| casualties1 = Unknown{{efn|Light?{{citation needed|date=February 2024}}}} |
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| casualties2 = 22,000–24,000 killed and died of starvation/disease{{sfnp|Kamenir}}<ref name=B>[[#Battle]]</ref><br>12,000 captured{{sfnp|Kamenir}}<ref name=B/> |
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|date= November 3-14, 1811 |
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|commander1=[[Mikhail Kutuzov]] |
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|casualties1= light |
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|casualties2= 20,000 killed and died from disease{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}<br> 12,000 captured}} |
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{{Campaignbox Russo-Ottoman Wars}} |
{{Campaignbox Russo-Ottoman Wars}} |
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{{Campaignbox Russo-Turkish War (1806-1812)}} |
{{Campaignbox Russo-Turkish War (1806-1812)}} |
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⚫ | The '''Battle of Slobozia''' was fought between [[Russian Empire|Russia]] and the [[Ottoman Empire]] as a part of the Napoleonic Wars during the [[Russo-Turkish War (1806–1812)|Russo-Turkish War of 1806–1812]]. The primary battle occurred on the left bank of the [[Danube River]] near the small village of Slobozia in [[Wallachia]]. Four miles to the southeast on the right bank of the Danube was the Ottoman fortress at [[Ruse, Bulgaria|Rusçuk]]. The Russian [[Investment (military)|investment]] of the Ottoman forces at Slobozia including the final battle lasted approximately two and half months from 28 August to 14 November 1811, ending when Russian Commander [[Mikhail Kutuzov]] ultimately accepted the surrender of the Ottoman forces commanded by [[Laz Aziz Ahmed Pasha|Ahmed Pasha]]. |
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⚫ | The Battle of Slobozia was fought between Russia and |
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== Background == |
== Background == |
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In 1810, [[Imperial Russian Army|Russian forces]] crossed the Danube and invaded [[Ottoman Bulgaria]]. Numerous Ottoman fortresses along the Danube were attacked and captured including those at [[Silistra]] and Rusçuk. In the spring of 1811, [[Alexander I of Russia|Tsar Alexander]] became concerned that war with Napoleon would be renewed and prepared for a conflict by moving five of the nine Russian infantry divisions in Wallachia to [[northern Europe]]. Tsar Alexander also put Mikhail Kutuzov in command of the Russian forces along the Danube and ordered him to end the war as soon as possible.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|North (1995–2020)}}{{sfnp|Williams|1907|pp=466–467}} |
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After the Russian victory, [[Mikhail Kutuzov]] ordered his forces to cross the Danube to [[Wallachia]]. This odd retreat made the Turks think that they won: a big party was held in Constantinople to celebrate the Turks' "victory". [[Tsar Alexander I]] became very angry and demanded an explanation. However, Kutuzov had a secret plan behind that strange act and he decided to keep quiet for a while. Seeing that the Russians had retreated, the Turks prepared to launch a new attack. Several months later 70,000 Turkish troops led by [[Laz Aziz Ahmed Pasha|Ahmet Pasha]] crossed the Danube river to assault the Russians, encamping across from Ruse, around [[Slobozia]]. |
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When Kutuzov reached Bucharest and took charge of Russia's armed forces in April, he immediately moved the bulk of his troops out of the Ottoman fortresses along the Danube and retreated back across the river into Wallachia. The fortress at Silistra was completely evacuated and the fortress at Rusçuk was vacated of everyone with the exception of a small covering force of 12 infantry battalions.{{sfnp|Kamenir}} |
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Well acquainted with his opponent at war, Kutuzov calculated that the Ottomans on the Lower Danube would direct their main force to cross the Middle Danube and to seize Bucharest. Therefore, destroying the fortresses of Silistria Nikopol, Kutuzov took off with his main forces to Ruse and Giurgiu. Zass in Little Wallachia and O'Rourke in Belgrade, covered his right wing, the left guarded by troops, located on the Lower Danube and Slobozia. Along with these preparations Kutuzov entered into peace talks with the minister. Emperor Alexander did not agree to reduce their former demands, and the Ottomans, for their part, too, were extremely uncompromising, the negotiations were suspended. Russian inaction convinced of their weakness in the Vizier, and so he decided to launch an offensive to Ruse, as they outnumbered them and moved to the Danube to beat Kutuzov. At the same time, another Ottoman army, Ismail Bey gathered in Sofia, was about to cross in Viddina to invade Little Wallachia, and connect the two armies of the commander at Bucharest. |
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== Prelude to the battle == |
