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Battle of Grunwald

The Battle of Grunwald, Battle of Žalgiris, or First Battle of Tannenberg, was fought on 15 July 1410 during the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War. The alliance of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, led respectively by King Władysław II Jagiełło (Jogaila), and Grand Duke Vytautas, decisively defeated the German Teutonic Order, led by Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen. Most of the Teutonic Order's leadership were killed or taken prisoner.

Battle of Grunwald
Part of the Polish–Lithuanian–Teutonic War

Battle of Grunwald by Jan Matejko (1878)
Date15 July 1410 (1410-07-15)
Location
Between villages of Grunwald (Grünfelde) and Łodwigowo (Ludwigsdorf), western Masuria, Poland
Coordinates: 53°29′10″N 20°07′29″E / 53.48611°N 20.12472°E / 53.48611; 20.12472
Result Polish–Lithuanian victory
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Strength
16,000–39,000 men[6] 11,000–27,000 men[6]
Casualties and losses
Unknown; see Casualties and captives 203–211 out of 270 brothers killed[7]
See Casualties and captives
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Battle site on a map of modern Poland

Although defeated, the Teutonic Order withstood the subsequent siege of the Malbork Castle and suffered minimal territorial losses at the Peace of Thorn (1411), with other territorial disputes continuing until the Treaty of Melno in 1422. The order, however, never recovered their former power, and the financial burden of war reparations caused internal conflicts and an economic downturn in the lands controlled by them. The battle shifted the balance of power in Central and Eastern Europe and marked the rise of the Polish–Lithuanian union as the dominant regional political and military force.[8]

The battle was one of the largest in medieval Europe.[9] The battle is viewed as one of the most important victories in the histories of Poland and Lithuania. It is also commemorated in Ukraine and Belarus. It has been used as a source of romantic legends and national pride, becoming a larger symbol of struggle against foreign invaders.[10] During the 20th century, the battle was used in Nazi German and Soviet propaganda campaigns. Only in recent decades have historians moved towards a dispassionate, scholarly assessment of the battle, reconciling the previous narratives, which differed widely by nation.[11]

Names and sources

Names

 
The most important source about the battle is Cronica conflictus...[12]

Traditionally, the battle's location was thought to be in the territory of the monastic state of the Teutonic Order, on the plains between three villages: Grünfelde (Grunwald) to the west, Tannenberg (Stębark) to the northeast and Ludwigsdorf (Łodwigowo, Ludwikowice) to the south. However, research by Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl [de] and archaeological excavations in 2014–2017 proved that the actual site was south of Grünfelde (Grunwald).[13] Władysław II Jagiełło referred to the site in Latin as in loco conflictus nostri, quem cum Cruciferis de Prusia habuimus, dicto Grunenvelt.[8] Later, Polish chroniclers interpreted the word Grunenvelt ("green field" in Low German) as Grünwald, meaning "green forest" in German. The Lithuanians followed suit and translated the name as Žalgiris.[14] The Germans named the battle after Tannenberg ("fir hill" or "pine hill" in German).[15] Thus, there are three commonly used names for the battle: German: Schlacht bei Tannenberg, Polish: bitwa pod Grunwaldem, Lithuanian: Žalgirio mūšis. Its names in the languages of other involved peoples include Belarusian: Бітва пад Грунвальдам, Ukrainian: Грюнвальдська битва, Russian: Грюнвальдская битва, Czech: Bitva u Grunvaldu, Romanian: Bătălia de la Grünwald.

Sources

There are few contemporary, reliable sources about the battle, and most were produced by the Polish side. The most important and trustworthy source is Cronica conflictus Wladislai regis Poloniae cum Cruciferis anno Christi 1410, which was written within a year of the battle by an eyewitness.[12] Its authorship is uncertain, but several candidates have been proposed: Polish deputy chancellor Mikołaj Trąba and Władysław II Jagiełło's secretary Zbigniew Oleśnicki.[16] While the original Cronica conflictus did not survive, a short summary from the 16th century has been preserved. Another important source is Historiae Polonicae by Polish historian Jan Długosz (1415–1480).[16] It is a comprehensive and detailed account written several decades after the battle. The reliability of this source suffers not only from the long gap between the events and the chronicle, but also Długosz's alleged biases against the Lithuanians.[17] Banderia Prutenorum is a mid-15th-century manuscript with images and Latin descriptions of the Teutonic battle flags captured during the battle and displayed in Wawel Cathedral and Vilnius Cathedral.[18] Other Polish sources include two letters written by Władysław II Jagiełło to his wife Anne of Cilli and Bishop of Poznań Wojciech Jastrzębiec and letters sent by Jastrzębiec to Poles in the Holy See.[17] German sources include a concise account in the chronicle of Johann von Posilge. An anonymous letter, discovered in 1963 and written between 1411 and 1413, provided important details on Lithuanian maneuvers.[19][20]

Historical background

Lithuanian Crusade and Polish–Lithuanian union

 
The Kingdom of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania within their vassals between 1386 and 1434

In 1230, the Teutonic Order, a crusading military order, moved to Chełmno Land (Kulmerland) and launched the Prussian Crusade against the pagan Prussian clans. With support from the pope and Holy Roman Emperor, the Teutons conquered and converted the Prussians by the 1280s and shifted their attention to the pagan Grand Duchy of Lithuania. For about 100 years, the order raided Lithuanian lands, particularly Samogitia, as it separated the order in Prussia from their branch in Livonia. While the border regions became an uninhabited wilderness, the order gained very little territory. The Lithuanians first gave up Samogitia during the Lithuanian Civil War (1381–84) in the Treaty of Dubysa.[citation needed]

In 1385, Grand Duke Jogaila of Lithuania agreed to marry Queen Jadwiga of Poland in the Union of Kreva. Jogaila converted to Christianity and was crowned King of Poland and became known as Władysław II Jagiełło, thus creating a personal union between the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. The official Lithuanian conversion to Christianity removed the religious rationale for the order's activities in the area.[21] Its grand master, Conrad Zöllner von Rothenstein, supported by Hungarian King Sigismund of Luxemburg, responded by publicly contesting the sincerity of Jogaila's conversion, bringing the charge to a papal court.[21] The territorial disputes continued over Samogitia, which had been in Teutonic hands since the Peace of Raciąż in 1404. Poland also had territorial claims against the order in Dobrzyń Land and Gdańsk (Danzig), but the two states had been largely at peace since the Treaty of Kalisz (1343).[22] The conflict was also motivated by trade considerations: the order controlled the lower reaches of the three largest rivers (the Neman, Vistula and Daugava) in Poland and Lithuania.[23]

War, truce and preparations

 
Territory of the State of the Teutonic Order between 1260 and 1410; the locations and dates of major battles, including the Battle of Grunwald, are indicated by crossed red swords.
 
