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The storming[4] or battle of Kinburn (also Kılburun; Russian: Кинбурнская баталия, Turkish: Kılburun Muharebesi) was fought on 11–12 OctoberN.S./30 September – 1 OctoberO.S. 1787[d] as part of the Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792).
The Battle of Kinburn | |||||||
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Part of the Russo-Turkish War (1787–1792) | |||||||
Grenadier Novikov saves Suvorov from a Turkish warrior | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Ottoman Empire
| Russian Empire | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Landing party:
Fleet:
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In Kinburn:
Reinforcements:
Squadron:
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Strength | |||||||
Fleet:
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In Kinburn:
Reinforcements:
Available on land:
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
4,000 to 5,000 |
1,000 |
A weak fortress, Kinburn was located opposite Ochakov on a sand bank forming a part of the Dnieper river delta. It covered approaches to the fleet base at Kherson. The reason for the Ottoman attack on the Kinburn Spit was to deprive the enemy of a base for the siege of Ochakov and Kherson fleet base.
The forces
editAlexander Suvorov, commanding the Russian garrison, had 19 bronze and 300 iron artillery pieces in the fortress, weak in power and range, 1,500 infantry in Kinburne and 2,500 infantry or light cavalry, 28 regimental and 10 field guns, and Cossack cavalry within 30 versts (roughly 32 kilometers) from the fortress.
The Ottomans had three 60 gun ships of the line, four 34 gun frigates, four bomb vessels (floating batteries), and 14 gunboats with 4 guns each. Altogether, about 400 guns. The Ottoman troops were carried by 23 transport vessels.
First attack
editDuring September, the Ottoman fleet twice carried out ranging fire of the fleet against the coast, trying to locate position of the Russian gun emplacements. During one bombardment, a Russian galley Desna which was part of a force of two frigates and four galleys (themselves a part of Admiral Mordvinov's squadron that sent these ships to assist in the defence of Kinburn), intervened on the initiative of its Maltese captain, and drove off the Ottoman gunboats. On the 11 October bombardment of Kinburn was conducted from the Ottoman ships again. Under the cover of this bombing, now more intense, on 12 October 1787 at 9 in the morning an amphibious landing of 6,000 troops was conducted on two separate sites (5,300 on the bank's 'tongue' itself, and the rest 10–15 versts away at a village of Bienka), with the fleet supporting the landing with fire. The landing consisted of shipboard soldiers, composing of Turks, Greeks, and part of the Ochakov garrison (about 600 people). The commander of the landing force was Serben-Geşti-Eyyub-Ağa Janissary. The pasha of Ochakov ordered the ships to leave after the landing so that the amphibious landing force would not contemplate withdrawal. The landing force begun to dig a total of 15 trenches, in the attempt to move closer to Kinburn.
Suvorov called for reinforcement (2,500 infantry and Cossacks) and waited, while being occupied with public prayer in the church (Celebration of the Covering), receiving dispatches and messages in the church.
Counterattack
editAt midday the Turks approached to within 200 paces of the fortress. Suvorov began pulling troops towards Kinburn, while at the same time the first counterattack was launched, with 1,500 soldiers of the Oryol infantry and Schlisselburg grenadier regiments leading the attack, under the command of Major General Ivan von Reck. Those attacking troops took 10 of the 15 trenches, but further, due to the loss of most of the leaders (General Reck commanding the garrison of Kinburn was seriously wounded), under flank fire of the Ottoman fleet, and the tenacity of the Turks, to which the reinforcements arrived, came to disarray and were forced to retreat to the fortress; then, Suvorov himself led the Russian forces into new, even more fierce fight. Suvorov was wounded in the side of the body and in the left hand. The news of this shook the troops, and they retreated again. Suvorov was saved only through the courage of Stepan Novikov, a grenadier of the Schlisselburg Grenadier Regiment.
At 16.00 hours Russian reinforcements approached and Suvorov repeated his attack, after releasing Cossacks to attack around the left flank of the enemy over the shoals and into their rear. This attack was successful, and Turks were forced out from the trenches and forced against the coast, forcing the fleet to cease fire in order not to hit its own troops. Suvorov had two horses shot under him. The regimental guns were able to fire canister at point-blank range, causing fearful carnage among the Turks.