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Induced by the retreat of the Russians, Ahmed Pasha set about that spring assembling an army of close to 60,000 men. In June, he then set out to attack Rusçuk. Before Ahmed Pasha arrived in Rusçuk, however, Kutuzov re-crossed the Danube with his army of 18,000 and took a position three miles south of town. When Ahmed Pasha attacked the Rusçuk fortress on 22 June, Kutuzov attacked the Turks from the rear and successfully drove them back. At the end of the day, the Russians suffered 800 casualties but maintained control of the fortress. The Turks suffered 1,500 casualties, but still held a substantial numerical superiority.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Williams|1907|p=467}} |
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During the days following the battle, the armies spent time consolidating their forces and recovering. Kutuzov moved his army into the Rusçuk fortress; Ahmed Pasha organized a fortified field camp. Then on 27 June, Kutuzov surprised his adversary by razing the works of the fortress and moving his entire army across the Danube back into Wallachia. After vacating the fortress and assuring that all his men were on the left bank of the Danube, Kutuzov destroyed all the nearby bridges. For the next two months the two armies entered into a prolonged standoff during which they called for reinforcements and built their armies for an expected battle. The only offensive maneuver during this time was a failed attempt by an independent Turkish detachment of 20,000 men commanded by Ismail Bey to cross the Danube and flank the Russian lines.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Williams|1907|p=467}}{{sfnp|Anderson|1952|p=470}} |
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== Battle == |
== Battle == |
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On 28 August, Ahmed Pasha finally initiated a direct confrontation with the Russians when he sent his forces to invade Wallachia by crossing the Danube two miles upstream from Rusçuk. Upon reaching the left bank of the Danube, the Turkish forces established a small [[bridgehead]] along the river in the vicinity of the village of Slobozia. Fortifications were begun and Russian defenders were fended off. Within a week, 36,000 men had crossed the Danube to the bridgehead where they were joined by Ahmed Pasha. The remainder of Ahmed Pasha's army, some 20,000 men, stayed on the right bank of Danube at their fortified camp near Rusçuk. Ismail Bey and his detachment were not a part of Ahmed Pasha's initiative and remained on the Bulgarian side of the Danube with a continuing objective being to cross the river and flank the Russians.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|p=276}} |
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The main force (50,000 personnel) garrisoned the west bank, facing the Russian forces. The remaining 20,000 garrisoned at the east bank, guarding the ammunition and provisions. On the night of 2 November 1811 a separate Russian cavalry detachment secretly crossed the Danube and assaulted the east-bank Turkish troops, slew 9,000 troops and captured the remaining ones with all the Turks' provisions. The Russian casualties were low, about 25 cavalrymen and nine [[Cossack]] troops killed in action. Right after that, all the Russian forces attacked and quickly encircled the main Turkish army on the left-bank. |
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Kutuzov reacted quickly to the Turkish offensive by moving his headquarters from the fortress at Giurgiu to Slobozia and surrounding the Turks with two divisions of Russian Moldavian troopers that had been returned to his command. Fortifications were built directly in front of the Turks and extended on the sides to the banks of the Danube. Immediately thereafter, both armies were content to remain inactive for a period of time knowing that Ismail Bey and his sizable force remained free in the field. During this time, Ahmed Pasha was able to suitably provision his forces on the bridgehead by ferrying food and supplies across the Danube from the Turkish camp near Rusçuk. While the two armies stood steadfast facing each other, Ismail Bey attempted to find a way to cross the Danube and relieve Ahmed Pasha's army by flanking the Russians. Two crossing attempts were made by Ismail Bey at Vidin upstream from Slobozia. In both cases, however, the Turks were repelled by Russian Lieutenant General Andrey Zass. After the second failed attempt, Ismail Bey's forces were so depleted that they were no longer a threat to Kutuzov's army at Slobozia.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|p=276}} |
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Kutuzov then received information that [[Laz Aziz Ahmed Pasha|Ahmet Pasha]] was trying to escape the encirclement himself. The Russian commander let Ahmet escape because he knew that, according to Turkish law, the encircled Grand Vizier could not take part in peace negotiations - and peace is what Kutuzov needed. After that, Kutuzov contacted Ahmet to congratulate him on his successful escape and offer peace negotiations. But the Grand Vizier still hoped for reinforcements and tried to procrastinate. In response, the Russians took all the surrounding forts and cut all the supply lines to the encircled Turks. |
