Siege of Kamenets

Siege of Kamenets
Part of the Polish–Ottoman War (1672–76)

Kamianets-Podilskyi Castle until 1875
Date18–27 August 1672
Location
Kamianets-Podilskyi
Result Ottoman Victory
Belligerents
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth Ottoman Empire
Crimean Khanate
Cossack Hetmanate
Moldavia
Wallachia
Lipka Tatars
Commanders and leaders
Jerzy Wołodyjowski
Mikołaj Potocki
Wespazjan Lanckoroński
Mehmed IV
Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed Pasha "Commander"
Abdi Pasha the Albanian
Selim I Giray
Petro Doroshenko
George Ducas
Grigore I Ghica
Strength
1,500 troops[1] 120,000 troops, 100 guns[1]
Casualties and losses
500[2] 5,000-8,000 killed
10,000 wounded[2]
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Polish–Ottoman War
(1672–1676)
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Polish-Ottoman Battles
1443-1444
1485-1503
1595
  • Cecora
  • Suceava
1612
1615-1616
1620-1621
  • Cecora
  • Khotyn
1633-1634
  • Sasowy Róg
  • Kamieniec
1667-1671
  • Podhajce
1672-1676
1683-1699

The siege of Kamieniec Podolski (Polish: Oblężenie Kamieńca Podolskiego; Turkish: Kamaniçe kuşatması[3]) was laid by the Ottoman Empire on August 18, 1672, in the Polish fortress of Kamieniec Podolski (now: Kamianets-Podilskyi, Ukraine). It lasted until August 27, when Polish forces defending the city capitulated. During the siege, legendary Polish hero, stolnik przemyski pułkownik Jerzy Wołodyjowski led many successful sallies with light cavalry.

Kamieniec Podolski, known as the "key to Podolia", had heavy, but obsolete fortifications, and a garrison of about 1500 soldiers (Poles and Lithuanians). The Ottoman army was under command of Köprülü Fazıl Ahmed Pasha[3] and numbered 150 thousand soldiers with reinforcements from the army of Tatars, Moldavians, Wallachians and Cossacks. Polish forces were commanded by Starosta of Podole, Mikolaj Potocki, and consisted of several units, such as infantry regiment of Bishop of Kraków Andrzej Trzebicki, two regiments of Captains Wasowicz and Bukar, permanent garrison of Major Kwasiborski, and other smaller units under Jan Mokrzycki, Jerzy Wolodyjowski, Rotmeister Myliszewski, Chorazy Wojciech Humecki, Stolnik Stanislaw Makowiecki, and Czesnik Jozef Wasilkowski. Polish forces of some 1,500 were inadequate to successfully defend such a large fortress.

First Crimean Tatar units appeared near Kamieniec Podolski on August 12, and two days later, main Ottoman army camped by the town. After building seven large sconces, Turkish artillery began a barrage with its 120 modern cannons. It paralyzed Polish defence, and on August 20, the Turks managed to score a direct hit in one of the towers of the Old Castle, which served as an ammunition depot. The tower blew up in a large explosion, which was followed by a Turkish attack on Kamieniec. Poles managed to defend the fortress, but with very heavy losses. After the attack, Mikolaj Potocki decided to abandon the New Castle, under which Turkish miners dug deep tunnels, placing explosives in them. The Old Castle with its medieval walls was not prepared for a modern siege, and Potocki’s decision placed the defenders in a very difficult position. On August 25 the Turks dug a tunnel under one of the towers, and managed to destroy it. Another attack followed, again repelled by the Poles.

On August 26, 1672, Potocki decided to capitulate and on August 30, Polish forces left Kamieniec. The Pasha entered the city three days later. Turkish occupiers remained in Kamieniec for 27 years, until 1699. In 1692, to stop a possible Turkish attack, Hetman Stanislaw Jan Jablonowski built the stronghold of Okopy Swietej Trojcy some 20 kilometres (12 mi) from Kamieniec.

On October 17, 1672, Poland signed the Treaty of Buczacz, wherein Poland and Lithuania agreed to pay a yearly tribute of 22,000 ducats to the Turks. However, these arrangements were not accepted by the Polish parliament. A new army was assembled, at the head of which Hetman Jan Sobieski crushed the Turks at Chocim in November 1673. The war lasted until 1676. Kamieniec returned to Poland in 1699, following the Treaty of Karlowitz.

References

  1. ^ a b Davies 2007, p. 156.
  2. ^ a b Derdej, Piotr (2009). Kamieniec Podolski 1672. p. 91.
  3. ^ a b Türkiye Diyanet Vakfı İslâm ansiklopedisi: Cilt 33. 2007. ISBN 9789753894272.

Bibliography

  • Davies, Brian L (2007). Warfare, State and Society on the Black Sea Steppe, 1500-1700. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415239851.
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Ottoman Empire Major sieges involving the Ottoman Empire by century
13th-14th
15th
  • 1411 Constantinople
  • 1422 Constantinople
  • 1422–1430 Thessalonica
  • 1428 Golubac
  • 1440 Belgrade
  • 1440–41 Novo Brdo
  • 1448 Svetigrad
  • 1450 Krujë
  • 1453 Constantinople
  • 1455 Berat
  • 1456 Belgrade
  • 1461 Trebizond
  • 1462 Mytilene
  • 1463 Jajce
  • 1464 Jajce
  • 1467 Krujë
  • 1470 Negroponte
  • 1474 Scutari
  • 1477–78 Krujë
  • 1478–79 Scutari
  • 1480 Rhodes
  • 1481 Otranto
  • 1484 Chilia
16th
17th
  • 1601 Nagykanizsa
  • 1621 Khotyn
  • 1638 Baghdad
  • 1663 Uyvar
  • 1664 Novi Zrin
  • 1648–1669 Candia
  • 1672 Kamenets
  • 1683 Vienna
  • 1684 Buda
  • 1684 Santa Maura
  • 1685 Érsekújvár
  • 1686 Buda
  • 1686 Pécs
  • 1688 Negroponte
  • 1688 Belgrade
  • 1690 Belgrade
  • 1695 Azov
  • 1696 Azov
18th
  • 1711 Brăila
  • 1715 Nauplia
  • 1716 Corfu
  • 1716 Temeşvar
  • 1717 Belgrade
  • 1733 Baghdad
  • 1734–35 Ganja
  • 1737 Ochakov
  • 1739 Belgrade
  • 1788 Ochakov
  • 1788 Khotin
  • 1789 Belgrade
  • 1789–90 Izmail
  • 1799 El Arish
  • 1799 Jaffa
  • 1799 Acre
19th
20th
  • 1912–13 Scutari
  • 1912–13 Adrianople
  • 1915 Van
  • 1915–16 Kut
  • 1916–1919 Medina
Ottoman defeats shown in italics.
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General and related


Piast Poland
Mongol invasions
Jagiellon Poland
Polish–Teutonic wars
Commonwealth
Polish–Swedish wars
Polish–Ottoman wars
  • Moldavian campaign (1497–1499)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1620–1621
    • Battle of Chocim (1621)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1633–1634
  • Polish–Cossack–Tatar War (1666–1671)
  • Polish–Ottoman War of 1672–1676
    • Battle of Chocim (1673)
  • Great Turkish War
Poland partitioned
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World War II in Poland
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48°40′24″N 26°33′45″E / 48.67333°N 26.56250°E / 48.67333; 26.56250