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{{Short description|Conflict between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and Russia}} | |||
The '''Smolensk War''' (Polish-Muscovy War of 1632-1634) was a conflict fought in the years ]-] between the ] and ]. After recovering to a certain extent from the ], Muscovy, expecting the Commonwealth to be weakened by the death of king ], launched the war in an attempt to recover the key city of ] which it lost to the Commonwealth in ], during the ] wars. Smolensk was often contested and changed hands many times in the course of the 15th to 17th centuries. | |||
{{Infobox military conflict | |||
| partof = ] | |||
| image = SmoleńskieIRP.JPG | |||
| image_size = 300px | |||
| caption = ], showing in red the disputed territory. | |||
| conflict = Smolensk War | |||
| date = Autumn 1632 – Spring 1634 | |||
| place = ], ] | |||
| result = Polish–Lithuanian victory<ref>{{Cite book |last=Stevens |first=Carol |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Russia_s_Wars_of_Emergence_1460_1730/Zf_cAAAAQBAJ?hl=pl&gbpv=1&dq=smolensk+war&pg=PA128&printsec=frontcover |title=Russia's Wars of Emergence 1460-1730 |date=2013-09-13 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-89330-1 |page=131 |language=en |quote=Unable to extricate his men, Shein surrendered to the Polish commander early in 1634. A variety of reasons have been offered for '''Muscovy's ignominious and perplexing defeat at Smolensk.'''}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Ostrowski |first=Donald |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Russia_in_the_Early_Modern_World/u_pVEAAAQBAJ?hl=pl&gbpv=1&dq=smolensk+war&pg=PA175&printsec=frontcover |title=Russia in the Early Modern World: The Continuity of Change |date=2022-01-25 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-7936-3421-4 |page=175 |language=en |quote='''The siege failed''' and the subsequent Treaty of Polianovka, which ended the Smolensk War in 1634 '''This defeat''' ended Muscovy's initial attempt to convert to Euro-Ottoman-style strategy.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=Legal foundations of administration in Belarusian lands in the 14th-18th centuries (overview) | website=Archives of Belarus | date=2024-11-26 | url=https://archives.gov.by/en/welcome-to-the-archives-of-belarus-website/subject-guides-to-archival-records/historical-events/archival-documents-and-materials-4/legal-foundations-of-administration-in-belarusian-lands-in-the-14th-18th-centuries-overview | ref={{sfnref|Archives of Belarus|2024}} | access-date=2024-11-26 |quote=Russia began the so-called Smolensk War of 1632-1634, '''which ended in her defeat.'''}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Kupisz |first=Dariusz |title=Smoleńsk 1632-1634 |date=2001 |publisher="Bellona" |isbn=978-83-11-09282-2 |series=Historyczne Bitwy |location=Warszawa |quote='''Zwycięstwo nad Moskwą''', przynoszące państwu korzystny traktat pokojowy, opłacono więc stosunkowo niewielkimi kosztami.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-06-17 |title=500 lat wojen Polski z Rosją. Od XV w. nie było stulecia, by Polska nie toczyła wojny z Rosją {{!}} HISTORIA.org.pl - historia, kultura, muzea, matura, rekonstrukcje i recenzje historyczne |url=https://historia.org.pl/2023/06/17/500-lat-wojen-polski-z-rosja-od-xv-w-nie-bylo-stulecia-by-polska-nie-toczyla-wojny-z-rosja/ |access-date=2025-01-10 |website=HISTORIA.org.pl |language=pl-PL}}</ref><br>(]) | |||
| combatant1 = {{flag|Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth}}<br /> {{flagicon image|Flag of the Zaporizhian Sich.svg}} ] | |||
| combatant2 = {{flag|Tsardom of Russia}} | |||
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth}} ] <br />{{flagicon|Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth}} ] | |||
| commander2 = {{Flagicon image|Flag of Oryol ship (variant).svg}} ] | |||
| strength1 = 30,000–35,000<br>3,120 hussars<br>260 Cossack cavalry<br>1,700 Western cavalry<br>10,500 Western infantry<br>1,040 dragoons<br>2,200 Polish infantry<br>Few thousand of Zaporozhian Cossacks infantry | |||
| strength2 = 23,961<ref name="Menshikov"/> | |||
| casualties1 = Unknown | |||
| casualties2 = Unknown | |||
| territory = * Russian failure to retake Smolensk. | |||
* Russia receives ]{{Efn|To encourage Russia to join the anti-Swedish alliance}} | |||
}} | |||
{{Polish-Russian Wars}} | |||
A large, carefully prepared Russian army of 34,500 men under ] reached Smolensk in October of ] and began a siege. The city held out for the following year while the Commonwealth, under its newly elected king ], organised a relief force. This force, led personally by the king, finally arrived near Smolensk in September of ] and began immediate operations against the besieging forces. | |||
{{Campaignbox Smolensk War}} | |||
The '''Smolensk War''' (1632–1634) was a conflict fought between the ] and ]. | |||
In a series of fierce combats, the Muscovites were first forced to break their siege of Smolensk by ], and then by the end the month were themselves surrounded by ]. The surrounded Muscovites waited for relief but none arrived. Finally they surrendered on ], ]. The war ended soon afterwards with the ] signed in May of ]. The peace treaty confirmed the ], with Russia paying a large ] (20,000 ]s in gold), while Wladislaus IV agreed to surrender his claim to the Muscovite throne and return the royal insignia to Muscovy. | |||
Hostilities began in October 1632 when Russian forces tried to capture the city of ]. Small military engagements produced mixed results for both sides, but the surrender of the main Russian force in February 1634 led to the ]. Russia accepted Polish–Lithuanian control over the Smolensk region, which lasted for another 20 years. | |||
The treaty ended the almost unbroken series of wars that the Commonwealth waged with its neighbours since the start of the ]. The 14 years of peace that followed were arguably the most prosperous in Commonwealth's history. | |||
== |
==Background== | ||
