Battle of Praga (1705) explained

Conflict:Battle of Praga
Partof:the Great Northern War
Date:October 14, 1705 (O.S.)
October 15, 1705 (Swedish calendar)
October 25, 1705 (N.S.)[1]
Place:Praga outside Warsaw, Poland
Result:Swedish victory
Combatant1: Swedish Empire
Combatant2: Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth

Tsardom of Russia
Commander1:Valentin Dahldorf,
Gustaf Henrik Siegroth
Commander2:Michał Serwacy Wiśniowiecki,
Aleksandr Menshikov
Strength1:1,000–1,500 men[2]
Strength2:5,000 men
Casualties1:200[3]
Casualties2:250[4]

The Battle of Praga took place on October 25, 1705, near the town of Warsaw, Poland during the fifth year of the Great Northern War. The Swedish army of more than 270 men assisted by approximately 140 soldiers from the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth under the command of Valentin Dahldorf defeated a combined Polish–Saxon–Russian force of about 5,000 men under Michał Serwacy Wiśniowiecki and Aleksandr Menshikov.[2] [1]

Prelude

See also: Campaign of Grodno. After the fruitless attack by Otto Arnold von Paykull to interrupt the coronation of king Stanisław Leszczyński in the battle of Warsaw, Polish commander Wiśniowiecki and Russian commander Menshikov attempted to surprise the Swedish patrol guarding the bridge going over the Vistula from Praga to Warsaw in order to capture and destroy the bridge which would, otherwise, greatly assist to the Swedish operations in the area. Only the Uppland and Dalarna regiments were stationed near Praga to protect the Polish Coronation in Warsaw, while the main army under Charles XII of Sweden was at Blonie.

Battle

A part of the coalition army managed to completely surprise and overwhelm a Polish force of about 140 men—friendly to Leszczyński and the Swedes—inside Praga while the rest attacked the 40 Swedish infantrymen patrolling the bridgehead. These were, in turn, also surprised and the coalition forces managed to push out to the middle of the bridge before getting halted by twelve men of the patrol, guarding there. They could hold their defense until further Swedish reinforcements, alerted by the musket fire, from the Uppland regiment of 20 men under Dahldorf arrived, which forced the coalition forces back. However, at the same bridgehead the coalition forces were reinforced by the rest of their part having fought the Polish guard in Praga. They soon positioned all around the bridgehead and fired massive volleys and cannon fire—six cannons which they had earlier captured from the Poles—against the vulnerable Swedes who retreated back over the bridge after having lost many men dead and wounded. The bridge was then open for their opponents to capture and destroy. Soon, however, further Swedish reinforcements of 210 men from the Uppland and Dalarna regiments (100 from Dal) grouped and counterattacked—with a cold steel charge—the superior coalition forces at the bridge, who were thrown back once again towards Praga and then forced to retreat after the rest of the Dalarna Regiment under Gustaf Henrik Siegroth arrived, who chased them out, inflicting great casualties.[2]

Aftermath

In this action the Swedes and their Polish allies lost about 200 men.[3] The Dalarna Regiment, having an unofficial status as elite in the Swedish army, suffered 17 killed and 53 wounded alone.[5] The combined Polish–Saxon–Russian forces lost about 250 men.[4] About 270 Swedes and 140 Poles participated in the fighting before the arrival of the full Dala regiment in the ending, which could estimate the full force to somewhere between 1,000 and 1,500 men.[2] Additional Swedish units appeared soon, but they were too late to participate in the fighting.[3]

References

  1. Wimmer, Jan (1956).
  2. Grimberg & Uddgren, pp. 233–236
  3. Defoe, Daniel, pp. 131–132
  4. According to "Wimmer, Jan (1956)" the coalition army claimed they had lost about a fourth of the Swedish–Polish losses, which they had overestimated to a number of 1,000 men.
  5. Pihlström, Anton & Westerlund, Carl (1906). pp. 147, 155.

Literature