Battle of Narva (1700)

Battle of Narva
Part of the Great Northern War

"Slaget vid Narva" (Ca 1870) by Otto Mankell
Date19 November 1700 (O.S.)
20 November 1700 (Swedish calendar)
30 November 1700 (N.S.)
LocationNarva, Swedish Empire
(present-day Estonia)
Result Decisive Swedish victory[1][2]
Belligerents
Swedish Empire Tsardom of Russia
Commanders and leaders
Charles XII[3]
Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld[3]
Otto Vellingk[3]
Charles Eugène de Croÿ[3]
Avtomon Golovin[3]
Ivan Trubetskoy[3]
Adam Veyde[3]
Boris Sheremetev[3]
Alexander of Imereti[3]
Strength
Narva garrison:
1,800 men,
297 artillery pieces
Relief force:
10,500 men,
37 cannon[a]
37,000 men,
195 artillery pieces[b]
Casualties and losses
667 killed,
1,247 wounded[c]
more than 9,000 killed,
20,000 captured[d]

The Battle of Narva (Russian: Битва на Нарве; Swedish: Slaget vid Narva) on 19 November 1700 (30 November, N.S.) was an early battle in the Great Northern War. A Swedish relief army under Charles XII of Sweden defeated a Russian siege force three to four times its size. Before, Charles XII had forced Denmark-Norway to sign the Treaty of Travendal. Narva was not followed by further advances of the Swedish army into Russia, instead, Charles XII turned southward to expel August the Strong from Livonia and Poland-Lithuania. Tsar Peter the Great of Russia took Narva in a second battle in 1704.

Prelude

During the 17th century, Russia was less advanced technologically than the rest of Europe, a condition which extended to its armed forces.[14] Despite this shortcoming Peter the Great of Russia was keen to expand his territory by conquering parts of Sweden's Baltic provinces. Russia made a military alliance with Frederick IV, king of Denmark-Norway; and August the Strong, king of Poland-Lithuania and elector of Saxony, to wage war against Sweden. Whereupon all five countries attacked Sweden from several directions.[15]

Charles XII, assisted by the Royal Navy and the Dutch Navy, first landed in Humlebæk north of Copenhagen and forced Denmark-Norway to leave the alliance in August 1700 (until 1709).[16] He then moved part of the Swedish army across the Baltic Sea to Estonia where it was joined by Estonian and Finnish regiments of the Swedish army.

The new Russian Tsar, Peter I, would drastically modernize Russia in the coming years, but the army with which he traveled in 1700 was still poorly drilled. Peter had employed foreign generals and officers[17]:686 to improve his armed forces, but they were still far from seasoned. Sweden, on the other hand, possessed a well-drilled and well-equipped army. Charles XII of Sweden had the most complete military force in northern Europe, even if it was not the largest, and Peter envied its capabilities.[14]

During November, Russian troops surrounded the Swedish city of Narva in Estonia (part of Sweden at the time), attempting to secure its surrender via siege. A Saxon-Polish army commanded by August II and Steinau was outside Riga in Swedish Livonia. The Saxon-Polish army however had gone into winter camp south of the river Daugava so Charles XII decided to deal with the more immediate Russian threat against Narva, which was under siege by Peter's forces.[17]:686

The battle

Russian force surrendering to Charles
The battle of Narva, 1700

On 19 (OS) or 30 (NS) November 1700[18] (20 November in the Swedish transitional calendar), Charles XII positioned his 8,000 men (another 2,500 men were garrisoned in the city and would also take part in the battle at a later stage) opposite the besieging Russian army of about 34,000 to 40,000 troops.[4][10][18][19]

The Swedish army was commanded personally by Charles XII, assisted by General Carl Gustav Rehnskiöld.[3] The Russian forces were commanded by Tsar Peter and Charles Eugène de Croy. Claiming important domestic events in Russia to which he was required to attend, Peter had left Narva just days before and was therefore not present during the actual fighting. He trusted that his commanders would draw success from the battle and presumed that Charles would not immediately attack his well fortified forces of superior number. Some interpretations view his flight from Narva days before the battle an act of cowardice; most of Europe mocked the Tsar after the battle for his departure. However, some scholars believe this accusation has little merit, as reportedly the Tsar had placed himself in physical danger too many times previously for his flight to be out of cowardice.[20]