In 1632, ], the ] and ], died. Although ] quickly ] Sigismund's son ] as their new ruler, Poland's neighbours, expecting delays in the electoral process, tested the Commonwealth's perceived weakness.<ref name="Gierowski"/> ] ] sent envoys to Russia and the ] to propose an alliance and war against the Commonwealth.<ref name="Gierowski"/> | |||
* ] (1618-1648) | |||
* ] | |||
The Commonwealth was not ready for war. In 1631, the ] numbered barely 3,000 men; the Smolensk garrison was about 500 strong, and most garrisons in the border area were composed not of regular or mercenary soldiers but of 100 to 200 local volunteers.<ref name="Nag6-7"/> Aware that Russia was preparing for war, in the spring of 1632 the ] (Polish–Lithuanian parliament) increased the army by recruiting an additional 4,500 men; by mid-1632 the deputy ] (''podwojewoda'') of ], {{ill|Samuel Drucki Sokoliński|pl|Samuel Stanisław Drucki Sokoliński}}, had about 500 volunteers from ] and 2,500 regular army soldiers and ].<ref name="Nag6-7"/> In May the ] agreed to increase the size of the army, but ] ] objected, arguing that the current forces were enough and that war was not likely. Nonetheless the ] ] recruited an additional 2,000 soldiers.<ref name="Nag8-9"/> | |||
== External links == | |||
* | |||
Russia, having recovered to a certain extent from the ], agreed with the assessment that the Commonwealth would be weakened by the death of its king, and unilaterally attacked without waiting for the Swedes and the Ottomans. Russia's aim was to gain control of Smolensk, which it had ceded to the Commonwealth in 1618 at the ], ending the ].<ref name="Gierowski"/> Smolensk was the capital of the Commonwealth's ], but it had often been contested, and it changed hands many times during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries (from the days of the ]). A major supporter of the war was the Tsar's father, ],<ref name="Rick"/> who represented the anti-Polish camp at court.<ref name="Hellie"/> Inspired by the ]'s (Russian parliament's) call for vengeance and reclamation of lost lands, the Russian army sallied west.<ref name="Davies"/> | |||
{{Poland-hist-stub}} | |||
{{Lithuania-stub}} | |||
{{Russia-hist-stub}} | |||
{{Mil-hist-stub}} | |||
==Hostilities== | |||
] | |||
The Russian army that crossed the Lithuanian border in early October 1632 had been carefully prepared and was under the experienced command of ], who had previously defended Smolensk against the Poles during the ]. Several towns and castles fell as the Russians advanced, and on 28 October 1632 (the same day that the historic town of ] was taken),<ref name="Nag8-9"/> Shein moved to begin the ].<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="Nag8-9"/><ref name="Rick"/><ref name="Jasienica"/> | |||
Former Polish estimates of the size of the Russian forces varied from 25,000<ref name="Gierowski"/> through 30,000<ref name="RzeczMW"/> to 34,500,<ref name="Rick"/><ref name="Black"/> with 160 artillery pieces.<ref name="Gierowski"/> Recent research on 17th-century Russian archive documents showed that the size of the Russian army was 23,961.<ref name="Menshikov"/> Compared to former Russian armies, Shein's army was significantly modernised.<ref name="Black"/> Dissatisfied with their traditional formations of ]-equipped infantry (the '']''), the Russians looked to foreign officers to update the equipment and training of their troops based on the Western European model of ], ]s, and ]s.<ref name="Black"/> Eight such regiments, totaling 14,000 to 17,000 men, comprised part of Shein's army.<ref name="Black"/> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===Siege of Smolensk=== | |||
] | |||
{{main|Siege of Smolensk (1632–1633)}} | |||
] in Smolensk were composed of the Smolensk garrison (about 1,600 men with 170 artillery pieces under the command of the ], ]),<ref name="Gierowski"/> strengthened by the local nobility,<ref name="Gierowski"/> which formed a ] force of about 1,500 strong. The city's fortifications had also recently been improved<ref name="Gierowski"/> with Italian-style ].<ref name="Black"/> | |||
Shein constructed ] around the fortress.<ref name="Gierowski"/> Using tunnels and mines, his forces damaged a long section of the city wall and one of its towers.<ref name="Jasienica"/> Russian heavy artillery, mostly of Western manufacture,<ref name="Jasienica"/> reached Smolensk in December 1632 with even heavier guns arriving the following March.<ref name="Rick"/> After a preliminary artillery bombardment, Shein ordered an assault, which was repulsed by the Polish defenders.<ref name="Gierowski"/> Nonetheless the siege was progressing; Smolensk's fortifications were being eroded, and the defenders were suffering heavy casualties and running out of supplies.<ref name="Nag12-13"/> By June 1633, some soldiers started to desert, and others talked of surrender.<ref name="Nag18"/> | |||
Despite these difficulties, the city, commanded by Deputy Voivode ],<ref name="Nag11-12"/> held out throughout 1633 while the Commonwealth, under its newly elected King ], organised a relief force. The ] had been informed about the Russian invasion by 30 October 1632,<ref name="ASR"/> and, starting in November, had discussed the possibility of relief. However, the process was delayed until the spring of 1633, when the Sejm officially sanctioned a declaration of war and authorised a large payment (6.5 million ]s, the highest tax contribution during Władysław's entire reign) for the raising of a suitable force.<ref name="Bonney"/> The intended relief force would have an effective strength of about 21,500 men and would include: 24 ]s of ] (~3,200 horses), 27 chorągiews of light cavalry—also known as Cossack cavalry but not composed of ]s—(3,600 horses), 10 squadrons of ]s (~1,700 horses), 7 Lithuanian ] regiments (~780 horses), 7 large regiments of ] (~2,250 horses), and ~20 regiments of infantry (~12,000 men).<ref name="Nag12-13"/> Over 10,000 of the infantry would be organized based on the Western model, previously not common in Commonwealth armies.<ref name="RzeczMW"/> | |||
