- Battle of Oravais
Infobox Military Conflict
conflict=Battle of Oravais
caption=Positions at the battle
partof=Finnish War
date=14 September 1808
place= The village ofOravais ,Finland
result= Russian victory
combatant1=Sweden
combatant2=Russia
commander1=Carl Johan Adlercreutz
commander2=Nikolay Mikhailovich Kamensky
strength1=5,000 troops
strength2=6,000-7,000 troops
casualties1=740 dead, hundreds wounded, around 100 prisoners
casualties2=900 dead, 600 woundedThe Battle of Oravais (Finnish: "Oravaisten taistelu", Swedish: "Slaget vid Oravais") is sometimes regarded as the turning point of the
Finnish War : the last chance forSweden to turn the war to her advantage. It was the bloodiest battle of the conflict, which some historians attribute to theexhaustion ,resignation anddesperation of theSwedish army : it was losing the war.Prelude
At the beginning of the war, Swedish forces had retreated to Uleåborg. They had then managed to repel the Russians and reach Savolax despite the capitulation of the fortress of Sveaborg by the end of summer
1808 . Russia recuperated quickly, and by the end of August the Swedish army was again retreating northwards along the coastal road. To avoid being encircled,colonel Georg Carl von Döbeln was sent in advance toNykarleby with a brigade. The threat of encirclement was exaggerated, but the Swedish army was at this point showing signs of panic and collapse. On September 13 the army left forOravais and it halted to await news from von Döbeln, who was fighting the Russians at Jutas. The sound of a cannon was heard in Oravais, and a brigade was sent to reinforce von Döbeln.The Russian main army had marched from Vasa in furious pursuit of the Swedish forces. The night before September 14 was spent in bivouacs along the road between
Vörå and Oravais. The impulsive General-majorYakov Kulnev 's troops had taken the lead and were the first to make contact with the Swedes.Battle
At dawn the first shots were exchanged between Kulnev's troops and a Swedish
outpost by a bridge in theforest . Firing intensified, the Swedish position was reinforced continuously while the remainder of the Russian forces behind Kulnev arrived. Fighting continued with heavy losses on both sides until the situation became untenable for the Swedes, who retreated to their defensive positions at 10 a.m. The retreat was covered by a singleartillery piece commanded by the sixteen-year-old sublieutenantWilhelm von Schwerin .The Swedish main position was deployed along a ridge which was protected to the north (on the Swedish right wing) by an inlet from the Baltic, and the
Fjärdså stream with its south to north flow provided added defensive potential. The forest in front of the ridge had been cleared to afford the artillery a better view of the arriving Russians, who were regrouping at the edge of the forest.Artillery
bombardment then began between the two forces, and continued for an hour until the Russians mounted afrontal assault against the Swedish positions. Kulnev, on the Russian left wing, struck the Swedish right, but was repelled when his force became bogged down in the Fjärdså stream. The Russians now reinforced their right wing, underNikolay Demidov , and another assault was made. It was also repelled, but this time the Swedish unexplainably left their positions and counterattacked; Adlercreutz had issued no order to that effect. The Swedish counterattack met overpowering fire and was forced to withdraw with heavy losses.At 2 p.m. the battle was far from decided. The Russians made a second attempt at turning the Swedish left
flank . This thinned the Russian center, and Adlercreutz ordered a forceful attack to exploit the weakness. Despite the intensive Russian fire, the attack proceeded swiftly, and the whole Swedish line was carried along by the movement. The entire Russian line was forced to retire back into the forest where the battle had begun earlier in the morning.However, Russian numerical superiority and dwindling of ammunition frustrated Adlercreutz' attempted decisive stroke. As Russian reinforcements arrived, the spent Swedish army retired to their defensive positions again. At this point the battle was still undecided, but General Kamensky ordered Demidov's right wing to make yet another attempt on the weak Swedish left wing. When this maneuver started night had fallen and the battle had raged for fourteen hours; it became too much for the Swedish army, which hastily retreated to the north.
Aftermath
The Swedish
lieutenant Carl Johan Ljunggren retold the retreat from Oravais like this:"The darkness was such that despite continuous shovings one could not recognize the shover... Hundreds of noises came out of the night; everywhere the wounded wailed, each in his own language; artillerymen and coachmen yelled at their exhausted horses and bellowed scores of curses each time they became stuck, which happened all the time; wheels and weapons rattled, soldiers bellowed; all staggered from tiredness and hunger. Thus came the army finally to Nykarleby. The Russians hadn't followed, for their forces were also completely spent.
The battle of Oravais had shown that the Swedish army was not tactically inferior to the Russian counterpart. It was the Russian numerical superiority that shifted the balance in the end. However, the Swedish strategic situation was hopeless: allied only with
Great Britain , it faced the overmight ofNapoleon 'sEurope and its Russian ally. Oravais was merely one battle on the road to final Swedish defeat.References
*"Svenska Slagfält" (2003), Wahlström & Widstrand, 2003. [http://www.nykarlebyvyer.nu/SIDOR/TEXTER/PROSA/SANDSTRA/SVESISKR/Oravais.htm A page (in Swedish) about the battle]
External links
* [http://www.multi.fi/~goranfri/batoravais.html Battle of Oravais]
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