Great Northern War
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Great Northern War | |||||||||||
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Part of Russo–Swedish Wars and Polish–Swedish wars and Dano-Swedish Wars | |||||||||||
Battle of Poltava as painted by Denis Martens the Younger in 1726 |
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Combatants | |||||||||||
Sweden Ottoman Empire (1710–1714) Ukrainian Cossacks |
Russia Denmark-Norway Poland-Lithuania Saxony later also Prussia, Hanover |
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Commanders | |||||||||||
Charles XII of Sweden Ahmed III Ivan Mazepa |
Peter the Great Augustus II the Strong Frederick IV of Denmark |
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Strength | |||||||||||
77,000 in the beginning of the war. 110 000 in 1707 Ottoman Empire added some 100,000-200,000 Unknown numbers of Cossacks |
In beginning: 170,000 Russians, +40,000 Danes, some +100,000 Poles and Saxons many more by the end of the war |
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Casualties | |||||||||||
About 200 000 Swedes dead, unknown number of wounded/PoW/deserters/missing, unknown numbers of Ottomans and unknown numbers of cossacks | About 75, 000 russian soldiers dead/wounded on the swedish front rest is unknown. |
Dano-Swedish Wars |
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Swedish Liberation – Northern Seven Years' – Kalmar – Torstenson – Northern – Scanian – Great Northern – Theater – Finnish - Napoleonic |
Polish-Swedish Wars |
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Livonian – 1600–11 – 1620–22 – 1625–29 – The Deluge – Northern – Great Northern |
Russo-Swedish Wars |
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Swedish-Novgorodian – 1495–97 – 1554–57 – Livonian – 1590–95 – Ingrian – 1656–58 – Great Northern – 1741–43 – 1788–90 – Finnish |
Great Northern War |
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Narva – Daugava – Kliszów – Gemauerthof – Pułtusk – Jakobstadt – Fraustadt – Kalisz – Holowczyn – Lesnaya – Poltava – Helsingborg – Gadebusch – Storkyro – Gangut – Stralsund – Dynekilen – Ösel – Stäket – Grengam |
- This is an article about the 18th century war. For wars with similar names see Northern Seven Years' War (1563–1570), Northern Wars (1655–1661) and the Flagstaff War (1845–1846) in New Zealand
The Great Northern War took place between 1700 and 1721. It was fought between a coalition of Russia, Denmark-Norway, and Saxony (also the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, from 1701 and Prussia and Hanover from 1715) on one side and Sweden, which was helped by the Ottoman Empire on the other.
The war began as a coordinated attack on Sweden by the coalition in 1700 and ended in 1721 with the Treaty of Nystad and the Stockholm treaties. A result of the war was the end of the Swedish Empire. Russia supplanted Sweden as the dominant Power on the Baltic Sea and became a major player in European politics.
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[edit] Background
Between 1560 and 1658, Sweden created a Baltic empire centered on the Gulf of Finland and comprising the provinces of Karelia, Ingria, Estonia, and Livonia. During the Thirty Years' War Sweden gained tracts in Germany as well, including Western Pomerania, Wismar, the Duchy of Bremen, and Verden. At the same period Sweden conquered Danish and Norwegian provinces north of the Sound (1645; 1658). These victories may be ascribed to a good training of the army, which, despite its comparatively small size, was far more professional than most continental armies, in particular able to maintain a high rate of small arms fire due to proficient drilling. However, the Swedish state was unable to support and maintain its army as the war was prolonged and the costs of warfare could not be passed to occupied countries.
The foreign interventions during the Time of Troubles resulted in Sweden's gains in the Treaty of Stolbovo (1617). The treaty deprived Russia of direct access to the Baltic Sea, meaning that the Russians were not in a position to challenge the Swedish regional hegemony. Russian fortunes reversed during the later half of the 17th century, notably with the rise to power of Peter the Great, who looked to address the earlier losses and re-establish a Baltic presence. In the late 1690s, the adventurer Johann Patkul managed to ally Russia with Denmark and Saxony by the Treaty of Preobrazhenskoye and in 1700 the three powers attacked.
[edit] Strengths
Charles XI had left a standing army based on annual training, consisting of 77,000 men in 1700, but by 1707 this number had (in spite of tens of thousands of deaths) risen to at least 120,000. It was the best-trained and best-equipped army in the region but not the largest.
Russia could mobilize 170,000 men and, though not able to put all in action at the same place, did not even have one rifle per man. Furthermore, the Russian mobilization system was ineffective, the expansive nation had to be defended everywhere, garrisons had to be supported, war paid for. A great mobilization over vast territories would have been unrealistic.
The Danes added 20,000 in their invasion against Holstein-Gottorp and several more against other fronts. Poland and Saxony together could mobilize at least 100,000 men. The Russians were the worst equipped, not even the standard of one rifle per man. The Saxons were the only ones that could match the Swedes in training and equipment, but poor numerically. Western Europe was drained into the War of Spanish Succession and did not follow the events in the east very closely.
[edit] Swedish victories
From the very beginning of the Great Northern War, Sweden suffered from the inability of Charles XII to view the situation from anything but a purely personal point of view. His determination to avenge himself on enemies overpowered every other consideration. Time and again during the eighteen years of warfare it was in his power to dictate an advantageous peace, but he neglected to do so. The early part of the war consisted of a continual string of Swedish victories under Charles XII. Denmark was defeated in the summer of 1700, in what was to be the first major campaign of the war, and in such a way that she could not participate in the war for a number of years. Russia then suffered a crushing defeat in the Battle of Narva in November.
