Battle of Bereza Kartuska explained

Conflict:Battle of Bereza Kartuska
Partof:Polish-Soviet War
Date:14 February 1919[1]
Place:Near Bereza Kartuska, near Brzesc, Belarus
Result:Polish victory
Combatant1: Poland
Combatant2: Russian SFSR
Commander1:Mieniecki
Commander2:Unknown
Strength1:62 soldiers
Strength2:86 soldiers
Casualties1:Unknown
Casualties2:80 captured

The Battle of Bereza Kartuska was fought between the Second Polish Republic and Soviet Russia around the village Bereza Kartuska (now Byaroza, Belarus) first on 14 February 1919, and again between 21 and 26 July 1920.

The first skirmish of Bereza is considered to be the initial engagement of the Polish–Soviet War of 1919–1921 by some historians.[1]

History

After German and Polish representatives signed an evacuation agreement on 5 February 1919, the ten battalions of the newly formed Polish Army were to pass through German Oberkommando-Ostfront (Ober-Ost) lines at Wolkowysk to reach the Bolshevik front, where on 12 January 1919, the Soviet Supreme Command ordered a "reconnaissance in depth", codenamed Target Vistula.

In February 1919, both Soviet Russia and newly-reborn Poland were in their infancy, and both only months old. On 13 February 1919, at 7 in the morning, 57 Polish soldiers and 5 officers, led by Capt. Mienicki of the Polish Wilno Detachment, made a sortie into the township of Biaroza (Polish: Bereza), a small city to the east of Brzesc capturing 80 soldiers of the Red Army.[2]

The second Battle of Bereza Kartuska

One year later, between 21 and 26 July 1920, soldiers of the Polish 14th Infantry Division under General Daniel Konarzewski once again clashed with the Red Army in Bereza Kartuska, soon after the Battle of Warsaw (1920). Poles had retreated from Baranowicze, abandoning German Imperial Army fortifications constructed there during World War I, and took defensive positions along the Jasiołda River. After three days of heavy fighting, the 14th I.D. once again was forced to retreat towards Kobryn, after burning the bridges on the Jasiołda. The town of Bereza Kartuska was retaken by the Polish Army and, at the end of the Polish–Soviet War, ceded to Poland in the Peace of Riga signed by Soviet Russia (acting also on behalf of Soviet Belarus). The peace treaty remained in force until the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939.[3]

References

52.55°N 82°W

Notes and References

  1. For controversies about the naming and dating of this conflict, refer to the section devoted to this subject in the Polish-Soviet War article.
  2. Book: Davies, Norman . 1972 . White Eagle, Red Star: The Polish-Soviet War 1919–20 . London: Macdonald & Co. . 9780712606943 . Random House . 2011 . 22 . Norman Davies. ISBN for books.google.com:
  3. Anna M. . Cienciala . Anna M. Cienciala . The Rebirth of Poland . https://web.archive.org/web/20130515153155/http://web.ku.edu/~eceurope/hist557/lect11.htm . dead . 2013-05-15 . History 557 Lecture Notes 11 B . University of Kansas, Lecture Notes by Professor Anna M. Cienciala . Spring 2002 . Revised Fall 2007. Spring 2012 . Internet Archive . Poland and Soviet Russia: 1917–1921.