Lithuanians fighting with Teutonic knights (14th-century bas-relief from the Castle of Marienburg)

In May 1409, an uprising in Teutonic-held Samogitia started. Lithuania supported it and the order threatened to invade. Poland announced its support for the Lithuanian cause and threatened to invade Prussia in return. As Prussian troops evacuated Samogitia, Teutonic Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen declared war on the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania on 6 August 1409.[24] The order hoped to defeat Poland and Lithuania separately, and began by invading Greater Poland and Kuyavia, catching the Poles by surprise.[25] The order burned the castle at Dobrin (Dobrzyń nad Wisłą), captured Bobrowniki after a 14-day siege, conquered Bydgoszcz (Bromberg) and sacked several towns.[26] The Poles organized counterattacks and recaptured Bydgoszcz.[27] The Samogitians attacked Memel (Klaipėda).[25] However, neither side was ready for a full-scale war.

Wenceslaus, King of the Romans, agreed to mediate the dispute. A truce was signed on 8 October 1409 and was set to expire on 24 June 1410.[28] Both sides used this time to prepare for war, gathering troops and engaging in diplomatic maneuvering. Both sides sent letters and envoys accusing each other of various wrongdoings and threats to the Christendom. Wenceslaus, who received a gift of 60,000 florins from the order, declared that Samogitia rightfully belonged to the order and only Dobrzyń Land should be returned to Poland.[29] The order also paid 300,000 ducats to Sigismund of Hungary, who had ambitions regarding the Principality of Moldavia, for mutual military assistance.[29] Sigismund attempted to break the Polish–Lithuanian alliance by offering Vytautas a king's crown; Vytautas' acceptance would have violated the terms of the Ostrów Agreement and created Polish-Lithuanian discord.[30] At the same time, Vytautas managed to obtain a truce from the Livonian Order.[31]

By December 1409, Władysław II Jagiełło and Vytautas had agreed on a common strategy: their armies would unite into a single massive force and march together towards Marienburg (Malbork), capital of the Teutonic Order.[32] The order, who took a defensive position, did not expect a joint attack and were preparing for a dual invasion—by the Poles along the Vistula River towards Danzig (Gdańsk) and the Lithuanians along the Neman River towards Ragnit (Neman).[1] To counter this perceived threat, Ulrich von Jungingen concentrated his forces in Schwetz (Świecie), a central location from where troops could respond to an invasion from any direction rather quickly.[33] Sizable garrisons were left in the eastern castles of Ragnit, Rhein (Ryn) near Lötzen (Giżycko) and Memel (Klaipėda).[1] To keep their plans secret and mislead the order, Władysław II Jagiełło and Vytautas organized several raids into border territories, thus forcing the order to keep their troops in place.[32]

Opposing forces

Various estimates of opposing forces[6]
Historian Polish Lithuanian Teutonic
Karl Heveker and
Hans Delbrück[34]
10,500 6,000 11,000
Eugene Razin[35] 16,000–17,000 11,000
Max Oehler 23,000 15,000
Jerzy Ochmański 22,000–27,000 12,000
Sven Ekdahl[34] 20,000–25,000 12,000–15,000
Andrzej Nadolski 20,000 10,000 15,000
Jan Dąbrowski 15,000–18,000 8,000–11,000 19,000
Zigmantas Kiaupa[36] 18,000 11,000 15,000–21,000
Marian Biskup 19,000–20,000 10,000–11,000 21,000
Daniel Stone[21] 27,000 11,000 21,000
Stefan Kuczyński 39,000 27,000
James Westfall Thompson and
Edgar Nathaniel Johnson[37]
100,000 35,000
Alfred Nicolas Rambaud[38] 163,000 86,000

The precise number of soldiers involved has proven difficult to establish.[39] None of the contemporary sources provided reliable troop counts. Jan Długosz provided the number of banners, the principal unit of each cavalry: 51 for the Teutons, 50 for the Poles and 40 for the Lithuanians.[40] However, it is unclear how many men were under each banner. The structure and number of infantry units (pikemen, archers, crossbowmen) and artillery units is unknown. Estimates, often biased by political and nationalistic considerations, were produced by various historians.[39] German historians tend to present lower numbers, while Polish historians tend to use higher estimates.[6] The high-end estimates by Polish historian Stefan Kuczyński of 39,000 Polish–Lithuanian and 27,000 Teutonic men[40] have been cited in Western literature as "commonly accepted".[5][10][39]

While outnumbered, the Teutonic army had advantages in discipline, military training and equipment.[35] They were particularly noted for their heavy cavalry, although only a small percentage of the Order's army at Grunwald were heavily armoured knights.[41] The Teutonic army was also equipped with bombards that could shoot lead and stone projectiles.[35]

Both armies were composed of troops from several states and lands, including numerous mercenaries, primarily from Silesia and Bohemia. Bohemian mercenaries fought on both sides.[41] The Silesian mercenaries were led in battle by Duke Konrad VII the White, of Oels, who was supported by knights from the Silesian nobility including Dietrich von Kottulin and Hans von Motschelnitz.[42]

Soldiers from twenty-two different states and regions, mostly Germanic, joined the Order's army.[43] Teutonic recruits known as guest crusaders included soldiers from Westphalia, Frisia, Austria, Swabia, Bavaria,[41] and Stettin (Szczecin).[44] Two Hungarian nobles, Nicholas II Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz, brought 200 men for the Order,[45] but support from Sigismund of Hungary was disappointing.[31]

Poland brought mercenaries from Moravia and Bohemia. The Czechs produced two full banners, under the command of John Sokol of Lamberg.[3] Serving among the Czechs was possibly Jan Žižka, future commander of the Hussites.[46] Alexander I of Moldavia commanded an expeditionary corps and the Moldavian king was so brave that the Polish troops and their king honoured him with a royal sword, the Szczerbiec.[2] Vytautas gathered troops from Lithuanian and Ruthenian lands (present-day Belarus and Ukraine). Among them were three banners from Smolensk led by Władysław II Jagiełło's brother Lengvenis and the Tatar contingent of the Golden Horde under the command of the future Khan Jalal ad-Din.[4] The overall commander of the joint Polish–Lithuanian force was King Władysław II Jagiełło; however, he did not directly participate in the battle. The Lithuanian units were commanded directly by Grand Duke Vytautas, who was second in command, and helped design the grand strategy of the campaign. Vytautas actively participated in the battle, managing both Lithuanian and Polish units.[47] Jan Długosz stated that the low-ranking swordbearer of the Crown, Zyndram of Maszkowice, commanded the Polish army, but that is highly doubtful.[48] More likely, marshal of the Crown Zbigniew of Brzezia commanded the Polish troops in the field.

