- Morava Offensive Operation
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Morava Offensive Operation Part of Serbian Campaign (World War I) 300px
Bulgarian army crossed the River MoravaDate 14 October 1915 - 9 November 1915 Location front from Leskovac to Negotin, Serbia Result Bulgarian victory Belligerents Bulgaria
Serbia
Commanders and leaders Kliment Boyadzhiev
Stepa Stepanovic
Strength First Army: 195,620 men; 116,569 rifleman,108 machine guns, 422 cannons [1] Second Army - 5 infantry divisions: c.90,000 rifleman, 94 machine guns, 248 cannons [2] Casualties and losses 1,906 killed,
10,637 wounded,
925 missing[3]6,000 casualties - Cer
- Drina
- Kolubara
- Morava
- Ovche Pole
- Kosovo
- Mojkovac
The Morava Offensive Operation (Bulgarian: Моравска настъпателна операция) was undertaken by the Bulgarian First Army between 14 October 1915 and 9 November 1915 as part of the strategic offensive operation of Army Group Mackensen against Serbia in 1915. Under the command of Lieutenant General Kliment Boyadzhiev the Bulgarians seized the fortified areas of Pirot, Niš and the valley of the river Morava[disambiguation needed
]. As a result the Serbian forces were compelled to retreat towards Kosovo.
In the beginning due to the harsh weather and the tough terrain the Bulgarian advance was slow but despite the desperate resistance of the defenders, there was a Bulgarian breakthrough near Pirot in 10 days and the Serbs retreated to the Timok and the Bulgarian 1st Army chased them.
The battle continued for 27 days and the Bulgarians penetrated up to 90 km deep into the enemy's territory. The Serbs lost 6,000 men; 60 guns and huge amount of military equipment.
Footnotes
Sources
- Атанас Пейчев и колектив, 1300 години на стража, Военно издателство, София 1984.
Bulgaria in World War I Prelude South-western front: Serbian Campaign, Macedonian front Romanian front • Outcome • Others Important persons 1912–1913
1913
- Treaty of London
- Second Balkan War
- Treaty of Bucharest
- Treaty of Istanbul
Neutrality1915
- Negotiations of Bulgaria with the Central Powers and the Entente
- Bulgarian-German treaty
- Secret Bulgarian-German agreement
- Military convention between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria
- Bulgarian-Turkish convention
- Mobilization
CommandersNikola Zhekov • Kliment Boyadzhiev • Georgi Todorov• Stefan Nerezov • Vladimir Vazov
Serbia: Radomir Putnik • Živojin Mišić • Stepa Stepanović • Petar Bojović;
France: Maurice Sarrail • Adolphe Guillaumat • Franchet d'Esperey;
United Kingdom: George Milne;
Greece: Panagiotis Danglis
Field ArmiesFirst Army
Second Army
Fourth Army
Battles1915
Morava Offensive Operation • Ovche Pole Offensive Operation • Kosovo Offensive Operation (1915) • Battle of Krivolak
1916
First battle of Doiran • Battle of Lerin • Battle of Struma • Monastir Offensive
1917
Second battle of Doiran • 2nd Cerna Bend • Battle of the Red Wall
1918
Battle of Skra-di-Legen • Battle of Dobro Pole • Third battle of Doiran
CommandersNikola Zhekov • Panteley Kiselov • Stefan Toshev • Todor Kantardzhiev • Ivan Kolev
Romania: Constantin Prezan • Alexandru Averescu;
Russia: Andrei Zaionchkovsky
Field ArmiesBattles1916
Battle of Turtucaia • Battle of Dobrich • First Cobadin • Flămânda Offensive • Second Cobadin • Battle of Bucharest
Outcome1918 Treaty of Brest-Litovsk • Armistice of Focşani • Treaty of Bucharest • Protocol of Berlin
Outcome
- Armistice of Salonica
- Vladaya revolt
- Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine
Others
- Bulgarian administration in Kosovo
- Anti-military propaganda
- Ferdinand
- Aleksandar Protogerov
- August von Mackensen
- Boris Drangov
- Vladimir Vazov
- Georgi Todorov (general)
- Ivan Kolev
- Kliment Boyadzhiev
- Konstantin Zhostov
- Krastyu Zlatarev
- Nikola Zhekov
- Panteley Kiselov
- Stefan Toshev
- Stefan Nerezov
- Todor Kantardzhiev
Categories:- Battles of World War I involving Bulgaria
- Battles involving Serbia
- Battles of the Balkans Theatre (World War I)
- 1915 in Bulgaria
- World War I stubs
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