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On the night of 1 October, Kutuzov took the action of secretly sending a detachment of 7,500 men commanded by Lieutenant General [[Yevgeni Ivanovich Markov|Yevgeny Markov]] across the Danube to the right bank. The next morning, Markov's forces surprised and overwhelmed the Turkish troops at their camp near Rusçuk. Even though the Ottoman forces outnumbered the Russians 3 to 1, the Turks panicked and scattered, suffering casualties of 2,000 men killed, wounded, or captured. With the loss of the forces protecting his back, Ahmed Pasha was now completely surrounded at the bridgehead.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|p=276}} |
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With all the supply lines being cut off, the encircled Turks were threatened by hunger and disease. Kutuzov proposed supplying the Turks with food and provisions to allow them to survive. Tsar Alexander I did not agree with Kutuzov's idea, but Kutuzov explained that by keeping the Turks alive, he actually was holding a larger number of hostages and that would force the Sultan to negotiate. The plan was successful and on 28 May 1812 the [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1812|Treaty of Bucharest]] was signed. |
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Kutuzov then moved quickly to end the battle by initiating an all-out artillery attack upon the Turkish bridgehead. The bombardment was directed onto the Turks from all directions including from a small mid-river island on which the Russians constructed a battery and from a flotilla of 14 ships on the Danube. As the days and weeks went on, Turkish casualties accelerated not only from the artillery attack but also from a lack of food and supplies. Food stores were exhausted and extreme measures were taken to try and feed the troops. Cold, wet weather and the lack of firewood helped to spread illness and disease. Many men lost their lives as they attempted to desert. Ahmed Pasha finally met with Kutuzov and sought an armistice.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|pp=276–277}} |
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On 25 October, a ceasefire was agreed upon and approximately three weeks later on 14 November 1811, Ahmed Pasha agreed to a truce and formally surrendered to Kutuzov. Of the 36,000 men that crossed the Danube to establish the bridgehead at Slobozia, it was estimated that 2,000 men successfully deserted; 12,000 men surrendered and were taken captive, and 22,000 lost their life to warfare, starvation, or disease.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|p=277}} |
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<gallery> |
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File:Окружение турок у Слободзее 1.jpg|Markov's crossing to the right bank and capturing the camp |
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File:Окружение турок у Слободзее 2.jpg|[[Encirclement]] of the Ottoman army on the left river bank |
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</gallery> |
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== Aftermath == |
== Aftermath == |
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The loss of such a magnitude as that suffered at Slobozia forced the Ottoman Empire to enter into a general peace treaty with the Russians. Although the Turks were in no position to make demands, [[Mahmud II|Sultan Mahmud]] was aware that Tsar Alexander desired to reach an agreement quickly and held out for better terms. Ultimately, Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1812|Treaty of Bucharest]] on 28 May 1812.{{sfnp|Anderson|1952|p=470}}{{sfnp|Aksan|2013|p=278}} |
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Per the terms of the treaty, Russia relinquished the conquests that it had made in Serbia and Bulgaria. Turkey retained control of Bulgaria, but lost nearly half of [[Moldavia]] when the Prut River was established as the new border between Moldavia and [[Bessarabia]]. Russia gained control over a new larger Bessarabia composed in part of territory formerly under the rule of Moldavia.{{sfnp|Kamenir}}{{sfnp|North (1995–2020)}} |
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Finally, five divisions were taken from Russia's Army in Wallachia and sent to Northern Europe to guard against an attack from Napoleon which ultimately occurred on 24 June 1812.{{sfnp|North (1995–2020)}} |
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== Citations == |
== Citations == |
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{{notelist}} |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
{{reflist|30em}} |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{Refbegin|indent=yes}} |
{{Refbegin|indent=yes}} |
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*{{cite book |last1=Anderson |first1=R.C. |title=Naval Wars in the |
*{{cite book |last1=Anderson |first1=R.C. |title=Naval Wars in the Levant 1559–1853 |date=1952 |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=Princeton |isbn=978-1578985388 |edition=1st}} |
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*{{cite book |last1= |