Meanwhile, ] and ], ], and Voivode Gosiewski established a camp about {{convert|30|km|mi|1}} from Smolensk, moving from ] to Bajów and later, Krasne. By February 1633, they had amassed around 4,500 soldiers, including over 2,000 infantry, and were engaged in raiding the rear areas of the Russian besiegers to disrupt their ].<ref name="Nag11-12"/> Hetman Radziwiłł also managed to break through the Russian lines on several occasions, bringing about 1,000 soldiers and supplies into Smolensk to reinforce the fortress and raising the defenders' morale.<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="Jasienica"/><ref name="Nag12-13"/> | |||
By the summer of 1633, the relief force, led personally by the king and numbering about 25,000<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="RzeczMW"/> (20,000 in the Polish–Lithuanian army, according to ]), arrived near Smolensk; they reached Orsha on 17 August 1633.<ref name="Nag20"/> By the first days of September, the main body of the relief forces approaching Smolensk numbered around 14,000. The Russian army, recently reinforced, numbered 25,000.<ref name="Nag21"/> Only when Cossack reinforcements, led by ] and numbering between 10,000 and 20,000, arrived on 17 September would the Commonwealth army gain numerical superiority.<ref name="Jasienica"/><ref name="Nag21"/><ref name="Nag21-23"/> The Cossacks under Orendarenko and ] raided the Russian rear lines, freeing the Polish–Lithuanian units under Radziwiłł and Gosiewski to join the effort to break the siege.<ref name="Nag24"/> | |||
] | |||
Władysław's brother, ], commanded one of the regiments in the relief army.<ref name="RzeczMW"/> Another notable commander was the ], ].<ref name="Nag31-33"/> King Władysław IV, a great supporter of the modernization of the Commonwealth army, proved to be a good tactician, and his innovations in the use of artillery and fortifications based on Western ideas greatly contributed to the eventual Polish–Lithuanian success.<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="RzeczMW"/> He had replaced the old ] with ], and standardized the Commonwealth artillery (introducing 3- to 6-] regimental guns), both to great effect.<ref name="Black"/> | |||
Commonwealth's cavalry, including the ], significantly restricted Russian mobility, forcing them to stay in their trenches.<ref name="Rick"/> In a series of fierce engagements, Commonwealth forces gradually overran the Russian field fortifications, and the siege reached its final stages by late September.<ref name="RzeczMW"/> On 28 September 1633, Commonwealth forces took the main Russian supply points, and by 4 October the siege had broken.<ref name="Nag26-27"/> | |||
Shein's army retreated to its main camp, which was in turn surrounded by Commonwealth forces in mid-October.<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="Nag26-27"/> The besieged Russians waited for relief, but none arrived, as Commonwealth and Cossack cavalry had been sent to disrupt the Russian rear.<ref name="RzeczMW"/> Some historians also cite dissent and internal divisions in the Russian camp as responsible for their inaction and ineffectiveness. (Jasienica blames the Russian warlords,<ref name="Jasienica"/> and Parker the foreign mercenaries.<ref name="Parker"/>) The ] threatening the south Russian borderlands was a contributory factor, with many soldiers and ]s from those regions deserting the Russian camp to return to protect their homeland.<ref name="Jasienica"/> Some foreign mercenaries also deserted to the Commonwealth side.<ref name="Nag36-37"/> | |||
Shein began surrender negotiations in January 1634, and by February they were in full swing.<ref name="Nag43-44"/> The Russians finally signed a surrender treaty on 25 February 1634,<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="RzeczMW"/><ref name="Nag43-44"/> and on 1 March they vacated their camp.<ref name="Nag43-44"/> (Some scholars, such as Rickard and Black, give the date of 1 March for Shein's capitulation.)<ref name="Rick"/><ref name="Black"/> Under the surrender terms, the Russians had to leave behind most of their artillery but were allowed to retain their banners after a ceremony in which they were laid before King Władysław. They also had to promise not to engage Commonwealth forces for the next three months.<ref name="Nag43-44"/> Shein's forces numbered around 12,000 at the time of their capitulation, but over 4,000, including most of the foreign contingent, immediately decided to defect to the Commonwealth.<ref name="Nag46"/> | |||
===Other engagements=== | |||
Several other towns and fortresses in the region were the site of smaller battles. Russian forces captured several significant locations during their advance in 1632, but Nagielski speculates that the delay in the arrival of their main force and artillery at Smolensk caused by this dilution of effort may have cost them the siege and consequently the war.<ref name="Nag10"/> In July 1633, the Russians took the towns of ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Jasienica"/> Polatsk was the scene of particularly heavy fighting as the Russians captured the city and part of the fortress.<ref name="Nag14"/> However, attacks on ] and ] were successfully repulsed. Polish forces laid siege to ], but due to the desertion of their Cossack allies they were forced to withdraw.<ref name="Nag15"/> | |||
In the autumn of 1633, Commonwealth forces retook ], an important Russian supply point after its capture the year before. This setback wrecked Russian plans to send reinforcements to Shein's army,<ref name="Nag29"/> although in any event the Russians did not begin to gather a 5,000-strong army for that purpose until January 1634.<ref name="Nag38"/> Also that autumn, ] ] ] in the south of the Commonwealth, freeing his force to lay siege to the Russian town of ]; although Koniecpolski failed to take the fortress, he tied down large Russian forces, preventing them from moving north towards Smolensk.<ref name="Nag39-40"/> | |||
After the relief of Smolensk in the spring of 1634, the Commonwealth army moved towards the fortress ]. However, the ] turned to a fiasco<ref name="Nag47-50"/> although the king manage to capture ].<ref name="CzubTop"/> | |||
== Treaty of Polyanovka == | |||
{{main|Treaty of Polyanovka}} | |||
] | |||
