- Battle of Zhovti Vody
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Zhovti Vody
partof=theKhmelnytsky Uprising
caption=Death of Stefan Potocki at the Battle of Zhovti Vody.
date=April 29 -May 16 ,1648
place=Zhovti Vody ,Ukraine
result=Cossack-Tatar victory
combatant1=
combatant2=
commander1=
commander2=
strength1= 5,000 Zaporizhian cossacks and 3,000-4,000 Tatars later 6,000 Registered Cossacks joned Khmelnytsky )
strength2= 10,000 later 6,000 Registered Cossacks joned Khmelnytsky pl icon [http://www.husaria.jest.pl/zoltewody.html Bitwa pod Żółtymi Wodami -sprostowanie do filmu Jerzego Hoffmana] .Last accessed on 23 December 2006.]
casualties1=Unknown, but heavy
casualties2=UnknownBattle of Zhovti Vody ( _uk. Жовтi Води, _pl. Żółte Wody; literally "yellow waters"), (
April 29 toMay 16 ,1648 ) was the first significantbattle of theKhmelnytsky Uprising . Near the site of the present-day city ofZhovti Vody in south-central Ukraine, advance forces of thePolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth army met a numerically superior (1:10) force ofCossack s andCrimean Tatars under the command ofBohdan Khmelnytsky andTuhaj Bej . After theRegistered Cossacks allied with the Commonwealth arrived and unexpectedly sided with Khmelnytsky, the Commonwealth forces were vanquished while attempting to retreat following the 18-day battle, only days before reinforcements were to arrive.Before the battle
Around the 21-22 of April, 1648, word of an uprising had spread through the Commonwealth. Either because they underestimated the size of the uprising, [Chirovsky, Nicholas: "The Lithuanian-Rus' commonwealth, the Polish domination, and the Cossack-Hetman State", page 176. Philisophical Library, 1984.] or because they wanted to act quickly to prevent it from spreading, [uk iconTerletskyi, Omelian: "History of the Ukrainian Nation, Volume II: The Cossack Cause", page 75. 1924.] the Commonwealth's Grand Crown
Hetman Mikołaj Potocki and Field Crown HetmanMarcin Kalinowski sent 3,000 soldiers under the command of Potocki's son, Stefan, deep into Cossack territory, without waiting to gather additional forces fromPrince Jeremi Wiśniowiecki . Stefan's force consisted of 2chorągiew s ofdragoon s, 1 unit ofinfantry (foreignmercenaries ), and 11 chorągiews of cavalry (about 1150 people, of which 1 chorągiew was composed of the eliteWinged Hussars ); the rest of his force was composed ofregistered Cossacks . While this group traveled by land, an additional group was sent down theDniepr river in boats and was to regroup with Stefan Potocki's forces. This group, under the command ofPolkovnyk (colonel )Mykhailo Krychevsky , was composed almost entirely of registered Cossacks (it also had a small number of German dragoon mercenaries) and numbered at around 4,000.5,000 troops remained with Hetman Mikołaj Potocki while he attempted to gather local reinforcements from the various private armies of the local
magnate s as well as the "pospolite ruszenie " of the militantszlachta (Polish nobility).Stefan's force arrived first at the rendezvous point. It is likely that Krychevsky, en route, contacted Bohdan Khmelnytsky, his old friend (who he helped to escape into
Zaporizhian Sich a year earlier) and the leader of the uprising.The battle
On April 28, 1648, Stefan Potocki's forces came upon Khmelnytsky's army in an area near the present-day city
Zhovti Vody . Numbering only 3,000, the Commonwealth forces were greatly outnumbered at this point in comparison to Khmelnytsky's army of 8,000, which consisted ofCossacks as well as 3,000-4,000Crimean Tatars under the command ofTuhaj Bej . Stefan Potocki (advised byJacek Szemberk andStefan Czarniecki ) ordered his force to retreat and take on the defensivetabor formation , which allowed for a messenger to be sent to contact Hetman Mikołaj Potocki.On May 4, 1648, instead of doubling the Commonwealth's forces at Zhovti Vody, Mykhailo Krychevsky's 4,000 registered cossacks arrived and sided with Khmelnytsky; in the process of changing allegiances, Cossacks who elected to remain loyal to Potocki were cut down, as well as the German dragoons in their midst. The next day, Stefan Potocki saw his already undermanned force of 3,000 halved to 1,500, when the registered cossacks who arrived with Stefan also joined the uprising. Polkovnyk
Ivan Hanzha is recognized as having been instrumental in swaying his fellow registered cossacks over to Khmelnytsky's side. At this point, Khmelnytsky's army swelled to 15,000 (further reinforced by local cossacks joining the uprising).The Commonwealth army managed to hold off from being overrun; this was due in part to their superior
artillery . On May 13, 1648, Khmelnytsky met with representatives of Stefan Potocki, who debated turning over their artillery in exchange for safe passage. With negotiations breaking down, Potocki decided to leave the artillery and escape under the cover of darkness on the night of May 15. The Commonwealth forces were surprised by a hail of arrows from Tuhaj Bej's Tatar forces, which diverted their escape route towards the nearby fortified village ofKniazhi Bairaky ( _uk. Княжі Байраки, _pl. Kryłów). There the combined forces of Tatar horsemen and cossacks under the command of Khmelnytsky's First Polkovnyk Maksym Olshansky ( "Crook-nose", "Kryvonis", or "Perebyinis") overwhelmed Potocki's tabor formation and thoroughly routed the fleeing force.Hetman Mikołaj Potocki, who had received word on May 3, 1648, of his son's plight, could not move his forces in time to reinforce the Commonwealth's position, with his forces getting to within 100km from the site of the battle.
Aftermath
The majority of the Commonwealth forces either died in battle or were killed shortly thereafter. Stefan Potocki was wounded, taken
prisoner of war and died fromgangrene on May 19, 1648. His advisor, Stefan Czarniecki, was also taken prisoner, although he managed to escape soon thereafter (and went on to become one of Poland's greatest military commanders).Bolstered by their victory, the Cossack and Tatar forces engaged and defeated the forces of Hetman Mikołaj Potocki at the
Battle of Korsuń .In popular culture
The battle was very inaccurately portrayed in the 1999
film "With Fire and Sword" by Polishfilm director Jerzy Hoffman . Although the film paid much attention to historical details, the attempt to summarize the weeks-long battle in a few minutes meant that the battle as shown in the movie – reduced to the failed hussar's charge – had little in common with what had really happened, especially as the hussar forces in reality proved to be the backbone of Polish resistance during this 18-day battle.References
External links
*pl icon [http://szymbid.webpark.pl/zolte.html Żółte Wody 1648] .
*uk icon [http://warhistory.ukrlife.org/2_02_5.htm Military strategy of Bohdan Khmelnytsky]
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