Course of the battle

 
Map of army movements in the Grunwald campaign

March into Prussia

The first stage of the Grunwald campaign was the gathering of all Polish–Lithuanian troops at Czerwińsk, a designated meeting point about 80 km (50 mi) from the Prussian border, where the joint army crossed the Vistula over a pontoon bridge.[49] This maneuver, which required precision and intense coordination among multi-ethnic forces, was accomplished in about a week, from 24 to 30 June.[1] Polish soldiers from Greater Poland gathered in Poznań, and those from Lesser Poland, in Wolbórz. On 24 June, Władysław II Jagiełło and Czech mercenaries arrived in Wolbórz.[1] Three days later the Polish army was already at the meeting place. The Lithuanian army marched out from Vilnius on 3 June and joined the Ruthenian regiments in Hrodna.[1] They arrived in Czerwińsk on the same day the Poles crossed the river. After the crossing, Masovian troops under Siemowit IV and Janusz I joined the Polish–Lithuanian army.[1] The massive force began its march north towards Marienburg (Malbork), capital of Prussia, on 3 July. The Prussian border was crossed on 9 July.[49]

The river crossing remained secret until Hungarian envoys, who were attempting to negotiate a peace, informed the Grand Master.[50] As soon as Ulrich von Jungingen grasped the Polish–Lithuanian intentions, he left 3,000 men at Schwetz (Świecie) under Heinrich von Plauen[51] and marched the main force to organize a line of defense on the Drewenz River (Drwęca) near Kauernik (Kurzętnik).[52] The river crossing was fortified with stockades.[53] On 11 July, after meeting with his eight-member war council,[48] Władysław II Jagiełło decided against crossing the river at such a strong, defensible position. The army would instead bypass the river crossing by turning east, towards its sources, where no other major rivers separated his army from Marienburg.[52] The march continued east towards Soldau (Działdowo), although no attempt was made to capture the town.[54] The Teutonic army followed the Drewenz River north, crossed it near Löbau (Lubawa) and then moved east in parallel with the Polish–Lithuanian army. According to the Order's propaganda, the latter ravaged the village of Gilgenburg (Dąbrówno).[55] Later, in the self-serving testimonies of the survivors before the Pope, the order claimed that Von Jungingen was so enraged by the alleged atrocities that he swore to defeat the invaders in battle.[56]

Battle preparations

 
Teutonic Order presents Grunwald Swords as gift to King Władysław II Jagiełło (painting by Wojciech Kossak)

In the early morning of 15 July, both armies met in an area covering approximately 4 km2 (1.5 sq mi) between the villages of Grunwald, Tannenberg (Stębark) and Ludwigsdorf (Łodwigowo).[57] The armies formed opposing lines along a northeast–southwest axis. The Polish–Lithuanian army was positioned in front and east of Ludwigsdorf and Tannenberg.[58] Polish heavy cavalry formed the left flank, Lithuanian light cavalry the right flank and various mercenary troops made up the center. Their men were organized in three lines of wedge-shaped formations about 20 men deep.[58] The Teutonic forces concentrated their elite heavy cavalry, commanded by Grand Marshal Frederic von Wallenrode, against the Lithuanians.[57] The order, which was the first to organize their army for the battle, hoped to provoke the Poles or Lithuanians into attacking first. Their troops, wearing heavy armor, had to stand in the scorching sun for several hours waiting for an attack.[59] One chronicle suggested that they had dug pits that an attacking army would fall into.[60] They also attempted to use field artillery, but a light rain dampened their powder and only two cannon shots were fired.[59] As Władysław II Jagiełło delayed, the Grand Master sent messengers with two swords to "assist Władysław II Jagiełło and Vytautas in battle". The swords were meant as an insult and a provocation.[61] Known as the "Grunwald Swords", they became one of the national symbols of Poland.

Battle begins: Lithuanian attack and retreat maneuver

Vytautas, supported by the Polish banners, started an assault on the left flank of the Teutonic forces.[59] After more than an hour of heavy fighting, the Lithuanian light cavalry began a full retreat. Jan Długosz described this development as a complete annihilation of the entire Lithuanian army. According to Długosz, the order assumed that victory was theirs, broke their formation for a disorganized pursuit of the retreating Lithuanians, and gathered much loot before returning to the battlefield to face the Polish troops.[63] He made no mention of the Lithuanians, who later returned to the battlefield. Thus, Długosz portrayed the battle as a single-handed Polish victory.[63] This view contradicted Cronica conflictus and has been challenged by modern historians.

Starting with an article by Vaclaw Lastowski in 1909, they proposed that the retreat had been a planned maneuver borrowed from the Golden Horde.[64] A feigned retreat had been used in the Battle of the Vorskla River (1399), when the Lithuanian army had been dealt a crushing defeat and Vytautas himself had barely escaped alive.[65] This theory gained wider acceptance after the discovery and publication, in 1963 by Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl [de], of a German letter.[66][67] Written a few years after the battle, it cautioned the new Grand Master to look out for feigned retreats of the kind that had been used in the Great Battle.[20] Stephen Turnbull asserts that the Lithuanian tactical retreat did not quite fit the formula of a feigned retreat; such a retreat was usually staged by one or two units (as opposed to almost an entire army) and was swiftly followed by a counterattack (whereas the Lithuanians had returned late in the battle).[68]

Battle continues: Polish–Teutonic fight

 
Muslim Tatar fights a Teutonic knight (detail from a painting by Wojciech Kossak)

While the Lithuanians were retreating, heavy fighting broke out between Polish and Teutonic forces. Commanded by Grand Komtur Kuno von Lichtenstein, the Teutonic forces concentrated on the Polish right flank. Six of von Walenrode's banners did not pursue the retreating Lithuanians, instead joining the attack on the right flank.[36] A particularly valuable target was the royal banner of Kraków. It seemed that the order were gaining the upper hand, and at one point the royal standard-bearer, Marcin of Wrocimowice, lost the Kraków banner.[69] However, it was soon recaptured and fighting continued. Władysław II Jagiełło deployed his reserves—the second line of his army.[36] Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen then personally led 16 banners, almost a third of the original Teutonic strength, to the right Polish flank,[70] and Władysław II Jagiełło deployed his last reserves, the third line of his army.[36] The melee reached the Polish command and one knight, identified as Lupold or Diepold of Kökeritz, charged directly against King Władysław II Jagiełło.[71] Władysław's secretary, Zbigniew Oleśnicki, saved the king's life, gaining royal favor and becoming one of the most influential people in Poland.[21]