By the spring of 1634, the Russians had not only lost Shein's army but were threatened by ] raids that ravaged southern Russia.<ref name="Jasienica"/><ref name="Black"/> Patriarch Filaret had died the previous year, and without him the war fervour lessened.<ref name="Rick"/> Even before the end of 1633, ] ] was considering how best to end the conflict.<ref name="Jasienica"/> Because he had once been elected Tsar of Russia and could realistically lay claim to the Russian throne, King Władysław wanted to continue the war or, because the Polish-Swedish ] would soon be expiring, ally with the Russians to strike against Sweden. However, the Sejm wanted no more conflict.<ref name="Jasienica"/> As ], the ], wrote two weeks after Shein's surrender: "Our happiness is in remaining within our borders, guaranteeing health and well-being."<ref name="Jasienica"/> With neither side keen on prolonging the war, they began negotiating, not for an ] but for "eternal peace."<ref name="Jasienica"/> | |||
Talks began on 30 April 1634,<ref name="Nag50"/> and the Treaty of Polyanovka was signed in June, putting an end to hostilities. The treaty confirmed the ], with Russia paying a large ] (20,000 ] in gold), while Władysław agreed to surrender his claim to the Russian throne and return the royal insignia to Moscow.<ref name="Gierowski"/><ref name="Jasienica"/><ref name="RzeczMW"/> Jasienica notes that from the Russian perspective it was likely that Władysław's abnegation of his claim was more important, in terms of the subsequent increase in internal stability, than the loss of disputed borderland. Despite not winning militarily, the Russians may have scored a diplomatic triumph.<ref name="Jasienica"/> Other authors, such as Hellie, support this interpretation.<ref name="Hellie"/> | |||
==Aftermath== | |||
], lost during the Second World War]] | |||
Already during the later stages of the war, when the Commonwealth army moved from Smolensk to Bely, a new threat begun to loom on the southern borders, where the ] was massing an invasion force.<ref name="Nag54"/> Thus Władysław began redirecting his reinforcements to that theater.<ref name="Nag54"/> Later that year, the Commonwealth forces under ] scored a victory in the south, ending a ].<ref name="CzubTop"/> | |||
Both sides introduced new tactics, units and equipment based on Western models, but the Polish–Lithuanian forces proved more adept with these innovations than the Russians.<ref name="Black"/> However, the main factors that kept the Russians from winning were the delay in moving siege artillery to Smolensk and the severe disruption of Russian supply lines by Polish cavalry.<ref name="Black"/> A scapegoat was nevertheless needed: ] was accused of treason and, together with his second-in-command ] and the latter's son Vasily, executed in Moscow on April 28, 1634.<ref name="Rick"/><ref name="Hellie"/><ref name="Davies"/> Learning from this defeat, the Russians would adopt new and more successful tactics in the ].<ref name="Nag52-53"/> | |||
After the war, Władysław gave the Russians the border town of ] and nearby territories, hoping to persuade the Tsar to join in an anti-Swedish alliance.<ref name="Nag52-53"/> However, the king was ultimately unable to overcome objections from the Polish–Lithuanian Sejm, who were unwilling to fight Sweden after the ].<ref name="Czaplinski-200-201"/> The Russians, unable to see benefit in such an alliance, were also unenthusiastic, and the proposed alliance came to nothing.<ref name="Nag52-53"/> | |||
The war cost the Commonwealth treasury about 4,300,000 ].<ref name="Nag54"/> | |||
The Battle of Smolensk is commemorated on the ], with the inscription "SMOLENSK 18 X 1632–25 II 1634". | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] (1618–1648) | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|colwidth=35em|refs= | |||
<ref name="ASR">], Pamiętnik o dziejach w Polsce, t. I, PIW, 1980.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Black">{{cite book |title=European Warfare, 1494–1660 |last=Black |first=Jeremy |year=2002 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |isbn=0-415-27531-8 |page=137 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Bonney">{{cite book |title=The Rise of the Fiscal State in Europe, C. 1200–1815 |last=Bonney |first=Richard |year=1999 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=London |isbn=0-19-820402-7 |page=471 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Czaplinski-200-201">], ''Władysław IV i jego czasy'' (Władysław IV and His Times). PW "Wiedza Poweszechna". Warszawa 1976, pp. 200–201</ref> | |||
<ref name="CzubTop">{{cite book |title=Historia Polski |last=Czubiński |first=Antoni |author-link=Antoni Czubiński |author2=Topolski, Jerzy |author-link2=Jerzy Topolski |year=1988 |publisher=Wydawnictwo Ossolińskich |isbn=83-04-01919-1 |page=181 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Davies">{{cite book |title=] |last=Davies |first=Norman |author-link=Norman Davies |year=1994 |edition=Polish |publisher=Znak |isbn=83-7006-331-4 |page=602 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Gierowski">{{cite book |title=Historia Polski, 1505–1764 |last=Gierowski |first=Józef Andrzej |author-link=Józef Andrzej Gierowski |year=1979 |publisher=] |isbn=83-01-00172-0 |pages=235–236 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Hellie">{{cite book |title=The Economy and Material Culture of Russia, 1600–1725 |last=Hellie |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Hellie |year=1999 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago |isbn=0-226-32649-7 |page=4 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Jasienica">{{cite book |title=Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów: Srebny Wiek |last=Jasienica |first=Paweł |author-link=Paweł Jasienica |year=1982 |publisher=Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy |isbn=83-06-00788-3 |pages=370–372 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Menshikov">''«Перечневая роспись ратных людей под Смоленском 141-го года»'' Меньшиков Д.