Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Siege of Buzhin (1664)

Siege of Buzhin
Part of the Right-Bank Uprising (1664–1665)
Date7–13 April 1664
Location
Result Cossack-Russian victory[1][2][3]
Belligerents
Left-Bank Cossacks
Zaporozhian Sich
Tsardom of Russia Tsardom of Russia
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Crimean Khanate
Right-Bank Cossacks
Commanders and leaders
Cossack Hetmanate Ivan Briukhovetsky
Ivan Sirko
Tsardom of Russia Grigory Kosagov
Stefan Czarniecki
Mehmed IV Giray
Pavlo Teteria
Strength
Unknown 2,000+[2]
Casualties and losses
Unknown Heavy[2][4]

The Siege of Buzhin was conducted by the Polish-Lithuanian-Crimean forces against the Cossack-Russian garrison of Buzhin, from 7 to 13 April 1664.[1]

Prelude

The residents of Chyhyryn rose up in support of pro-Polish Teteria. Briukhovetsky besieged Chyhyryn for several weeks, but retreated after the news of Teteria and Tatars coming to the aid of Chyhyryn residents. Bryukhovetsky joined Ivan Sirko at Buzhin.[5] Kosagov and Sirko replenished their losses and again operated in the Right-Bank, attracting the local population to their side. However, Kosagov wanted to avoid direct confrontation with Czarniecki and spent the entire April avoiding Czarniecki's army in various fortresses. Kosagov and Sirko were stationed in Buzhin at that time.[3]

Siege

On 7 April, Teteria and his Tatar allies conducted skirmishes with the Buzhin garrison until Czarniecki is going arrive. Bryukhovetsky learned about this from captives, so he headed to up the Dnieper to Kaniv itself, which was under his command, for the defensive maneuver. Czarniecki took Korsun and besieged Kaniv, but was repulsed.[5] Czarniecki gathered 2,000-strong Polish-Tatar cavalry to besiege Bruzhin.[2] However, Sirko pulled off a decisive maneuver, breaking out of encirclement and killing many Polish-Tatar troops in process.[4] On 13 April, Czarniecki was forced to lift the siege and retreat with his army.[1][2]

Aftermath

Polish-Tatar forces suffered heavy losses and all their attacks were repulsed.[1][2] Czarniecki suffered a military defeat and only captured Buzhin after withdrawal of Kosagov and Sirko. Czarniecki captured Subotov, in anger he dug up the grave of Bohdan Khmelnytsky and his son Tymosh to burn them down on the square, taking revenge for his defeat.[3] However, other historians disagree that Czarniecki dug up the graves and burnt the bodies, saying this wasn't the case.

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Кампания 1664 г." runivers.ru. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "События в Украине (1660-1664 гг.)". history.wikireading.ru. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  3. ^ a b c "Григорий Косагов против Стефана Чарнецкого". warspot.ru. Retrieved 2025-01-25.
  4. ^ a b Олександр Рігельман (1994). Літописна оповідь про Малу Росію та її народ і козаків узагалі. "Lybidʹ". p. 350. ISBN 5-325-00163-9.
  5. ^ a b Олександр Рігельман (1994). Літописна оповідь про Малу Росію та її народ і козаків узагалі. "Lybidʹ". p. 352. ISBN 5-325-00163-9.