Battle of Kutná Hora explained

Conflict:Battle of Kutná Hora
Partof:the Second anti-Hussite crusade, Hussite Wars
Date:21 December 1421
Place:Kutná Hora
Result:
  • Hussite victory
  • Loyalist retreat out of Bohemia
Combatant1:Crusade along with Catholic loyalists
Combatant2:Hussite coalition
Commander1:King Sigismund
Pippo Spano
Commander2:Jan Žižka
Strength1:50,000–92,000[1]
  • 80,000 Hungarians
  • 12,000 Austrians
Strength2:12,000–18,000
Casualties1:2,000–12,000 men
Casualties2:Unknown, less than Catholics

The Battle of Kutná Hora (Kuttenberg) was an early battle and subsequent campaign in the Hussite Wars, fought on 21 December 1421 between German and Hungarian troops of the Holy Roman Empire and the Hussites, an early ecclesiastical reformist group that was founded in what is now the Czech Republic.

In 1419, Pope Martin V declared a crusade against the Hussites. One branch of the Hussites, known as the Taborites, formed a religious-military community at Tábor. Under the leadership of the talented general Jan Žižka, the Taborites adopted the latest weaponry available, including handguns, long, thin cannons, nicknamed "snakes", and war wagons.[2] Their adoption of the latter gave them the ability to fight a flexible and mobile style of warfare.[2] [3] Originally employed as a measure of last resort, its effectiveness against the royal cavalry turned field artillery into firm part of Hussite armies.

Battle

At Kutná Hora in the early winter of 1421, the Taborites were encircled by the superior forces of the Holy Roman Empire under King Sigismund. Even though Sigismund's elite heavy cavalry was kept at bay by Žižka's artillery, the Taborites apparently faced imminent destruction. However, on 21 December, Žižka grouped his war wagons into a column and charged the enemy lines. The battle wagons advanced rapidly, with all of their guns blazing. The column smashed a hole through Sigismund's line, allowing the Taborites to escape the encirclement. Sigismund decided against mounting a pursuit of the Hussites, for he incorrectly believed that they had been utterly defeated.[2]

Aftermath

Žižka, throughout the rest of December, launched numerous counter-offensives and raids on the Germans' lines. He also introduced the use of small firearms for large bodies of infantry, eventually equipping a third of his infantry.[4] His normal tactic was to mount raids that would draw his opponent into attacking his wagon fort, then, at the right moment, sortie out of the fort with his cavalry, bowmen, and pikemen to ravage the enemy forces.[2] His manoeuvres were quite successful, and, as a result, by the end of the month, Sigismund's demoralized army, constantly harried by Žižka's seemingly invincible soldiers, fled Bohemia.[2]

References

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Notes and References

  1. Book: WINDECKE, Eberhard . Denkwürdigkeiten zur Geschichte des Zeitalters Kaiser Sigmunds . Wilhelm Altmann . german . Berlin . 1893.
  2. Web site: Hussite Battles and significant events . 3 January 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060304001712/http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/matthaywood/main/Hussite_Battles_and_Significant_events.htm . 4 March 2006 . dead .
  3. Book: Setton. Kenneth Meyer. A History of the Crusades: The fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Univ of Wisconsin Press. 1975. 604. 9780299066703.
  4. Sedlar, Jean W. (1994), A history of East Central Europe: East Central Europe in the Middle Ages, University of Washington Press. p. 234.