Battle ends: Teutonic Order defeated

 
After the Battle of Grunwald: The Solidarity of the Northern Slavs (1924), by Alfons Mucha, The Slav Epic

At that time the reorganized Lithuanians returned to the battle, attacking von Jungingen from the rear.[72] The Teutonic forces were by then becoming outnumbered by the mass of Polish knights and advancing Lithuanian cavalry. As von Jungingen attempted to break through the Lithuanian lines, he was killed.[72] According to Cronica conflictus, Dobiesław of Oleśnica thrust a lance through the Grand Master's neck,[72] while Długosz presented Mszczuj of Skrzynno as the killer. Surrounded and leaderless, the Teutonic Order began to retreat. Part of the routed units retreated towards their camp. This move backfired when the camp followers turned against their masters and joined the manhunt.[73] The knights attempted to build a wagon fort: the camp was surrounded by wagons serving as an improvised fortification.[73] However, the defense was soon broken and the camp was ravaged. According to Cronica conflictus, more knights died there than on the battlefield.[73] The battle lasted for about ten hours.[36]

The Teutonic Order attributed the defeat to treason on the part of Nicholas von Renys (Mikołaj of Ryńsk), commander of the Culm (Chełmno) banner, and he was beheaded without a trial.[74] He was the founder and leader of the Lizard Union, a group of knights sympathetic to Poland. According to the order, von Renys lowered his banner, which was taken as a signal of surrender and led to the panicked retreat.[75] The legend that the order was "stabbed in the back" was echoed in the post-World War I stab-in-the-back myth and preoccupied German historiography of the battle until 1945.[74]

Aftermath

Casualties and captives

 
The battle as depicted in the Berner Chronik of Diebold Schilling

A note sent in August by envoys of King Sigismund of Hungary, Nicholas II Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz, put total casualties at 8,000 dead "on both sides".[76] However, the wording is vague and it is unclear whether it meant a total of 8,000 or 16,000 dead.[77] A papal bull from 1412 mentioned 18,000 dead Christians.[76] In two letters written immediately after the battle, Władysław II Jagiełło mentioned that Polish casualties were small (paucis valde and modico) and Jan Długosz listed only 12 Polish knights who had been killed.[76] A letter by a Teutonic official from Tapiau (Gvardeysk) mentioned that only half of the Lithuanians returned, but it is unclear how many of those casualties are attributable to the battle and how many to the later siege of Marienburg.[76]

The defeat of the Teutonic Order was resounding. According to Teutonic payroll records, only 1,427 men reported back to Marienburg to claim their pay.[78] Of 1,200 men sent from Danzig, only 300 returned.[44] Between 203 and 211 brothers of the Order were killed, out of 270 that participated in battle,[7] including much of the Teutonic leadership—Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen, Grand Marshal Friedrich von Wallenrode, Grand Komtur Kuno von Lichtenstein, Grand Treasurer Thomas von Merheim, Marshal of Supply Forces Albrecht von Schwartzburg, and ten of the komturs.[79] Marquard von Salzbach, Komtur of Brandenburg (Ushakovo) and Heinrich Schaumburg, voigt of Sambia, were executed by order of Vytautas after the battle.[78] The bodies of von Jungingen and other high-ranking officials were transported to Marienburg Castle for burial on 19 July.[80] The bodies of lower-ranking Teutonic officials and 12 Polish knights were buried at the church in Tannenberg.[80] The rest of the dead were buried in several mass graves. The highest-ranking Teutonic official to escape the battle was Werner von Tettinger, Komtur of Elbing (Elbląg).[78]

Polish and Lithuanian forces took several thousand captives. Among these were Dukes Konrad VII of Oels (Oleśnica) and Casimir V of Pomerania.[81] Most of the commoners and mercenaries were released shortly after the battle on condition that they report to Kraków on 11 November 1410.[82] Only those who were expected to pay ransom were kept. Considerable ransoms were recorded; for example, the mercenary Holbracht von Loym had to pay 150 kopas of Prague groschen, amounting to more than 30 kg (66 lb) of silver.[83]

Further campaign and peace

 
After the battle, the Castle of Marienburg, which served as the Teutonic capital, was unsuccessfully besieged for two months by the Polish–Lithuanian forces

After the battle, the Polish and Lithuanian forces delayed their attack on the Teutonic capital in Marienburg (Malbork), remaining on the battlefield for three days and then marching an average of only about 15 km (9.3 mi) per day.[84] The main forces did not reach heavily fortified Marienburg until 26 July. This delay gave Heinrich von Plauen enough time to organize a defense. Władysław II Jagiełło also sent his troops to other Teutonic fortresses, which often surrendered without resistance,[85] including the major cities of Danzig (Gdańsk), Thorn (Toruń), and Elbing (Elbląg).[86] Only eight castles remained in Teutonic hands.[87] The besiegers of Marienburg expected a speedy capitulation and were not prepared for a long siege, suffering from lack of ammunition, low morale, and an epidemic of dysentery.[88] The order appealed to their allies for help, and Sigismund of Hungary, Wenceslaus, King of the Romans, and the Livonian Order promised financial aid and reinforcements.[89]

The siege of Marienburg was lifted on 19 September. The Polish–Lithuanian forces left garrisons in the fortresses they had taken and returned home. However, the order quickly recaptured most of the castles. By the end of October only four Teutonic castles along the border remained in Polish hands.[90] Władysław II Jagiełło raised a fresh army and dealt another defeat to the order in the Battle of Koronowo on 10 October 1410. Following other brief engagements, both sides agreed to negotiate.

