Battle of Călugăreni explained

Conflict:Battle of Călugăreni
Partof:the Long Turkish War and Ottoman-Wallachian wars
Date:23 August 1595
Place:Călugăreni
Map Type:Romania
Map Relief:yes
Result:Wallachian victory[1]
Combatant1:Wallachia
Combatant2:Ottoman Empire
Commander1:Michael the Brave
Albert Király
Commander2:Sinan Pasha
Strength1:15,000 Wallachians
c. 5,000 mercenaries
Strength2:85,000-100,000[2] [3] Though only about 35-40,000 Ottoman soldiers participated in the battle according to most sources including a log written by Michael the Brave himself.

The Battle of Călugăreni took place during the history of early modern Romania on between the Wallachian army led by Michael the Brave and the Ottoman army led by Koca Sinan Pasha. It was part of the Long Turkish War, fought between Christian and Ottoman forces at the end of the 16th – beginning of the 17th centuries.

The whole Ottoman force was estimated at 100,000 men,[2] but not all of their troops were on the battlefield at Călugăreni. It seems that only about 30,000-40,000 Ottoman soldiers were involved in the battle.[2]

Michael the Brave had in total about 15,000 men[4] and about 12 large field cannons, with Transylvanian (Székely) detachments.[5] Michael the Brave strategically positioned his forces south of the village of Călugăreni, where the Câlniştea river flows into the Neajlov river. The terrain there was a muddy marsh, surrounded by forests that would negate the Ottoman's military superiority. The battle had three different phases. A narrow bridge over the Neajlov river was used by Michael as a mandatory pass point where he successfully held a large Ottoman attack, although a second Ottoman assault supported by flanking cavalry forced the Wallachians to retreat. However a Wallachian counterattack on the pursuing Ottomans forced them back over the river, ending the battle as Michael would retreat during the night. The Ottomans suffered much heavier casualties.

First phase of the battle

The day of 23 August started with probing cavalry attacks. The Wallachian cavalry surprised the Ottoman cavalry in front of the village and pushed it over the Neajlov river. Michael the Brave positioned himself with 10,000 troops and 10 cannons north of the Neajlov river and south of the village. The Székely mercenary Captain Albert Király was in charge of the reserve of 6,000 Székely troops.[5] The reserve was positioned rather far, north-west of the village, to stop any possible attack from the direction of the village of Singureni.

After the cavalry skirmish, Koca Sinan Pasha sent forward a force 12,000 strong. Michael the Brave waited for the Ottoman forces to cross the river and, after a heavy artillery bombardment, attacked fiercely pushing the Turks back over the river. The first phase of the battle ended favorably for the Wallachians.

Second phase of the battle

The second phase started at noon, when Sinan Pasha launched a decisive attack with all the forces he had at that moment. Janissaries made a frontal attack over the bridge while other forces made a double flanking maneuver (Mehmet Satirghi Pashha in the east and Hasan Pasha (beylerbey of Rumelia) in the west, passing over Neajlov by the bridge of Singureni).Janissaries attacked not only on the bridge, but also used logs and planks to help them cross the marsh. Initially their attack was stopped, but Ottoman cavalry managed to cross the river via a ford in the east and threatened the Wallachian left wing. Michael retreated, abandoning all his cannons. He rallied his troops north of the village where he stopped the Ottoman advance. The second phase of the battle ended favorably for the Ottomans.

Third phase of the battle

The third and last phase of the battle took place in the afternoon and started with a strong frontal Wallachian attack, led by Michael the Brave. Captain Cocea had just returned from a scouting mission with 400 cavalry and his fresh forces were used in this attack in a flanking maneuver. Mehmet Satîrgi Pasha's troops were pushed into the Janissaries and the Ottoman forces were crowded in a narrow space north of the Neajlov river. The Wallachian counterattack reached the bridge and the cannons were retaken and used to inflict many casualties on the Ottomans. Sinan Pasha tried to restore the situation by advancing with his personal guard, but the Ottoman forces dispersed in disarray when Captain Cocea's cavalry attacked them in the rear. The Wallachians attacked the Ottoman camp simultaneously, which was near Hulubeşti village. In the disorganized retreat, legend has it that Michael the Brave, true to his name, took a battle axe and (as Robert the Bruce had done to Sir Henry de Bouhen at the battle of Bannockburn) threw Sinan Pasha from his horse and into the marsh, but he was saved by one of his slaves. The Wallachians were unable to pursue the fleeing Ottomans because Hasan Pasha appeared on their right flank. Michael the Brave turned with all his men against Hasan Pasha and routed his forces.

Aftermath of the battle

Michael the Brave knew that he still was greatly outnumbered, and during the night he retreated northward. He abandoned both Bucharest and Târgoviște, stopping at the winter camp in Stoeneşti, near the Rucăr-Bran Pass.

Sinan Pasha captured the capital, Bucharest, and left there Mehmed Pasha with 10,000 troops, then captured Târgoviște where he left another 1,500 troops and 30 cannons. The bulk of the Ottoman army advanced to Stoeneşti, where it took positions in front of the Wallachian army, but did not attack.

On 6 September, the Transylvanian prince Sigismund Báthory arrived with around 7,500 cavalry to support Michael the Brave. Early October another 1,500 troops from the Habsburg Empire and 300 cavalry from Tuscany arrived. These combined forces attacked the Ottomans and eventually defeated them at Târgoviște (18 October), Bucharest (22 October), and Giurgiu (26 October).

Literature

In Romanian:

In Turkish:

Notes and References

  1. Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, Volume 1, ed. Alexander Mikaberidze, (ABC-CLIO, 2011), 538.
  2. Web site: (Romanian)A câştigat Mihai Viteazul bătălia de la Călugăreni? (Did Michaela the Brave win the Battle of Calugareni?). Historia. Bogdan Murgescu. Ovidiu Cristea. Ioan Aurel Pop. Marius Diaconescu. 2010-04-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20100425043334/http://www.historia.ro/exclusiv_web/general/articol/castigat-mihai-viteazul-batalia-calugareni. 25 April 2010. dead.
  3. Haluk Arif, (2004) "Devlet". Kitabi Indirim Insat.
  4. A. D. Xenopol, Istoria Romanilor Vol. 5
  5. Singur împotriva Europei, Author: Mircea Dogaru, Publisher: Phobos, Bucharest 2005