After the dissipation of the first coalition through the peace of Travendal and the victory at Narva, the Swedish chancellor, Benedict Oxenstjerna, rightly regarded the universal bidding for the favor of Sweden by France and the maritime powers, then on the eve of the War of the Spanish Succession, as a golden opportunity of ending the war and making Charles the arbiter of Europe. At that time, the representatives of Poland-Lithuania (which considered itself neutral despite its king's active participation in the anti-Swedish coalition) offered to serve as mediators between the Swedish king and Augustus. But Charles, intent on dethroning Augustus of Saxony from the Polish throne, held attacked Poland, therefore ending the official neutrality of Poland-Lithuania. Five years later, on September 24, 1706, he concluded the Polish War through the treaty of Altranstadt, but, this treaty brought no advantage to Sweden, not even compensation for the expenses of six years of warfare.
[edit] Russian victories
During the years between 1700 and 1707, two of Sweden's Baltic provinces, Estonia and Ingria, had been seized by the Tsar, and a third, Livonia, had been essentially ruined. To secure his acquisitions, Peter founded the city of Saint Petersburg in Ingria in 1703. He began to build a navy and a modern-style army, based primarily on infantry drilled in the use of firearms.
Yet even now Charles, by a stroke of the pen, could have recovered nearly everything he had lost. In 1707, Peter was ready to retrocede everything except St. Petersburg and the line of the Neva, and again Charles preferred risking the whole to saving the greater part of his Baltic possessions. The year following, he invaded Russia, but was frustrated in Smolensk by Generalissimo Menshikov and headed to Ukraine for the winter. However, the abilities of his force were sapped by the cold weather and Peter's use of scorched earth tactics. When the campaign started again in the spring of 1709, a third of his force had been lost, and he was crushingly defeated by Peter in the Battle of Poltava, fleeing to the Ottoman Empire and spending five years in exile. Peter's victory shook all European courts. In just one day, Russia emerged as a major European power.
This shattering defeat did not end the war, although it decided it. Denmark and Saxony joined the war again and Augustus the Strong, through the crafty politics of Boris Kurakin, regained the Polish throne. Peter continued his campaigns in the Baltics, and eventually he built up a powerful navy. In 1714, Peter's galley navy managed to capture a small detachment of the Swedish navy in the first Russian naval victory near Hangö udde (see Battle of Gangut for details).
[edit] The Fall of Stralsund
Only the firmness of the Chancellor, Count Arvid Horn, held Sweden in the war until Charles finally returned from the Ottoman Empire, arriving in Swedish held Stralsund in November 1714 on the south shore of the Baltic. Charles was by now at war with all of Northern Europe, and Stralsund was doomed. Charles remained there until December, 1715, escaping only days before Stralsund fell.
By this point, Charles was considered mad by many, as he would not consider peace and the price Sweden had paid was already dear, with no hope in sight. All of Sweden’s Baltic and German possessions were lost.
[edit] Conclusion
Though Charles returned from the Ottoman Empire and resumed personal control of the war effort, initiating a series of Norwegian Campaigns, he accomplished little before his death in 1718. Over the next few years little changed, but a series of raids on Sweden itself demonstrated that there was little fight left, and soon Prussia and Hanover entered the war in the hope of gaining territory when peace was made. Eventually a series of massive seaborne invasions by combined Danish and Russian navies of the Swedish homeland forced the issue.
The war was finally concluded by the Treaty of Nystad in 1721. Sweden had lost almost all of its "overseas" holdings gained in the 17th century, and was no longer a major power. Russia gained its Baltic territories, and from then on was the greatest power in Eastern Europe. Sweden's dissatisfaction with the result would lead to its fruitless attempts at recovering the lost territories, such as Hats' Russian War, and Gustav III's Russian War. Some Swedish patriots maintain that hostilities weren't concluded until Russia's official apology on April 20, 1969.
[edit] References
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
- Sweden and the Baltic, 1523 - 1721, by Andrina Stiles, Hodder & Stoughton, 1992 ISBN 0-340-54644-1
- The Struggle for Supremacy in the Baltic: 1600-1725 by Jill Lisk; Funk & Wagnalls, New York, 1967
- The Northern Wars, 1558-1721 by Robert I. Frost; Longman, Harlow, England; 2000 ISBN 0-582-06429-5
- Norges festninger by Guthorm Kavli; Universitetsforlaget; 1987; ISBN 82-00-18430-7
- Admiral Thunderbolt by Hans Christian Adamson, Chilton Company, 1958
- East Norway and its Frontier by Frank Noel Stagg, George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. 1956
[edit] See also
Extensive information on the major battles and campaigns of the Great Northern War can be found as part of these articles:
- Peter I of Russia | Charles XII of Sweden | Battle of Narva | Battle of Holowczyn | Battle of Lesnaya | Battle of Poltava | Battle of Gangut | Battle of Gadebusch | Treaty of Nystad | Great Northern War and Norway | Russo-Turkish War, 1710-1711
[edit] External links
Categories: Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica | Great Northern War | 18th century | Wars involving Denmark | Wars involving Poland | Wars involving Russia | Wars involving Sweden | Wars involving Norway | History of Poland (1569–1795) | Polish-Swedish relations | Warfare of the Early Modern era