The Peace of Thorn was signed in February 1411. Under its terms, the order ceded the Dobrin Land (Dobrzyń Land) to Poland and agreed to resign their claims to Samogitia during the lifetimes of Władysław II Jagiełło and Vytautas,[91] although another two wars—the Hunger War of 1414 and the Gollub War of 1422—would be waged before the Treaty of Melno permanently resolved the territorial disputes.[92] The Poles and Lithuanians were unable to translate the military victory into territorial or diplomatic gains. However, the Peace of Thorn imposed a heavy financial burden on the order from which they never recovered. They had to pay an indemnity in silver in four annual installments.[91] To meet these payments, the order borrowed heavily, confiscated gold and silver from churches, and increased taxes. Two major Prussian cities, Danzig (Gdańsk) and Thorn (Toruń), revolted against the tax increases.[93] The defeat at Grunwald left the Teutonic Order with few forces to defend their remaining territories. Since Samogitia became officially christened, as both Poland and Lithuania were for a long time, the order had difficulties recruiting new volunteer crusaders.[94] The Grand Masters then needed to rely on mercenary troops, which proved an expensive drain on their already depleted budget. The internal conflicts, economic decline, and tax increases led to unrest and the foundation of the Prussian Confederation, or Alliance against Lordship, in 1441. This in turn led to a series of conflicts that culminated in the Thirteen Years' War (1454).[95]

Battlefield memorials

 
Memorials at the battlefield built in 1960
 
Ruins of the Chapel of St. Mary

Ideas about commemorating the battle rose right after the event. Władysław II Jagiełło wanted to build a monastery dedicated to Saint Bridget of Sweden, who had prophesied the downfall of the Teutonic Order, at the location of the battle.[96] When the order regained the territory of the battlefield, the new grand master Heinrich von Plauen built a chapel dedicated to Saint Mary and it was consecrated in March 1413.[97] It was destroyed by the Poles when they invaded during the Hunger War of 1414, but it was quickly rebuilt. The chapel fell to ruins during the Protestant Reformation and was demolished in 1720.[98][99] Over time, the location of the chapel became associated with the location where Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen was killed. In 1901, a large memorial stone was erected for the fallen Grand Master in the midst of the chapel ruins for the 200th anniversary of the coronation of King Frederick I of Prussia. The inscription was chiseled in 1960 and the stone was removed from the chapel ruins and placed inscription facing down in 1984.[100]

In 1960, for the 550th anniversary, a museum and monuments were constructed a little northeast of the chapel ruins in 1960.[101] The grounds were designed by sculptor Jerzy Bandura and architect Witold Cęckiewicz [pl]. The monuments included an obelisk of Silesian granite depicting two faces of knights, a bundle of eleven 30-metre (98 ft)-high flagpoles with emblems of the Polish–Lithuanian army, and a sculptural map depicting the supposed positions of the armies before the battle.[101] Presumed locations where Władysław II Jagiełło and Vytautas had their main camps were marked with artificial mounds and flagpoles.[101] The battle site is one of Poland's national Historical Monuments, as designated on 4 October 2010, and tracked by the National Institute of Cultural Heritage. The museum, which is open during summers, has an exhibition space of 275 square metres (2,960 sq ft) in which it displays archaeological finds from the battlefield, original and reproduced medieval weapons, reconstructed flags from the battle, as well as various maps, drawings, and documents related to the battle.[102] In 2018, the museum was visited by about 140,000 people.[103] Construction of a larger year-round museum at an estimated cost of 30 million Polish złoty (6.5 million euros) started in April 2019.[104]

In July 2020, a large stone with engraved Vytis was erected by the Lithuanians near the monument site to commemorate the 610th anniversary of the battle. The monument was unveiled by Lithuanian and Polish presidents Gitanas Nausėda and Andrzej Duda.[105]

Archaeological excavations

 
Traditional view of army movements and battlefield location according to descriptions by Jan Długosz and map first published by Johannes Voigt in 1836[13]
 
Army movements and battlefield location according to Sven Ekdahl which were proven correct by archaeological excavations[13]

Several artifacts from the battlefield are known from historical record, for example stone balls in the church of Stębark (Tannenberg) and a metal helmet with holes in the church of Mielno which was gifted to Frederick William IV of Prussia when he visited the battlefield in 1842, but they have not survived to the present day.[106][107] The first amateur archeological research was carried out in 1911 in hopes of finding the mass graves mentioned by Jan Długosz at the church of Stębark.[107] The church was surveyed with ground-penetrating radar in 2013 but little evidence of the mass graves was found.[108]

The first more thorough archaeological excavations of the battlefield were carried out in 1958–1960 in connection with the construction of the memorial site and museum. The government showed great interest in the excavations and sent helicopters and 160 soldiers to help.[107] Research continued in later decades, but yielded very little results with the exception of the area around the ruined chapel.[109][98] Several mass graves were found at the chapel: remains of six people in the vestibule, 30 people next to the southern wall, more than 130 people in three pits adjacent to the chapel, and about 90 people in the sacristy. Many remains showed signs of traumatic injuries. Some skeletons showed signs of being burned and moved.[107] Mass burials, including of women and children, were also found in the villages of Gilgenburg (Dąbrówno) and Faulen (Ulnowo). The massacre in Gilgenburg was known from written sources, but the burial in Faulen was unexpected.[107] In the fields, very few items of militaria were found. In 1958–1990, only 28 artifacts were found connected to the battle: ten crossbow bolts, five arrowheads, a javelin head, two sword pieces, two gun bullets, six pieces of gauntlets, and two small arms bullets.[107]

Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl [de] formulated hypothesis that the traditionally identified location of the battlefield is not correct in 1960s but published it only in 2000s. According to him, the main battlefield was located northeast of the road between Grunwald and Łodwigowo, i.e. about 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) southwest of the memorial site.[110] Archaeologists from Scandinavia and Poland investigated an area of approximately 450 hectares (1,100 acres) with metal detectors in 2014–2017 and located the main battle site according to Ekdahl's predictions.[111] In 2017, the team found approximately 65 crossbow bolts and 20 arrowheads, as well as parts of spurs, stirrups, gauntlets, etc.[112] The research is ongoing. As of 2020, archaeologists discovered about 1,500 artifacts of which about 150 are linked to the battle. Among them are a Teutonic clasp to fasten coat with the Gothic inscription ‘Ave Maria’, a seal with the image of a pelican feeding its young with blood, two well preserved axes, and Teutonic coins.[113]

Legacy

 
Military parade of the 1st Infantry Regiment of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas during commemoration of the battle of Žalgiris in Ukmergė on 15 July 1930.

In William Urban's summary, almost all accounts of the battle made before the 1960s were more influenced by romantic legends and nationalistic propaganda than by fact.[74] Historians have since made progress towards dispassionate scholarship and reconciliation of the various national accounts of the battle.[11]

 
Grunwald Monument was erected in Kraków, Poland for the battle's 500th anniversary. It was destroyed during World War II by the Germans and rebuilt in 1976.