Н. Затишье перед бурей. Боевые действия под Смоленском в июле-августе 1633 года // Война и оружие: Новые исследования и материалы. Научно-практическая конференция 12-14 мая 2010 г. СПб., 2010. Ч. II. С. 107</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag10">Nagielski, p. 10.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag11-12">Nagielski, p. 11–12.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag12-13">Nagielski, p. 12–13.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag14">Nagielski, p. 14.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag15">Nagielski, p. 15.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag18">Nagielski, p. 18.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag20">Nagielski, p. 20.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag21">Nagielski, p. 21.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag21-23">Nagielski, p. 21–23.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag24">Nagielski, p. 24.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag26-27">Nagielski, p. 26–27.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag29">Nagielski, p. 29.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag31-33">Nagielski, p. 31–33.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag36-37">Nagielski, p. 36–37.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag38">Nagielski, p. 38.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag39-40">Nagielski, p. 39–40.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag43-44">Nagielski, p. 43–44.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag46">Nagielski, p. 46.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag47-50">Nagielski, p. 47–50.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag50">Nagielski, p. 50.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag52-53">Nagielski, p. 52–53.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag54">Nagielski, p. 54.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag6-7">{{cite book |title=Diariusz kampanii smoleńskiej Władysława IV 1633–1634 |last=Nagielski |first=Mirosław |year=2006 |publisher=DiG |isbn=83-7181-410-0 |page=7 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Nag8-9">Nagielski, p. 8–9.</ref> | |||
<ref name="Parker">{{cite book |title=The Thirty Years' War |last=Parker |first=Geoffrey |year=1997 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=0-415-12883-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/thirtyyearswarnd00park|url-access=limited |page= }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Rick">{{cite web |url=http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/wars_smolensk.html |title=Smolensk War, 1632–1634 |access-date=2007-08-02 |last=Rickard |first=J. |date=2007-07-26 }}</ref> | |||
<ref name="RzeczMW">''Władysław IV Waza 1595–1658.'' Władcy Polski Nr 23. ] and ]. Various authors and editors. 24 July 2007.</ref> | |||
}} | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
*{{cite book |title=Diariusz kampanii smoleńskiej Władysława IV 1633–1634 |last=Nagielski |first=Mirosław |year=2006 |publisher=DiG |isbn=83-7181-410-0 }} | |||
*{{cite book |title=Smoleńsk 1632–1634 |last=Kupisz |first=Dariusz |year=2001 |publisher=Bellona |isbn=83-11-09282-6 }} | |||
==External links== | |||
*Rickard, J (26 July 2007), | |||
*{{in lang|ru}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 17:06, 10 January 2025
Conflict between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and RussiaSmolensk War | |||||||||
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Part of Russo-Polish wars | |||||||||
Smolensk Voivodeship, showing in red the disputed territory. | |||||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||||
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Zaporozhian Cossacks | Tsardom of Russia | ||||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||||
Władysław IV Vasa Krzysztof Radziwiłł | Mikhail Borisovich Shein | ||||||||
Strength | |||||||||
30,000–35,000 3,120 hussars 260 Cossack cavalry 1,700 Western cavalry 10,500 Western infantry 1,040 dragoons 2,200 Polish infantry Few thousand of Zaporozhian Cossacks infantry | 23,961 | ||||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||||
Unknown | Unknown |
Polish–Russian Wars | |
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Smolensk War | |
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The Smolensk War (1632–1634) was a conflict fought between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and Russia.
Hostilities began in October 1632 when Russian forces tried to capture the city of Smolensk. Small military engagements produced mixed results for both sides, but the surrender of the main Russian force in February 1634 led to the Treaty of Polyanovka. Russia accepted Polish–Lithuanian control over the Smolensk region, which lasted for another 20 years.
Background
In 1632, Sigismund III Vasa, the king of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, died. Although the Commonwealth nobility quickly elected Sigismund's son Władysław IV Vasa as their new ruler, Poland's neighbours, expecting delays in the electoral process, tested the Commonwealth's perceived weakness. Swedish king Gustav II Adolph sent envoys to Russia and the Ottoman Empire to propose an alliance and war against the Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth was not ready for war. In 1631, the royal army numbered barely 3,000 men; the Smolensk garrison was about 500 strong, and most garrisons in the border area were composed not of regular or mercenary soldiers but of 100 to 200 local volunteers. Aware that Russia was preparing for war, in the spring of 1632 the Sejm (Polish–Lithuanian parliament) increased the army by recruiting an additional 4,500 men; by mid-1632 the deputy voivode (podwojewoda) of Smolensk, Samuel Drucki Sokoliński [pl], had about 500 volunteers from pospolite ruszenie and 2,500 regular army soldiers and Zaporozhian Cossacks. In May the Senate of Poland agreed to increase the size of the army, but Grand Lithuanian Hetman Lew Sapieha objected, arguing that the current forces were enough and that war was not likely. Nonetheless the Field Lithuanian Hetman Krzysztof Radziwiłł recruited an additional 2,000 soldiers.
