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Battle of Khotyn (1673)

Coordinates: 48°29′N 26°30′E / 48.483°N 26.500°E / 48.483; 26.500
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Battle of Khotyn (1673)
Part of the Ottoman–Polish War (1672–1676)

Painting of the battle by Jan van Huchtenburg in 1675
Date11 November 1673
Location48°29′N 26°30′E / 48.483°N 26.500°E / 48.483; 26.500
Result Polish–Lithuanian victory
Belligerents
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth link Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
John III Sobieski
Michał Kazimierz Radziwiłł
link Hüseyin Pasha
Strength
29,052–30,000[1] 35,000[2]
Casualties and losses
2,000 killed and wounded[3] 20,000–30,000 killed and wounded[3]
John III Sobieski during the battle

The Battle of Khotyn or Battle of Chocim, also known as the Hotin War,[4] took place on 11 November 1673 in Khotyn, where the forces of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth under the Grand Hetman of the Polish Crown John Sobieski defeated Ottoman Empire forces, with Moldavian and Wallachian regiments, led by Hüseyin Pasha. It reversed the fortunes of the previous year, when Commonwealth weakness led to the signing of the Treaty of Buchach, and allowed John Sobieski to win the upcoming royal election and become the King of Poland.

Name

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Khotyn (Polish: Chocim; Romanian: Hotin; Turkish: Hotin; Ukrainian: Хоти́н, romanizedKhotyn) was conquered and controlled by many states, resulting in many name changes. Other name variations include Chotyn, or Choczim (especially in Polish).

Battle

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The Polish-Lithuanian army, numbering some 30,000 soldiers, under the command of Grand Crown Hetman John Sobieski, besieged the Khotyn fortress in the first days of November 1673. The fortress had natural defensive qualities, as it was located in a bend of the Dniester River. It was protected from the land side by earth ramparts and numerous defensive fortifications built on the site of a former Polish camp from half a century before. The first attacks on the Turkish positions were carried out by Sobieski on November 10, however, they were intended only to reconnoiter the battlefield and the deployment of enemy forces. The actual battle was fought the next day, when Sobieski hit the Turks tired of the weather and sleeplessness. The Polish-Lithuanian leader took advantage of the fact that the weather was frosty and the Turks were ill-equipped and unprepared for such weather conditions.

After an all-night branding of the attack by the besiegers, in a strong wind and murderous cold for the Turks, at dawn on November 11 Sobieski personally led his troops to storm the Turkish camp. After a cannon salvo, the infantry and dragoons stormed the ramparts, pushing back the enemy and making room for the cavalry. After which, the hussars, led by Hetman Jabłonowski, rushed through the breaches in the ramparts. The Turks responded with a counterattack by the spahis' cavalry, but the spahis could not withstand the bravado of the hussars' charge, and soon the fighting heated up inside the fortress and the Turkish camp, among the dens of tents. In view of the panic that gripped the Turkish troops, Hussein Pasha ordered an evacuation to the other bank of the Dniester. But the only bridge at Chocim was damaged by Polish-Lithuanian artillery fire and collapsed under the weight of those fleeing. Only a few thousand Turks out of the entire 35,000-strong army managed to get through to Kamieniec Podolski.

The rest of the Turkish troops fell or were taken prisoner. The Polish-Lithuanian losses were much smaller, and a strongly fortified fortress with large supplies of food and war supplies was captured.

The Battle of Khotyn ended with a total victory for the Commonwealth, but it did not bring a breakthrough in the war and did not lead to the recovery of Kamieniec Podolski. On the other hand, the prestige of the Commonwealth in Europe increased, especially the respect for Hetman John Sobieski among the Turks, who henceforth called Sobieski the "Lion of Khotyn."

Aftermath

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In result of the battle the Ottoman army suffered crippling losses. It lost two-thirds of its count in either killed or wounded. On top of that Moldavian and Wallachian troops switched sides and decided to support the Commonwealth. The Turkish forces withdrew from Poland after their supplies and most of their artillery were captured but they retained most of western Ukraine. Sobieski and the nobles returned to Warsaw for elections following the death of Michael Wisniowiecki, King of Poland, the day before the battle.

Composition of the Polish–Lithuanian forces

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Total: 29,052 soldiers[5]

References

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  1. ^ Marek Wagner, Wojna polsko-turecka w latach 1672–1676 t.1, Infort Editions, Zabrze 2009, p 376, ISBN 978-83-89943-34-7
  2. ^ Marek Wagner, Wojna polsko-turecka w latach 1672–1676 t.1, Infort Editions, Zabrze 2009, p 374, ISBN 978-83-89943-34-7
  3. ^ a b Marek Wagner, Wojna polsko-turecka w latach 1672–1676 t.1, Infort Editions, Zabrze 2009, p 392, ISBN 978-83-89943-34-7
  4. ^ DeVries, Kelly Robert (1 May 2014). "The European tributary states of the Ottoman Empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries". Choice. 51 (9).
  5. ^ Orłowski D. Chocim 1673, Warszawa, 2007, s. 108–118.

Bibliography

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  • Alan Palmer, The Decline and Fall of the Ottoman Empire, Published by Barnes & Noble Publishing, 1992. ISBN 1-56619-847-X.
  • Winged Hussars, Radoslaw Sikora, Bartosz Musialowicz, BUM Magazine, 2016.