For much of the day, a blizzard engulfed both armies, making attacks impossible. However, at midday, the winds changed and the snowstorm blew directly into the eyes of the Russians.[17]:686 Charles saw his opportunity and advanced on the Russian army under cover of the weather.[3] The Swedes attacked in two columns, quickly broke through the Russian lines cutting them in three, and rounded them up.[18] At one crucial point, a bridge over the Narova river collapsed under retreating Russian troops:[3] The stampede led to the overall losses of 6,000–18,000 dead Russians, depending on sources.[21][9] The remainder surrendered.[3]

The Russian surrender brought to Charles XII's army all of Peter's cannons, muskets and military supplies. This left Russia's remaining armed forces with essentially no equipment. If Sweden had invaded Russia immediately after Narva, Peter would have been almost powerless to stop them.[14]

Russian Memorial

Russian memorial near Narva

In 1900, 200 years after the battle of Narva, the Preobrazhensky and Semyonovsky regiments initiated the construction of a memorial to the Russian soldiers who had fallen in the battle of Narva. The memorial consists of a granite pedestal with a cross on top, placed on a mound of earth. The inscription says: "Our heroic ancestors who fell in November 1700."[22]

Victory monument

Swedish Lion Monument in Narva

On November 20, 2000, the Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Lena Hjelm Wallén inaugurated a new memorial/monument to celebrate the victory. Erected with economic contribution from the Swedish Institute, it replaced an older memorial, erected in 1936, which disappeared during the Second World War. The monument is surmounted by a "Swedish Lion", his left paw resting on a ball engraved with the Three Crowns of Sweden. It stands on a pedestal of granite. The Latin inscription on the pedestal reads MDCC (1700) and Svecia Memor (Sweden Remembers).[23]

Second battle

Four years after the first battle of Narva, Tsar Peter marched again in an attempt to capture Narva. Marshal Boris Sheremetev's force of 20,000 captured Tartu on 24 June.[17]:697 Sheremetev then besieged Narva, where the garrison of Narva was under the Commandant Major-General Henning Rudolf Horn af Ranzien[17]:697 and consisted of 3,800 infantry and 1,300 cavalry. The Russians took Narva on 20 August 1704 and begin to massacre the population before Peter stops them.[17]:697 General Horn, several officers and a large number of Swedish soldiers were captured, with about 3,200 casualties while the Russians lost over 10,000 men during the siege and the battle.[24]


External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Narva (1700).

References

  1. Kerala J. Snyder (2002), p.137
  2. Magnus Stenbock Count and Spy
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 3.12 Jeremy Black (1996), p.111
  4. 4.0 4.1 Christer Kuvaja (2008), p.139
  5. Lars-Eric Höglund, Åke Sallnäs, Alexander Vespalov (2011). Great Northern War 1700 - 1721, II.
  6. Generalstaben (1918-1919). Karl XII på slagfältet.
  7. Tacitus.nu, Örjan Martinsson. Russian force.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Boris Grigorjev & Aleksandr Bespalov (2012). Kampen mot övermakten. Baltikums fall 1700-1710. pp. 38
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Ullgren (2008), p.57
  10. 10.0 10.1 Ericson (2003), p.257
  11. Cathal J. Nolan (2008). Wars of the Age of Louis XIV, 1650-1715. pp. 313
  12. Hughes, Lindsey. Russia in the Age of Peter the Great. — New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998. pp. 30.
  13. Olle Larsson, Stormaktens sista krig (2009) Lund, Historiska Media. pp. 99
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Peter The Great - Swift
  15. Frost (2000), p.228
  16. Frost (2000), p.229
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 Tucker, S.C., 2010, A Global Chronology of Conflict, Vol. Two, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, LLC, ISBN 9781851096671
  18. 18.0 18.1 18.2 Frost (2003), p.230, 232
  19. Porfiriev (1958), p.145
  20. Massie (1980), p.341
  21. Беспалов А. В. Северная война (1998), p.43
  22. Петров А. В (1901), p.354-355
  23. Svenska institutet och Narva
  24. Carl XII:s historia, Del 1, Knut Lundblad. p.339

Further reading

Coordinates: 59°22′00″N 28°11′00″E / 59.3667°N 28.1833°E