Poland and Lithuania

The Battle of Grunwald is regarded as one of the most important in the histories of Poland and Lithuania.[10] In Lithuania, the victory is synonymous with the Grand Duchy's political and military peak. It was a source of national pride during the age of Romantic nationalism and inspired resistance to the Germanization and Russification policies of the German and Russian Empires. The Teutonic Order was portrayed as bloodthirsty invaders and Grunwald as a just victory achieved by a small, oppressed nation.[10]

In 1910, to mark the 500th anniversary of the battle, a monument by Antoni Wiwulski was unveiled in Kraków during a three-day celebration attended by some 150,000 people.[114] About 60 other towns and villages in Galicia also erected Grunwald monuments for the anniversary.[115] About the same time, Nobel Prize-winner Henryk Sienkiewicz wrote the novel The Knights of the Cross (Polish: Krzyżacy), prominently featuring the battle in one of the chapters. In 1960, Polish filmmaker Aleksander Ford used the book as the basis for his film, Knights of the Teutonic Order. At the 1939 New York World's Fair, Poland exhibited the King Jagiello Monument which commemorated the battle and was later installed in the Central Park, New York City.[116] The battle has lent its name to military decorations (Order of the Cross of Grunwald), sports teams (BC Žalgiris, FK Žalgiris), and various organizations. 72 streets in Lithuania are named after the battle.[117]

 
A re-enactor dressed as King Władysław II Jagiełło (left) during the annual recreation of the battle in 2003

An annual battle re-enactment takes place on 15 July. In 2010, a pageant reenacting the event and commemorating the battle's 600th anniversary was held. It attracted 200,000 spectators who watched 2,200 participants playing the role of knights in a re-enactment of the battle. An additional 3,800 participants played peasants and camp followers. The pageant's organisers believe that the event has become the largest re-enactment of medieval combat in Europe.[118] The reenactment attracts about 60,000 to 80,000 visitors annually.[119]

 
Belarusian stamp for the 600th anniversary of the battle

The battle is also commemorated in Ukraine and Belarus. In 2010, the National Bank of Ukraine released a jubilee coin of 20 hryvnia commemorated to the 600 anniversary of the battle. At least three cities in Ukraine (Lviv, Drohobych, and Ivano-Frankivsk) have a street named after the battle.[120][121] In Belarus, interest in the battle began to grow in the late 1980s and early 1990s.[122] In 2010, Belarus issued postage stamps for the 600th anniversary.[123] Since 2008, Our Grunwald Festival is hosted by a private museum of medieval culture near Minsk and includes battle reenactment.[124]

 
A German National People's Party propaganda poster from 1920 depicts a Teutonic knight threatened by a Pole and a socialist

Germany and Russia

Germans generally saw the Teutonic knights as heroic and noble men who brought Christianity and civilization to the east, although many came to the region with more material motives.[10] In August 1914, during World War I, Germany won a battle against Russia near the site. When the Germans realized its propaganda potential, they named the battle the Battle of Tannenberg,[125] despite it having actually taken place much closer to Allenstein (Olsztyn), and framed it as revenge for the Polish–Lithuanian victory 504 years earlier. To cement this symbolism, Germany built the Tannenberg Memorial, which became the tomb of the national hero Paul von Hindenburg.[126]

Nazi Germany later exploited the sentiment by portraying their Lebensraum policies as a continuation of the order's historical mission.[11] For example, SS Chief Heinrich Himmler told Nazi Germany's leader Adolf Hitler on the first day of the Warsaw Uprising in August 1944: "After five, six weeks we shall leave. But by then Warsaw, the capital, the head, the intelligence of this former 16–17 million Polish people will be extinguished, this Volk that has blocked our way to the east for 700 years and has stood in our way ever since the First Battle of Tannenberg."[127][128]

Due to the participation of the three Smolensk banners, Russians saw the battle as a victory of a Polish–Lithuanian–Russian coalition against invading Germans. However, ethnic composition of men under these banners cannot be determined as Smolensk had rebelled against Vytautas in 1404 and 1408.[129] Chronicler Jan Długosz praised the Smolensk banners, who fought bravely and, according to him, were the only banners from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania not to retreat. In Soviet historiography, the Battle of Grunwald was styled as an ethnic struggle between Slavs and Germanics.[130] The Teutonic Order was portrayed as the medieval forerunners of Hitler's armies, while the battle itself was seen as the medieval counterpart to the Battle of Stalingrad.[10][130]

In 2014, the Russian Military Historical Society stated that Russian troops and their allies defeated the German knights in the Battle of Grunwald,[131] though evidence that the Grand Duchy of Moscow was involved with this battle is lacking. In July 2017, billboards appeared on the streets of Russian cities with statements that seemed to attribute the victory in the battle of Grunwald to Russia.[132]