Russia, having recovered to a certain extent from the Time of Troubles, agreed with the assessment that the Commonwealth would be weakened by the death of its king, and unilaterally attacked without waiting for the Swedes and the Ottomans. Russia's aim was to gain control of Smolensk, which it had ceded to the Commonwealth in 1618 at the Truce of Deulino, ending the last Russo-Polish War. Smolensk was the capital of the Commonwealth's Smoleńsk Voivodeship, but it had often been contested, and it changed hands many times during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries (from the days of the Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars). A major supporter of the war was the Tsar's father, Patriarch Filaret, who represented the anti-Polish camp at court. Inspired by the Zemsky Sobor's (Russian parliament's) call for vengeance and reclamation of lost lands, the Russian army sallied west.
Hostilities
The Russian army that crossed the Lithuanian border in early October 1632 had been carefully prepared and was under the experienced command of Mikhail Borisovich Shein, who had previously defended Smolensk against the Poles during the 1609–1611 siege. Several towns and castles fell as the Russians advanced, and on 28 October 1632 (the same day that the historic town of Dorogobuzh was taken), Shein moved to begin the siege of Smolensk.
Former Polish estimates of the size of the Russian forces varied from 25,000 through 30,000 to 34,500, with 160 artillery pieces. Recent research on 17th-century Russian archive documents showed that the size of the Russian army was 23,961. Compared to former Russian armies, Shein's army was significantly modernised. Dissatisfied with their traditional formations of musket-equipped infantry (the streltsy), the Russians looked to foreign officers to update the equipment and training of their troops based on the Western European model of regulars, dragoons, and reiters. Eight such regiments, totaling 14,000 to 17,000 men, comprised part of Shein's army.
Siege of Smolensk
Main article: Siege of Smolensk (1632–1633)Commonwealth forces in Smolensk were composed of the Smolensk garrison (about 1,600 men with 170 artillery pieces under the command of the Voivode of Smolensk, Aleksander Korwin Gosiewski), strengthened by the local nobility, which formed a pospolite ruszenie force of about 1,500 strong. The city's fortifications had also recently been improved with Italian-style bastions.
Shein constructed lines of circumvallation around the fortress. Using tunnels and mines, his forces damaged a long section of the city wall and one of its towers. Russian heavy artillery, mostly of Western manufacture, reached Smolensk in December 1632 with even heavier guns arriving the following March. After a preliminary artillery bombardment, Shein ordered an assault, which was repulsed by the Polish defenders. Nonetheless the siege was progressing; Smolensk's fortifications were being eroded, and the defenders were suffering heavy casualties and running out of supplies. By June 1633, some soldiers started to desert, and others talked of surrender.
Despite these difficulties, the city, commanded by Deputy Voivode Samuel Drucki-Sokoliński, held out throughout 1633 while the Commonwealth, under its newly elected King Władysław IV, organised a relief force. The Sejm had been informed about the Russian invasion by 30 October 1632, and, starting in November, had discussed the possibility of relief. However, the process was delayed until the spring of 1633, when the Sejm officially sanctioned a declaration of war and authorised a large payment (6.5 million zlotys, the highest tax contribution during Władysław's entire reign) for the raising of a suitable force. The intended relief force would have an effective strength of about 21,500 men and would include: 24 chorągiews of Winged Hussars (~3,200 horses), 27 chorągiews of light cavalry—also known as Cossack cavalry but not composed of Cossacks—(3,600 horses), 10 squadrons of raitars (~1,700 horses), 7 Lithuanian petyhor regiments (~780 horses), 7 large regiments of dragoons (~2,250 horses), and ~20 regiments of infantry (~12,000 men). Over 10,000 of the infantry would be organized based on the Western model, previously not common in Commonwealth armies.
Meanwhile, Field Hetman of Lithuania and Voivode of Vilnius, Krzysztof Radziwiłł, and Voivode Gosiewski established a camp about 30 kilometres (18.6 mi) from Smolensk, moving from Orsha to Bajów and later, Krasne. By February 1633, they had amassed around 4,500 soldiers, including over 2,000 infantry, and were engaged in raiding the rear areas of the Russian besiegers to disrupt their logistics. Hetman Radziwiłł also managed to break through the Russian lines on several occasions, bringing about 1,000 soldiers and supplies into Smolensk to reinforce the fortress and raising the defenders' morale.
By the summer of 1633, the relief force, led personally by the king and numbering about 25,000 (20,000 in the Polish–Lithuanian army, according to Jasienica), arrived near Smolensk; they reached Orsha on 17 August 1633. By the first days of September, the main body of the relief forces approaching Smolensk numbered around 14,000. The Russian army, recently reinforced, numbered 25,000. Only when Cossack reinforcements, led by Tymosz (Timofiy) Orendarenko and numbering between 10,000 and 20,000, arrived on 17 September would the Commonwealth army gain numerical superiority. The Cossacks under Orendarenko and Marcin Kazanowski raided the Russian rear lines, freeing the Polish–Lithuanian units under Radziwiłł and Gosiewski to join the effort to break the siege.
Władysław's brother, John II Casimir, commanded one of the regiments in the relief army. Another notable commander was the Field Crown Hetman, Marcin Kazanowski. King Władysław IV, a great supporter of the modernization of the Commonwealth army, proved to be a good tactician, and his innovations in the use of artillery and fortifications based on Western ideas greatly contributed to the eventual Polish–Lithuanian success. He had replaced the old arquebusiers with musketeers, and standardized the Commonwealth artillery (introducing 3- to 6-pounder regimental guns), both to great effect.
