Battle of Drăgășani

Coordinates: 44°39′40″N 24°15′38″E / 44.6611°N 24.2606°E / 44.6611; 24.2606
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Battle of Drăgășani
Part of the
Principality of Wallachia, Ottoman Empire
44°39′40″N 24°15′38″E / 44.6611°N 24.2606°E / 44.6611; 24.2606
Result Ottoman victory
Belligerents

Greek Revolutionaries

 Ottoman EmpireCommanders and leaders
Nikolaos Ypsilantis
Vasileios Karavias Kara AhmedStrength 500 infantry
500 cavalry
[1] 2,000 cavalry[2]Casualties and losses 400+ dead Unknown

The Battle of Drăgășani (or Dragashani) was fought on 19 June 1821 in

Filiki Etaireia insurgents as a part of the Greek War of Independence
.

Context

, who was ultimately tortured and killed by the Etaireia, causing the Wallachian rebel troops to withdraw from the conflict.

Battle

An army of two thousand Ottoman cavalry camped, under the leadership of Kara Ahmed, at Drăgășani, in order to repulse the forces of Ypsilantis. The latter, after a council with his co-leaders (Giorgakis Olympios, Nikolaos Ypsilantis, Vasileios Karavias), decided to attack Drăgășani with his full army, which was consisted to be 7,500 troops and four cannons.

Battle of Drăgășani from Thomas Gordon's
book on the Greek Revolution (1832)

At 19 June 1821, Vasileios Karavias noticed the Ottomans retreating from Drăgășani and commanded his men to attack. The rest of the army, however, was not ready and Karavias acted alone with only 500 horsemen and the "Sacred Band" (a volunteer unit mostly made up of 500 young Greek students from both upper and middle classes led by Nikolaos Ypsilantis and Athanasios Tsakalov).[2]

The Ottomans, noticing that the size of the attacking force was less than a half of theirs, returned to their positions and conflicted with the Greeks.[2] Soon the Ottoman greater numbers outweighed the surprising attack of Karavias. The latter retreated, but the Sacred Band did not. The Sacred Band stood and fought the four times larger Ottoman cavalry, even though every hope of victory was lost.[2] Giorgakis Olympios with some men attacked and distracted the Ottomans for a while, saving about a hundred men with their leaders. After this conflict the Wallachian uprising started slowly fall apart.[3]

Aftermath

Despite its failure, the revolution in the Danubian Principalities helped inspire the uprisings in the Peloponnese.[4] Another aspect of the battle's aftermath entailed Alexander Ypsilantis' retreat to the Austrian-ruled area of Transylvania, after having written a forged letter to his troops stating that he was summoned by Francis I, the Emperor of Austria, to discuss military operations against the Ottomans on the Austrian frontier.[3]

Citations

  1. ^ Paparigopoulos, pp. 16–17.
  2. ^ a b c d Paparigopoulos, p. 17.
  3. ^ a b Miller (1966), p. 68.
  4. ^ Goldstein (1992), p. 20.

References

  • Goldstein, Erik (1992). Wars and Peace Treaties 1816-1991. Routledge.
  • Miller, William (1966). The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801-1927. Routledge.
  • Paparigopoulos, K. History of the Greek Nation. Vol. 6 (Greek ed.).