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Jučas 2009, p. 75.
  2. ^ a b Urban 2003, p. 138.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Turnbull 2003, p. 26.
  4. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 28.
  5. ^ a b Davies 2005, p. 98.
  6. ^ a b c d Jučas 2009, pp. 57–58.
  7. ^ a b Frost 2015, pp. 106–107.
  8. ^ a b Ekdahl 2008, p. 175.
  9. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 92.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Johnson 1996, p. 43.
  11. ^ a b c Johnson 1996, p. 44.
  12. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 8.
  13. ^ a b c Ekdahl 2018.
  14. ^ Sužiedėlis 2011, p. 123.
  15. ^ Evans 1970, p. 3.
  16. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 9.
  17. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 10.
  18. ^ Długosz, Jan (1448). Banderia Prutenorum (in Latin). Jagiellonian Digital Library. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
  19. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 11.
  20. ^ a b Ekdahl 1963.
  21. ^ a b c d Stone 2001, p. 16.
  22. ^ Urban 2003, p. 132.
  23. ^ Kiaupa, Kiaupienė & Kuncevičius 2000, p. 137.
  24. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 20.
  25. ^ a b Ivinskis 1978, p. 336.
  26. ^ Urban 2003, p. 130.
  27. ^ Kuczynski 1960, p. 614.
  28. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 51.
  29. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 21.
  30. ^ Kiaupa, Kiaupienė & Kuncevičius 2000, p. 139.
  31. ^ a b Christiansen 1997, p. 227.
  32. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 30.
  33. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 74.
  34. ^ a b Frost 2015, p. 106.
  35. ^ a b c Разин 1999, p. 486.
  36. ^ a b c d e Kiaupa 2002.
  37. ^ Thompson & Johnson 1937, p. 940.
  38. ^ Rambaud 1898.
  39. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 25.
  40. ^ a b Ivinskis 1978, p. 338.
  41. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 29.
  42. ^ Ekdahl 2010b, p. [page needed].
  43. ^ Разин 1999, pp. 485–486.
  44. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 56.
  45. ^ Urban 2003, p. 139.
  46. ^ Richter 2010.
  47. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 64.
  48. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 63.
  49. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 33.
  50. ^ Urban 2003, p. 141.
  51. ^ Urban 2003, p. 142.
  52. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 35.
  53. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 76.
  54. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 36.
  55. ^ Turnbull 2003, pp. 36–37.
  56. ^ Urban 2003, pp. 148–149.
  57. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 77.
  58. ^ a b Turnbull 2003, p. 44.
  59. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 45.
  60. ^ Urban 2003, p. 149.
  61. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 43.
  62. ^ Ekdahl 2018, pp. 243, 256, 257.
  63. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 78.
  64. ^ Baranauskas 2011, p. 25.
  65. ^ Sužiedėlis 1976, p. 337.
  66. ^ Urban 2003, pp. 152–153.
  67. ^ Ekdahl 2010a.
  68. ^ Turnbull 2003, pp. 48–49.
  69. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 83.
  70. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 53.
  71. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 61.
  72. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 64.
  73. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 66.
  74. ^ a b c Urban 2003, p. 168.
  75. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 79.
  76. ^ a b c d Bumblauskas 2010, p. 74.
  77. ^ Bumblauskas 2010, pp. 74–75.
  78. ^ a b c Turnbull 2003, p. 68.
  79. ^ Jučas 2009, pp. 85–86.
  80. ^ a b Jučas 2009, p. 87.
  81. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 69.
  82. ^ Jučas 2009, p. 88.
  83. ^ Pelech 1987, pp. 105–107.
  84. ^ Urban 2003, p. 162.
  85. ^ Urban 2003, p. 164.
  86. ^ Stone 2001, p. 17.
  87. ^ Ivinskis 1978, p. 342.
  88. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 75.
  89. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 74.
  90. ^ Urban 2003, p. 166.
  91. ^ a b Christiansen 1997, p. 228.
  92. ^ Kiaupa, Kiaupienė & Kuncevičius 2000, pp. 142–144.
  93. ^ Turnbull 2003, p. 78.
  94. ^ Christiansen 1997, pp. 228–230.
  95. ^ Stone 2001, pp. 17–19.
  96. ^ Petrauskas 2010, p. 224.
  97. ^ Ekdahl 2019, p. 45.
  98. ^ a b Knoll 1983, p. 72.
  99. ^ Odoj 2014, p. 64.
  100. ^ Ekdahl 2019, pp. 45–46.
  101. ^ a b c Ekdahl 2008, p. 186.
  102. ^ "Historia Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem w Stębarku" (in Polish). Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem w Stębarku. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  103. ^ Kruczek, Zygmunt (2019). "Frekwencja w atrakcjach turystycznych w latach 2016–2018" (PDF) (in Polish). Polska Organizacja Turystyczna. p. 69.
  104. ^ Libudzka, Agnieszka. "Wmurowano kamień węgielny pod budowę całorocznego Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem" (in Polish). Dzieje.pl. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  105. ^ "Memorial stone to mark Lithuanian-Polish victory against Teutonic crusaders". LRT. 29 May 2020.
  106. ^ Odoj 2014, p. 58.
  107. ^ a b c d e f Drej, Szymon (2015). "Z dziejów badań archeologicznych pól grunwaldzkich". jandlugosz.edu.pl (in Polish). Polish Historical Society and the Historical Magazine "Mówią wieki". Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  108. ^ Tanajewski et al. 2014.
  109. ^ Odoj 2014, p. 62.
  110. ^ Ekdahl 2018, pp. 241, 246.
  111. ^ Ekdahl 2018, p. 265.
  112. ^ Ekdahl 2018, p. 258.
  113. ^ Boguszewski, Marcin (2 September 2020). "Two axes from the Battle of 1410 found near Grunwald". PAP – Science in Poland. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  114. ^ Dabrowski 2004, pp. 164–165.
  115. ^ Ekdahl 2008, p. 179.
  116. ^ Ekdahl 2008, p. 183.
  117. ^ Pumprickaitė, Nemira (15 July 2020). "VU rektorius apie Žalgirio mūšį ir istorinį lūžį: regione atsirado nauja valdžia ir galybė – Lietuva ir Lenkija" (in Lithuanian). LRT.lt.
  118. ^ Fowler 2010.
  119. ^ Kruczek 2015, p. 52.
  120. ^ The holiday of the street (Свято вулиці (відео)). News.IF. 28 July 2010
  121. ^ Ivasiv, Natalia. The holiday of Hriunvaldska vulytsia (Свято Грюнвальдської вулиці). Zakhidny Kuryer. 15 July 2010.
  122. ^ Saganovich, Gennady (2002). Грунвальд у беларускай гістарыяграфіі. Беларускі Гістарычны Агляд (in Belarusian). 9 (1–2): 152–168.
  123. ^ Čajčyc, Alexander (15 July 2010). "Grunwald, the Great Belarusian Victory". Belarus Digest. Retrieved 16 September 2021.
  124. ^ "Our Grunwald Festival to be held for 10th time". Belteleradio. 20 July 2018.
  125. ^ Burleigh 1985, p. 27.
  126. ^ Symes 2016, p. 86.
  127. ^ Wlodzimierz Borodziej: Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2004, p. 121.
  128. ^ Richie, Alexandra (2013). Warsaw 1944: Hitler, Himmler, and the Warsaw Uprising. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 242. ISBN 978-1466848474.
  129. ^ Bumblauskas 2010, pp. 82–83.
  130. ^ a b Davies 2005, p. 99.
  131. ^ "Продолжается реализация проекта «Памятные даты военной истории»" [The implementation of the project "Memorable Dates of Military History" continues]. histrf.ru. 3 July 2014. from the original on 18 November 2014. 25 июля – Памятная дата военной истории России. В этот день в 1410 году русские войска и их союзники одержали победу над немецкими рыцарями в Грюнвальдской битве.
  132. ^ [Russia's victory in the Battle of Grunwald is a new historical "fact"]. Republic.com.ua (in Ukrainian). 16 July 2017. Archived from the original on 24 June 2018.