Commonwealth's cavalry, including the Winged Hussars, significantly restricted Russian mobility, forcing them to stay in their trenches. In a series of fierce engagements, Commonwealth forces gradually overran the Russian field fortifications, and the siege reached its final stages by late September. On 28 September 1633, Commonwealth forces took the main Russian supply points, and by 4 October the siege had broken.
Shein's army retreated to its main camp, which was in turn surrounded by Commonwealth forces in mid-October. The besieged Russians waited for relief, but none arrived, as Commonwealth and Cossack cavalry had been sent to disrupt the Russian rear. Some historians also cite dissent and internal divisions in the Russian camp as responsible for their inaction and ineffectiveness. (Jasienica blames the Russian warlords, and Parker the foreign mercenaries.) The Tatar invasion threatening the south Russian borderlands was a contributory factor, with many soldiers and boyars from those regions deserting the Russian camp to return to protect their homeland. Some foreign mercenaries also deserted to the Commonwealth side.
Shein began surrender negotiations in January 1634, and by February they were in full swing. The Russians finally signed a surrender treaty on 25 February 1634, and on 1 March they vacated their camp. (Some scholars, such as Rickard and Black, give the date of 1 March for Shein's capitulation.) Under the surrender terms, the Russians had to leave behind most of their artillery but were allowed to retain their banners after a ceremony in which they were laid before King Władysław. They also had to promise not to engage Commonwealth forces for the next three months. Shein's forces numbered around 12,000 at the time of their capitulation, but over 4,000, including most of the foreign contingent, immediately decided to defect to the Commonwealth.
Other engagements
Several other towns and fortresses in the region were the site of smaller battles. Russian forces captured several significant locations during their advance in 1632, but Nagielski speculates that the delay in the arrival of their main force and artillery at Smolensk caused by this dilution of effort may have cost them the siege and consequently the war. In July 1633, the Russians took the towns of Polatsk, Velizh, Usvyat, and Ozerishche. Polatsk was the scene of particularly heavy fighting as the Russians captured the city and part of the fortress. However, attacks on Vitebsk and Mstsislaw were successfully repulsed. Polish forces laid siege to Putivl, but due to the desertion of their Cossack allies they were forced to withdraw.
In the autumn of 1633, Commonwealth forces retook Dorogobuzh, an important Russian supply point after its capture the year before. This setback wrecked Russian plans to send reinforcements to Shein's army, although in any event the Russians did not begin to gather a 5,000-strong army for that purpose until January 1634. Also that autumn, Grand Crown Hetman Stanisław Koniecpolski defeated an Ottoman incursion in the south of the Commonwealth, freeing his force to lay siege to the Russian town of Sevsk; although Koniecpolski failed to take the fortress, he tied down large Russian forces, preventing them from moving north towards Smolensk.
After the relief of Smolensk in the spring of 1634, the Commonwealth army moved towards the fortress Belaya. However, the siege of Belaya turned to a fiasco although the king manage to capture Vyazma.
Treaty of Polyanovka
Main article: Treaty of PolyanovkaBy the spring of 1634, the Russians had not only lost Shein's army but were threatened by Tatar raids that ravaged southern Russia. Patriarch Filaret had died the previous year, and without him the war fervour lessened. Even before the end of 1633, Tsar Michael of Russia was considering how best to end the conflict. Because he had once been elected Tsar of Russia and could realistically lay claim to the Russian throne, King Władysław wanted to continue the war or, because the Polish-Swedish Treaty of Altmark would soon be expiring, ally with the Russians to strike against Sweden. However, the Sejm wanted no more conflict. As Stanisław Łubieński, the Bishop of Płock, wrote two weeks after Shein's surrender: "Our happiness is in remaining within our borders, guaranteeing health and well-being." With neither side keen on prolonging the war, they began negotiating, not for an armistice but for "eternal peace."
Talks began on 30 April 1634, and the Treaty of Polyanovka was signed in June, putting an end to hostilities. The treaty confirmed the pre-war status quo, with Russia paying a large war indemnity (20,000 rubles in gold), while Władysław agreed to surrender his claim to the Russian throne and return the royal insignia to Moscow. Jasienica notes that from the Russian perspective it was likely that Władysław's abnegation of his claim was more important, in terms of the subsequent increase in internal stability, than the loss of disputed borderland. Despite not winning militarily, the Russians may have scored a diplomatic triumph. Other authors, such as Hellie, support this interpretation.
Aftermath
Already during the later stages of the war, when the Commonwealth army moved from Smolensk to Bely, a new threat begun to loom on the southern borders, where the Ottoman Empire was massing an invasion force. Thus Władysław began redirecting his reinforcements to that theater. Later that year, the Commonwealth forces under Stanisław Koniecpolski scored a victory in the south, ending a war against the Ottomans.
Both sides introduced new tactics, units and equipment based on Western models, but the Polish–Lithuanian forces proved more adept with these innovations than the Russians. However, the main factors that kept the Russians from winning were the delay in moving siege artillery to Smolensk and the severe disruption of Russian supply lines by Polish cavalry. A scapegoat was nevertheless needed: Mikhail Shein was accused of treason and, together with his second-in-command Artemy Izmaylov and the latter's son Vasily, executed in Moscow on April 28, 1634. Learning from this defeat, the Russians would adopt new and more successful tactics in the Polish–Russian War (1654–1656).
After the war, Władysław gave the Russians the border town of Serpeysk and nearby territories, hoping to persuade the Tsar to join in an anti-Swedish alliance. However, the king was ultimately unable to overcome objections from the Polish–Lithuanian Sejm, who were unwilling to fight Sweden after the Treaty of Sztumska Wieś. The Russians, unable to see benefit in such an alliance, were also unenthusiastic, and the proposed alliance came to nothing.
The war cost the Commonwealth treasury about 4,300,000 zlotys.