*{{cite book |last1=Aksan |first1=Virginia H. |title=Ottoman Wars, 1700-1870: An Empire Besieged |date=2013 |publisher=Routledge |location=Abingdon, Oxfordshire |isbn=978-0-582-30807-7}} |
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*{{cite web |last1=Kamenir |first1=Victor |title=Sideshow on the Danube |url=https://www.historynet.com/sideshow-on-the-danube.htm |website=HistoryNet |publisher=Historynet LLC |access-date=25 February 2021}} |
*{{cite web |last1=Kamenir |first1=Victor |title=Sideshow on the Danube |url=https://www.historynet.com/sideshow-on-the-danube.htm |website=HistoryNet |publisher=Historynet LLC |access-date=25 February 2021 }} |
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*{{cite web |last1=North |first1=Jonathan |title=Attack along the Danube: The Russo-Turkish War of 1810 |url=https://www.napoleon-series.org/military-info/battles/c_russturk.html |website=The Napoleon Series |publisher=The Waterloo Association |access-date=25 February 2021 |date= |
*{{cite web |last1=North |first1=Jonathan |title=Attack along the Danube: The Russo-Turkish War of 1810 |url=https://www.napoleon-series.org/military-info/battles/c_russturk.html |website=The Napoleon Series |publisher=The Waterloo Association |access-date=25 February 2021 |date=1995–2020 |ref={{sfnref|North (1995–2020)}}}} |
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*{{cite journal |title=Slobodze Battle 1811 |journal=Great Russian Encyclopedia | |
*{{cite journal |title=Slobodze Battle 1811 |journal=Great Russian Encyclopedia |year=2017 |url=https://old.bigenc.ru/military_science/text/3625706 |access-date=27 February 2021 |language=Russian |ref={{sfnref|Great Russian Encyclopedia|2017}} |archive-date=28 October 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211028105922/https://bigenc.ru/military_science/text/3625706 |url-status=dead }} |
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*{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Henry Smith |title=The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise and Development of Nations as Recorded by Over Two Thousand of the Great Writers of All Ages |date=1907 |publisher=The History Association |location=London |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MUgJAQAAIAAJ&q=Prince+Prosorovski&pg=PA466}} |
*{{cite book |last1=Williams |first1=Henry Smith |title=The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise and Development of Nations as Recorded by Over Two Thousand of the Great Writers of All Ages |date=1907 |publisher=The History Association |location=London |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MUgJAQAAIAAJ&q=Prince+Prosorovski&pg=PA466}} |
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{{refend}} |
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== General References == |
== General References == |
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*Petrov, А.N. ''The War between Russia and Turkey, 1806—1812'', vol. |
*Petrov, А.N. ''The War between Russia and Turkey, 1806—1812'', vol. 1–3. SPb, 1885—87. |
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{{Ottoman battles}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Sultanabad}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Sultanabad}} |
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[[Category:Battles involving |
[[Category:Battles involving the Russian Empire]] |
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[[Category:Battles involving the Ottoman Empire]] |
[[Category:Battles involving the Ottoman Empire]] |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1812]] |
[[Category:Conflicts in 1812]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Battles in 1813]] |
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[[Category:1812 in the Ottoman Empire]] |
[[Category:1812 in the Ottoman Empire]] |
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[[Category:1813 in the Ottoman Empire]] |
[[Category:1813 in the Ottoman Empire]] |
Latest revision as of 16:23, 2 June 2024
Battle of Slobozia | |||||||
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Part of the Russo-Turkish War (1806–1812) | |||||||
The capture of the Ottoman army at Slobozia | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Russian Empire | Ottoman Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Mikhail Kutuzov Yevgeny Markov |
Ahmed Pasha Ismail Bey | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
37,000 soldiers[1] | 56,000 soldiers[1] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Unknown[a] |
22,000–24,000 killed and died of starvation/disease[1][2] 12,000 captured[1][2] |
The Battle of Slobozia was fought between Russia and the Ottoman Empire as a part of the Napoleonic Wars during the Russo-Turkish War of 1806–1812. The primary battle occurred on the left bank of the Danube River near the small village of Slobozia in Wallachia. Four miles to the southeast on the right bank of the Danube was the Ottoman fortress at Rusçuk. The Russian investment of the Ottoman forces at Slobozia including the final battle lasted approximately two and half months from 28 August to 14 November 1811, ending when Russian Commander Mikhail Kutuzov ultimately accepted the surrender of the Ottoman forces commanded by Ahmed Pasha.
