- Battle of Lyubar
The Battle of Lyubar or battle of Lubar on 14–27 September 1660 near
Lyubar between the forces of thePolish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (allied with theTatars ) andTsardom of Russia (allied with theCossacks ) was the first battle of the 1660 campaign in the south. It ended with a Polish victory. The Russian army retreated and was subsequently destroyed during thebattle of Chudniv .Background
In July 1660, Tsar
Alexis I of Russia orderedVasily Sheremetev to resume the sporadicRusso-Polish War (1654–1667) and push the Poles west, takingLviv and securing disputed Ukrainian territories for Russia.In September 1660, the commander of the Russian army, Sheremetev, acting on misleading information that greatly underestimated the numerical strength of the Polish army decided to seek out and destroy the Polish forces with what he believed would be overwhelming strength (15,000 Russian soldiers and 15,000–35,000 of his Cossack allies).Ossoliński, 1995, p.12-20] Sheremetev's major tactical error was to advance relying on outdated and sparse intelligence reports, and without adequate scouting. [Ossoliński, 1995, p.9-10] He expected only a weak army of 10,000 (in fact, it numbered only about 7,000) under
Great Crown Hetman Stanisław "Rewera" Potocki and was unaware it was soon to be reinforced by about 12,000 men underField Crown Hetman Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski who recently defeated a Russian army in Lithuania.The Polish commanders
Hetman s Potocki and Lubomirski had much better intelligence (they were also aided byIvan Vyhovsky spy network) and quickly became aware of Sheremetev's error. Polish historian Łossowski notes that "while Sheremetev's advanced blindly, the Polish hetmans knew almost everything about his army and moves". [Ossoliński, 1995, p.10] They decided to engage his forces before he could be reinforced by hisCossack allies. Part of the Cossacks (about 15,000 underTimofey Tsetsura (Pol: Tymofiej Cieciura)) were to stay with Sheremetev's corps, and another part (about 20,000 underYurii Khmelnytsky ), according to Sheremetev's plan were to intercept and defeat the 12,000 strong Tatars from theCrimean Khanate under nuradyn-sultanSafer Giray (of whose coming to Polish aid Sheremetev was aware). However, Khmelnytsky failed to stop the Tatars and most of the Tatar forces slipped past him around middle of August. Further, the Cossack's leader,Yurii Khmelnytsky , was increasingly at odds with Sheremetev (who favored Tsetsura over Khmelnytsky, and who refused to promise Khmelnytsky any loot from the upcoming battles), and was in no hurry to execute Sheremetev's orders or stick to his plan.Ossoliński, 1995, p.8Orest Subtelny , "Ukraine: A History", University of TorontoPress, 2000, ISBN 0802083900, [http://books.google.com/books?id=HNIs9O3EmtQC&pg=PA145&dq=chudniv+1660&as_brr=3&ei=EzpsR6uCDYHUiwHvxJxg&sig=1UGOAxtEzlU4_QP3YMA5d3Ps0pE Google Print, p.145] ] The Tatars met Potocki's forces on 1 September, and they in turn met with Lubomirski on 7 September, while Khmelnytsky was still far from Sheremetev's army.The combined Polish army (not counting 12,000 Tatars and 1,500 Cossacks under Vyhovsky) numbered about 27,000 (including about 700
Winged Hussars , 8,000pancerni , 3500 light cavalry, 1,500raitar s, 5,000dragoon s, and 10,000 infantry). Sheremetev troops (not counting about 15,000 Cossacks under Tsetsura) numbered 18,000 (including 4500 Russian traditional cavalry, 5,500 raitars, 3,500 dragoons, 3,000 foreign infantry and 1,000streltsy ).Battle
The Russian army was surprised near
Lyubar on 14 September and Sheremetev's vanguard was wiped out. Sheremetev, who had up until then failed to send out a single scouting party, suddenly realized what was to be an easy victory was a death trap and decided to take a defensive position in a fortified camp. [Ossoliński, 1995, p.22] The numerical superiority of the Polish forces, a lack of supplies and several minor defeats convinced him to break away on 26 September. At first the plan succeeded but the Polish forces caught up with the Russian army during its crossing of theIber river and subsequently captured or destroyed a significant portion of the remaining Russian artillery and supplies.Aftermath
The Polish forces caught up again with the Russians on 27 September near
Chudniv (Cudnów. At that point, the Russian and Cossack armies had lost about 1,000 troops and the Poles, about 100 (not counting the wounded). Sheremetev received a minor reinforcement by attaching Chudniv's garrison (about 1,000 troops) to his main army. However with no further reinforcements, Sheremetev suffered a major defeat at the ensuingbattle of Chudniv .Fact|date=June 2008Notes
References
* Łukasz Ossoliński, "Kampania na Ukrainie 1660 roku"; doctoral thesis (
University of Warsaw ), 1995, [http://web.archive.org/web/20040611013227/http://www.historia.icenter.pl/pdf/Kampania_na_Ukrainie.pdf available here]
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