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Battle of Lesnaya |
| Battle of Lesnaya | |||||||
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| Part of the Great Northern War | |||||||
Battle of Lesnaya by Jean-Marc Nattier, painted 1717 |
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| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders | |||||||
| General Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt | Tsar Peter the Great | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 8,300 engaged in the battle2 | 5,000 infantry, 7,000 cavalry engaged. | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| About 1,000 killed, about 4000 missing, loss of all 16 cannons and most of the supply wagons.3 | 1,111 killed; 2,856 wounded | ||||||
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The Battle of Lesnaya (Russian: Битва при Лесной, Swedish: Slaget vid Lesna), was one of the major battles of the Great Northern War. It took place on September 28, 1709 (O.S.) / September 29, 1709 (Swedish calendar) / October 9, 1709 (N.S.) between a Russian army of 12,000 men commanded by the Princes Repnin and Menshikov, and a Swedish force of about 12,000 men4, under the command of General Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt, at the village of Lesnaya, located close to the border between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and Russia (now the village of Lyasnaya, south-east of Mogilev in Belarus).
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Early Swedish victories at Copenhagen and at the Battle of Narva in 1700 temporarily took both Denmark and Russia out of the war. However, King Charles XII of Sweden proved unable to speedily end the war as it took eight years to deal with the remaining combatant Charles Augustus of Saxony-Poland. Meanwhile, Peter the Great rebuilt his army into modern form, concentrating on infantry trained to properly use linear tactics and modern firearms. He then achieved a stunning victory in Livonia, where he established the city of Saint Petersburg. As a reaction, Charles ordered an attack on the Russian heartland with an assault on Moscow from his campaign base in Poland.
Lewenhaupt, one of Sweden's foremost generals, was the commander of one of Sweden's best armies, based at the Baltic Sea port of Riga. In the summer of 1708, King Charles ordered him to march southward with most of his force and link up with the main army of 25,000 men, based in Poland. Lewenhaupt was to bring a fresh supply of ammunition and food to support the Swedish army in a proposed march on the Russian capital of Moscow.
However, Lewenhaupt found that gathering the needed supplies and preparing the army for an overland march took longer than expected, and on September 26, after waiting for Lewenhaupt for weeks, Charles XII abandoned his camps and decided to invade Ukraine, hoping to reach that rich granary before winter. At the time, Lewenhaupt was only about 80 miles from Charles' position.
Having observed these movements, Peter decided to attack Lewenhaupt's smaller force before Charles could support it. Menshikov moved quickly to intercept Lewenhaupt's force and prevented it from crossing the Sozh River to safety. As no Swedish army had yet been defeated by the Russians in eight years of war, Lewenhaupt was not impressed and moved to fight Peter's army.
The battle itself was closely contested and both forces suffered heavy casualties. Late in the day, a snow storm, rare for September even in Russia, set up. This disorganized the Swedish troops and Lewenhaupt ordered a retreat, while burning much-needed supply wagons behind them. Menshikov now ordered his cavalry to attack one more time, routing the Swedish train and enabling Kalmyks and Cossacks to finish the battle by taking hundreds of prisoners.
The Swedes lost 1,000 men dead and 4,000 missing in the battle. Russian casualties totaled 1,111 killed and 2,856 wounded, about one third of those engaged (Lewenhaupt, probably basing himself on the account of a Russian prisoner-of-war, in his diary claimed 16,0000 rather than 12,000 Russian combatants)
In his hurry to rejoin Charles' main army, Lewenhaupt decided to abandon the cannon, the cattle and most of the food, driving part of his soldiers to mutiny. After stealing the alcohol, the Swedish soldiers got drunk, and Lewenhaupt was forced to leave about 1,000 of them in the woods. By the time they finally reached Charles and the main force on October 19 (October 8 OS), no supplies and only 6,000 men remained, only increasing Charles' victuals problem.
The greatest significance of the Russian victory at Lesnaya was that it convinced the Russian army that they could defeat Sweden's best soldiers. This new-found confidence would help them greatly during the 1709 campaign in which they destroyed Charles' main Swedish army. Peter referred to Lesnaya as "the mother of the Battle of Poltava."
Sweden had its own calendar between 1700 and 1712, so in the Swedish calendar the battle of Lesnaya took place on September 29, 1708. According to the Julian Calendar still used in Russia, the battle took place on September 28, 1708.