Background
[edit]In 1810, Russian forces crossed the Danube and invaded Ottoman Bulgaria. Numerous Ottoman fortresses along the Danube were attacked and captured including those at Silistra and Rusçuk. In the spring of 1811, Tsar Alexander became concerned that war with Napoleon would be renewed and prepared for a conflict by moving five of the nine Russian infantry divisions in Wallachia to northern Europe. Tsar Alexander also put Mikhail Kutuzov in command of the Russian forces along the Danube and ordered him to end the war as soon as possible.[1][3][4]
When Kutuzov reached Bucharest and took charge of Russia's armed forces in April, he immediately moved the bulk of his troops out of the Ottoman fortresses along the Danube and retreated back across the river into Wallachia. The fortress at Silistra was completely evacuated and the fortress at Rusçuk was vacated of everyone with the exception of a small covering force of 12 infantry battalions.[1]
Prelude to the battle
[edit]Induced by the retreat of the Russians, Ahmed Pasha set about that spring assembling an army of close to 60,000 men. In June, he then set out to attack Rusçuk. Before Ahmed Pasha arrived in Rusçuk, however, Kutuzov re-crossed the Danube with his army of 18,000 and took a position three miles south of town. When Ahmed Pasha attacked the Rusçuk fortress on 22 June, Kutuzov attacked the Turks from the rear and successfully drove them back. At the end of the day, the Russians suffered 800 casualties but maintained control of the fortress. The Turks suffered 1,500 casualties, but still held a substantial numerical superiority.[1][5]
During the days following the battle, the armies spent time consolidating their forces and recovering. Kutuzov moved his army into the Rusçuk fortress; Ahmed Pasha organized a fortified field camp. Then on 27 June, Kutuzov surprised his adversary by razing the works of the fortress and moving his entire army across the Danube back into Wallachia. After vacating the fortress and assuring that all his men were on the left bank of the Danube, Kutuzov destroyed all the nearby bridges. For the next two months the two armies entered into a prolonged standoff during which they called for reinforcements and built their armies for an expected battle. The only offensive maneuver during this time was a failed attempt by an independent Turkish detachment of 20,000 men commanded by Ismail Bey to cross the Danube and flank the Russian lines.[1][5][6]
Battle
[edit]On 28 August, Ahmed Pasha finally initiated a direct confrontation with the Russians when he sent his forces to invade Wallachia by crossing the Danube two miles upstream from Rusçuk. Upon reaching the left bank of the Danube, the Turkish forces established a small bridgehead along the river in the vicinity of the village of Slobozia. Fortifications were begun and Russian defenders were fended off. Within a week, 36,000 men had crossed the Danube to the bridgehead where they were joined by Ahmed Pasha. The remainder of Ahmed Pasha's army, some 20,000 men, stayed on the right bank of Danube at their fortified camp near Rusçuk. Ismail Bey and his detachment were not a part of Ahmed Pasha's initiative and remained on the Bulgarian side of the Danube with a continuing objective being to cross the river and flank the Russians.[1][7][8]
Kutuzov reacted quickly to the Turkish offensive by moving his headquarters from the fortress at Giurgiu to Slobozia and surrounding the Turks with two divisions of Russian Moldavian troopers that had been returned to his command. Fortifications were built directly in front of the Turks and extended on the sides to the banks of the Danube. Immediately thereafter, both armies were content to remain inactive for a period of time knowing that Ismail Bey and his sizable force remained free in the field. During this time, Ahmed Pasha was able to suitably provision his forces on the bridgehead by ferrying food and supplies across the Danube from the Turkish camp near Rusçuk. While the two armies stood steadfast facing each other, Ismail Bey attempted to find a way to cross the Danube and relieve Ahmed Pasha's army by flanking the Russians. Two crossing attempts were made by Ismail Bey at Vidin upstream from Slobozia. In both cases, however, the Turks were repelled by Russian Lieutenant General Andrey Zass. After the second failed attempt, Ismail Bey's forces were so depleted that they were no longer a threat to Kutuzov's army at Slobozia.[1][7][8]
