Battle of Fundina

Battle of Fundina
Part of Montenegrin-Turkish War of 1876-1878

Depiction of the Battle of Fundina
Date 2 August 1876
Location Fundina, Montenegro
Result Decisive Montenegrin victory[1]
Belligerents
 Principality of Montenegro  Ottoman Empire
Commanders and leaders
Ilija Plamenac
Marko Miljanov Popović
Mahmud Pasha
Strength
5,000 40,000
Casualties and losses
about 600 10,000-13,500

The Battle of Fundina took place on 2 August 1876 in Fundina, a village in Kuči, Principality of Montenegro.

The Montenegrin Army was led by the two Montenegrin dukes, Ilija Plamenac and Marko Miljanov, who had about 5,000 people uder their direct command. Days before the battle, a Montenegrin Muslim, Mašo-Hadži Ahmetov revealed Ottoman plans to Marko Miljanov, so that Montenegrins knew where the attack was going to come from.

The Ottomans advanced from the Southwest towards Kuči, planning their final attack for 3 August. But, since Montenegrin commanders knew of their plans, they counterattacked a day before. Most of the fighting occurred at the bottom of Heljam hill, where Ottomans were defending from the trenches. While Marko Miljanov was in the front lines, Ilija Plamenac was commanding the Montenegrin army from the back, developing a strategy. After the victory was secured, Montenegrins captured the Ottoman leaders, put them in a house and burned it to the ground. The rest of Montenegrins chased the remaining Ottomans soutward, forcing them into a fast retreat.

The importance of this Montenegrin victory was that it stopped the Turkish advance, and secured Montenegrin victory in the Montenegrin-Turkish War of 1876-1878.

Contents

Trivia

Notes

  1. ^ Ćirković, Sima M., The Serbs, (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2004), 224.

Sources

See also