The Battle of Smolensk is commemorated on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Warsaw, with the inscription "SMOLENSK 18 X 1632–25 II 1634".
See also
- Polish–Ottoman War (1633–1634)
- Thirty Years' War (1618–1648)
References
- Stevens, Carol (2013-09-13). Russia's Wars of Emergence 1460-1730. Routledge. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-317-89330-1.
Unable to extricate his men, Shein surrendered to the Polish commander early in 1634. A variety of reasons have been offered for Muscovy's ignominious and perplexing defeat at Smolensk.
- Ostrowski, Donald (2022-01-25). Russia in the Early Modern World: The Continuity of Change. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 175. ISBN 978-1-7936-3421-4.
The siege failed and the subsequent Treaty of Polianovka, which ended the Smolensk War in 1634 This defeat ended Muscovy's initial attempt to convert to Euro-Ottoman-style strategy.
- "Legal foundations of administration in Belarusian lands in the 14th-18th centuries (overview)". Archives of Belarus. 2024-11-26. Retrieved 2024-11-26.
Russia began the so-called Smolensk War of 1632-1634, which ended in her defeat.
- Kupisz, Dariusz (2001). Smoleńsk 1632-1634. Historyczne Bitwy. Warszawa: "Bellona". ISBN 978-83-11-09282-2.
Zwycięstwo nad Moskwą, przynoszące państwu korzystny traktat pokojowy, opłacono więc stosunkowo niewielkimi kosztami.
- "500 lat wojen Polski z Rosją. Od XV w. nie było stulecia, by Polska nie toczyła wojny z Rosją | HISTORIA.org.pl - historia, kultura, muzea, matura, rekonstrukcje i recenzje historyczne". HISTORIA.org.pl (in Polish). 2023-06-17. Retrieved 2025-01-10.
- ^ «Перечневая роспись ратных людей под Смоленском 141-го года» Меньшиков Д.Н. Затишье перед бурей. Боевые действия под Смоленском в июле-августе 1633 года // Война и оружие: Новые исследования и материалы. Научно-практическая конференция 12-14 мая 2010 г. СПб., 2010. Ч. II. С. 107
- ^ Gierowski, Józef Andrzej (1979). Historia Polski, 1505–1764. Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe. pp. 235–236. ISBN 83-01-00172-0.
- ^ Nagielski, Mirosław (2006). Diariusz kampanii smoleńskiej Władysława IV 1633–1634. DiG. p. 7. ISBN 83-7181-410-0.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 8–9.
- ^ Rickard, J. (2007-07-26). "Smolensk War, 1632–1634". Retrieved 2007-08-02.
- ^ Hellie, Richard (1999). The Economy and Material Culture of Russia, 1600–1725. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 4. ISBN 0-226-32649-7.
- ^ Davies, Norman (1994). God's Playground (Polish ed.). Znak. p. 602. ISBN 83-7006-331-4.
- ^ Jasienica, Paweł (1982). Rzeczpospolita Obojga Narodów: Srebny Wiek. Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy. pp. 370–372. ISBN 83-06-00788-3.
- ^ Władysław IV Waza 1595–1658. Władcy Polski Nr 23. Rzeczpospolita and Mówią Wieki. Various authors and editors. 24 July 2007.
- ^ Black, Jeremy (2002). European Warfare, 1494–1660. London: Routledge. p. 137. ISBN 0-415-27531-8.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 12–13.
- Nagielski, p. 18.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 11–12.
- Albrecht Stanisław Radziwiłł, Pamiętnik o dziejach w Polsce, t. I, PIW, 1980.
- Bonney, Richard (1999). The Rise of the Fiscal State in Europe, C. 1200–1815. London: Oxford University Press. p. 471. ISBN 0-19-820402-7.
- Nagielski, p. 20.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 21.
- Nagielski, p. 21–23.
- Nagielski, p. 24.
- Nagielski, p. 31–33.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 26–27.
- Parker, Geoffrey (1997). The Thirty Years' War. Routledge. p. 124. ISBN 0-415-12883-8.
- Nagielski, p. 36–37.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 43–44.
- Nagielski, p. 46.
- Nagielski, p. 10.
- Nagielski, p. 14.
- Nagielski, p. 15.
- Nagielski, p. 29.
- Nagielski, p. 38.
- Nagielski, p. 39–40.
- Nagielski, p. 47–50.
- ^ Czubiński, Antoni; Topolski, Jerzy (1988). Historia Polski. Wydawnictwo Ossolińskich. p. 181. ISBN 83-04-01919-1.
- Nagielski, p. 50.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 54.
- ^ Nagielski, p. 52–53.
- Władysław Czapliński, Władysław IV i jego czasy (Władysław IV and His Times). PW "Wiedza Poweszechna". Warszawa 1976, pp. 200–201
Notes
- To encourage Russia to join the anti-Swedish alliance
Further reading
- Nagielski, Mirosław (2006). Diariusz kampanii smoleńskiej Władysława IV 1633–1634. DiG. ISBN 83-7181-410-0.
- Kupisz, Dariusz (2001). Smoleńsk 1632–1634. Bellona. ISBN 83-11-09282-6.
External links
- Rickard, J (26 July 2007), Smolensk War, 1632–1634
- (in Russian) Волков В.А. "Смоленская война (1632–1634 гг.)"
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Categories:
- Smolensk War
- 1630s conflicts
- Wars involving the Tsardom of Russia
- Wars involving the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- Polish–Russian wars
- Warfare of the early modern period
- Military history of Smolensk
- 1632 in Russia
- 1633 in Russia
- 1634 in Russia
- 1632 in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- 1633 in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- 1634 in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
- 17th-century military history of Russia