On the night of 1 October, Kutuzov took the action of secretly sending a detachment of 7,500 men commanded by Lieutenant General Yevgeny Markov across the Danube to the right bank. The next morning, Markov's forces surprised and overwhelmed the Turkish troops at their camp near Rusçuk. Even though the Ottoman forces outnumbered the Russians 3 to 1, the Turks panicked and scattered, suffering casualties of 2,000 men killed, wounded, or captured. With the loss of the forces protecting his back, Ahmed Pasha was now completely surrounded at the bridgehead.[1][7][8]
Kutuzov then moved quickly to end the battle by initiating an all-out artillery attack upon the Turkish bridgehead. The bombardment was directed onto the Turks from all directions including from a small mid-river island on which the Russians constructed a battery and from a flotilla of 14 ships on the Danube. As the days and weeks went on, Turkish casualties accelerated not only from the artillery attack but also from a lack of food and supplies. Food stores were exhausted and extreme measures were taken to try and feed the troops. Cold, wet weather and the lack of firewood helped to spread illness and disease. Many men lost their lives as they attempted to desert. Ahmed Pasha finally met with Kutuzov and sought an armistice.[1][7][9]
On 25 October, a ceasefire was agreed upon and approximately three weeks later on 14 November 1811, Ahmed Pasha agreed to a truce and formally surrendered to Kutuzov. Of the 36,000 men that crossed the Danube to establish the bridgehead at Slobozia, it was estimated that 2,000 men successfully deserted; 12,000 men surrendered and were taken captive, and 22,000 lost their life to warfare, starvation, or disease.[1][7][10]
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Markov's crossing to the right bank and capturing the camp
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Encirclement of the Ottoman army on the left river bank
Aftermath
[edit]The loss of such a magnitude as that suffered at Slobozia forced the Ottoman Empire to enter into a general peace treaty with the Russians. Although the Turks were in no position to make demands, Sultan Mahmud was aware that Tsar Alexander desired to reach an agreement quickly and held out for better terms. Ultimately, Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Bucharest on 28 May 1812.[6][11]
Per the terms of the treaty, Russia relinquished the conquests that it had made in Serbia and Bulgaria. Turkey retained control of Bulgaria, but lost nearly half of Moldavia when the Prut River was established as the new border between Moldavia and Bessarabia. Russia gained control over a new larger Bessarabia composed in part of territory formerly under the rule of Moldavia.[1][3]
Finally, five divisions were taken from Russia's Army in Wallachia and sent to Northern Europe to guard against an attack from Napoleon which ultimately occurred on 24 June 1812.[3]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Light?[citation needed]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Kamenir.
- ^ a b #Battle
- ^ a b c North (1995–2020).
- ^ Williams (1907), pp. 466–467.
- ^ a b Williams (1907), p. 467.
- ^ a b Anderson (1952), p. 470.
- ^ a b c d e Great Russian Encyclopedia (2017).
- ^ a b c Aksan (2013), p. 276.
- ^ Aksan (2013), pp. 276–277.
- ^ Aksan (2013), p. 277.
- ^ Aksan (2013), p. 278.
References
[edit]- Anderson, R.C. (1952). Naval Wars in the Levant 1559–1853 (1st ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1578985388.
- Aksan, Virginia H. (2013). Ottoman Wars, 1700-1870: An Empire Besieged. Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-582-30807-7.
- Kamenir, Victor. "Sideshow on the Danube". HistoryNet. Historynet LLC. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
- North, Jonathan (1995–2020). "Attack along the Danube: The Russo-Turkish War of 1810". The Napoleon Series. The Waterloo Association. Retrieved 25 February 2021.
- "Slobodze Battle 1811". Great Russian Encyclopedia (in Russian). 2017. Archived from the original on 28 October 2021. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
- Williams, Henry Smith (1907). The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise and Development of Nations as Recorded by Over Two Thousand of the Great Writers of All Ages. London: The History Association.
General References
[edit]- Petrov, А.N. The War between Russia and Turkey, 1806—1812, vol. 1–3. SPb, 1885—87.