At night 600 Turk survivors of the landing returned on board the ships by rowboats. Several hundred hid in the reeds, and were attacked by Cossacks on the following morning. Russian losses were 2 officers and 136 others killed and 17 officers and 300 others wounded, and those of the Turk – about 4,000, including two French officers dressed as Turks which were sent to Siberia.
In Suvorov's report the Schlisselburg regiment is particularly noted for bravery. For the Kinburn victory Catherine the Great awarded Suvorov with the Order of St. Andrew and the highest praise, where she wrote: "You deserved it by faith and by faithfulness".
Troop schedule
editUnit types | The formations |
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Infantry | Oryol Regt |
Inf. | Shlisselburg Regt |
Inf. | Kozlov Regt |
Inf. | Murom Regt
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Hussars | Mariupol Regt |
Hussars | Pavlograd Regt |
Dragoons | Saint Petersburg Regt
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Don Cossacks | 3 regiments
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See also
editNotes
edit- ^ The siege of Kinburn began on 25 September 1787 (N.S.). This is part of the so-called "Kinburn defensive operation of September 3 – October 13, 1787" (N.S.).
- ^ The siege of Kinburn began on 14 September 1787 (O.S.).[1] This is part of the so-called "Kinburn defensive operation of August 23 – October 2, 1787" (O.S.).[2]
- ^ A total of 3 regiments of Cossack cavalry,[5] numbering over 1,500 men.
(regiments of Cossacks are divided into sotnias, which must have more than 100 people; there are Cossack regiments with five, and there are regiments with seven sotnias[6]) - ^ The dates include the bombardment with which the landing was supported; shelling from Ottoman ships began the day before the land clash.
References
edit- ^ "12 октября". Runivers. Календарь (in Russian). Retrieved 17 January 2024.
- ^ Tsybakov 2022.
- ^ a b c Grant 2017, p. 475.
- ^ a b c d e Bodart 1908, p. 263.
- ^ "Кинбурнское сражение" [Battle of Kinburn]. Runivers. Военные конфликты, кампании и боевые действия русских войск 860–1914 гг. (in Russian). Retrieved 4 September 2023.
- ^ Dal 1882, p. 289.
- ^ "Russian Forces. Battle of Kinburn. 2 October 1787" (PDF). United States Army Combined Arms Center. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2023-11-06. Retrieved 2023-11-06.
Bibliography
edit- Bodart, Gaston (1908). Militär-historisches Kriegs-Lexikon (1618–1905) (in German). Vienna and Leipzig: C. W. Stern. Retrieved 1 July 2023.
- Широкорад А. Б. Русско-Турецкие войны (под общ. ред. Тараса А. Е.); Minsk: Harvest, 2000. "Сражение за Лиман и Кинбурнская победа".
- Лукирский А. Н. Сражение при Кинбурне 1 октября 1787 г. ВОИН № 12.
- Grant, R. G. (2017). 1001 Battles That Changed the Course of History. Chartwell Books. ISBN 978-0-7858-3553-0.
- Velichko, Konstantin; Novitsky, Vasily; Schwarz, Aleksey von; Apushkin, Vladimir; Schulz, Gustav von (1913). Sytin Military Encyclopedia (in Russian). Vol. XII: Кальяри – Коалиционные войны. Типография Т-ва И. Д. Сытина. pp. 528–531. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
- Dal, Vladimir (1882). Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language (in Russian). Vol. 4. St. Petersburg: Типография М. О. Вольфа. p. 289. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
- Petrov, Andrey N. (1880). Вторая турецкая война в царствование императрицы Екатерины II. 1787–1791 г. [Second Turkish War in the reign of Empress Catherine II] (in Russian). Vol. I. St. Petersburg: Типография Р. Голике. pp. 92–108. Retrieved 26 December 2023.
- Tsybakov, Dmitry Leonidovich (2022). "Проблемные вопросы истории Орловского пехотного полка: начало боевого пути и Кинбурнская оборонительная операция 1787 года". Вестник БГУ (3): 152.
External links
edit- Media related to Battle of Kinburn (1787) at Wikimedia Commons