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External links

  • Cronica conflictus Wladislai regis Poloniae cum cruciferi sanno Christi 1410 (Chronicle of the battle, written in 1410–1411, just after the battle)
  • (in Latin) Photos of Banderia Prutenorum, a catalog of captured Teutonic banners
  • Account by Jan Dlugosz, written sixty years after the battle
  • Museum of the Battle of Grunwald
  • Battle of Grunwald re-enactment (every year on 15 July)

battle, grunwald, other, uses, disambiguation, battle, Žalgiris, first, battle, tannenberg, fought, july, 1410, during, polish, lithuanian, teutonic, alliance, crown, kingdom, poland, grand, duchy, lithuania, respectively, king, władysław, jagiełło, jogaila, g. For other uses see Battle of Grunwald disambiguation The Battle of Grunwald Battle of Zalgiris or First Battle of Tannenberg was fought on 15 July 1410 during the Polish Lithuanian Teutonic War The alliance of the Crown of the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania led respectively by King Wladyslaw II Jagiello Jogaila and Grand Duke Vytautas decisively defeated the German Teutonic Order led by Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen Most of the Teutonic Order s leadership were killed or taken prisoner Battle of GrunwaldPart of the Polish Lithuanian Teutonic WarBattle of Grunwald by Jan Matejko 1878 Date15 July 1410 1410 07 15 LocationBetween villages of Grunwald Grunfelde and Lodwigowo Ludwigsdorf western Masuria PolandCoordinates 53 29 10 N 20 07 29 E 53 48611 N 20 12472 E 53 48611 20 12472ResultPolish Lithuanian victoryBelligerentsPoland LithuaniaVassals allies and mercenaries Masovia Warsaw 1 Masovia Plock Belz Pomerania Stolp Moldavia 2 Smolensk 3 Tatars from Golden Horde 4 Bohemians 3 Moravians 3 Silesians 3 Wallachians 5 Teutonic OrderVassals allies and mercenaries Guest crusaders Pomerania Stettin Duchy of Oels Prince Bishopric of Warmia Bishopric of Pomesania Bishopric of Culm Bishopric of Sambia mercenaries from western EuropeCommanders and leadersKing Wladyslaw II Jagiello supreme commander 3 Grand Duke Vytautas the Great Lithuanian commanderGrandmaster Ulrich von Jungingen Grand Marshal Friedrich von Wallenrode Strength16 000 39 000 men 6 11 000 27 000 men 6 Casualties and lossesUnknown see Casualties and captives203 211 out of 270 brothers killed 7 See Casualties and captivesclass notpageimage Battle site on a map of modern Poland Although defeated the Teutonic Order withstood the subsequent siege of the Malbork Castle and suffered minimal territorial losses at the Peace of Thorn 1411 with other territorial disputes continuing until the Treaty of Melno in 1422 The order however never recovered their former power and the financial burden of war reparations caused internal conflicts and an economic downturn in the lands controlled by them The battle shifted the balance of power in Central and Eastern Europe and marked the rise of the Polish Lithuanian union as the dominant regional political and military force 8 The battle was one of the largest in medieval Europe 9 The battle is viewed as one of the most important victories in the histories of Poland and Lithuania It is also commemorated in Ukraine and Belarus It has been used as a source of romantic legends and national pride becoming a larger symbol of struggle against foreign invaders 10 During the 20th century the battle was used in Nazi German and Soviet propaganda campaigns Only in recent decades have historians moved towards a dispassionate scholarly assessment of the battle reconciling the previous narratives which differed widely by nation 11 Contents 1 Names and sources 1 1 Names 1 2 Sources 2 Historical background 2 1 Lithuanian Crusade and Polish Lithuanian union 2 2 War truce and preparations 3 Opposing forces 4 Course of the battle 4 1 March into Prussia 4 2 Battle preparations 4 3 Battle begins Lithuanian attack and retreat maneuver 4 4 Battle continues Polish Teutonic fight 4 5 Battle ends Teutonic Order defeated 5 Aftermath 5 1 Casualties and captives 5 2 Further campaign and peace 6 Battlefield memorials 7 Archaeological excavations 8 Legacy 8 1 Poland and Lithuania 8 2 Germany and Russia 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksNames and sources EditNames Edit The most important source about the battle is Cronica conflictus 12 Traditionally the battle s location was thought to be in the territory of the monastic state of the Teutonic Order on the plains between three villages Grunfelde Grunwald to the west Tannenberg Stebark to the northeast and Ludwigsdorf Lodwigowo Ludwikowice to the south However research by Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl de and archaeological excavations in 2014 2017 proved that the actual site was south of Grunfelde Grunwald 13 Wladyslaw II Jagiello referred to the site in Latin as in loco conflictus nostri quem cum Cruciferis de Prusia habuimus dicto Grunenvelt 8 Later Polish chroniclers interpreted the word Grunenvelt green field in Low German as Grunwald meaning green forest in German The Lithuanians followed suit and translated the name as Zalgiris 14 The Germans named the battle after Tannenberg fir hill or pine hill in German 15 Thus there are three commonly used names for the battle German Schlacht bei Tannenberg Polish bitwa pod Grunwaldem Lithuanian Zalgirio musis Its names in the languages of other involved peoples include Belarusian Bitva pad Grunvaldam Ukrainian Gryunvaldska bitva Russian Gryunvaldskaya bitva Czech Bitva u Grunvaldu Romanian Bătălia de la Grunwald Sources Edit There are few contemporary reliable sources about the battle and most were produced by the Polish side The most important and trustworthy source is Cronica conflictus Wladislai regis Poloniae cum Cruciferis anno Christi 1410 which was written within a year of the battle by an eyewitness 12 Its authorship is uncertain but several candidates have been proposed Polish deputy chancellor Mikolaj Traba and Wladyslaw II Jagiello s secretary Zbigniew Olesnicki 16 While the original Cronica conflictus did not survive a short summary from the 16th century has been preserved Another important source is Historiae Polonicae by Polish historian Jan Dlugosz 1415 1480 16 It is a comprehensive and detailed account written several decades after the battle The reliability of this source suffers not only from the long gap between the events and the chronicle but also Dlugosz s alleged biases against the Lithuanians 17 Banderia Prutenorum is a mid 15th century manuscript with images and Latin descriptions of the Teutonic battle flags captured during the battle and displayed in Wawel Cathedral and Vilnius Cathedral 18 Other Polish sources include two letters written by Wladyslaw II Jagiello to his wife Anne of Cilli and Bishop of Poznan Wojciech Jastrzebiec and letters sent by Jastrzebiec to Poles in the Holy See 17 German sources include a concise account in the chronicle of Johann von Posilge An anonymous letter discovered in 1963 and written between 1411 and 1413 provided important details on Lithuanian maneuvers 19 20 Historical background EditLithuanian Crusade and Polish Lithuanian union Edit The Kingdom of Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania within their vassals between 1386 and 1434 Main article Lithuanian Crusade In 1230 the Teutonic Order a crusading military order moved to Chelmno Land Kulmerland and launched the Prussian Crusade against the pagan Prussian clans With support from the pope and Holy Roman Emperor the Teutons conquered and converted the Prussians by the 1280s and shifted their attention to the pagan Grand Duchy of Lithuania For about 100 years the order raided Lithuanian lands particularly Samogitia as it separated the order in Prussia from their branch in Livonia While the border regions became an uninhabited wilderness the order gained very little territory The Lithuanians first gave up Samogitia during the Lithuanian Civil War 1381 84 in the Treaty of Dubysa citation needed In 1385 Grand Duke Jogaila of Lithuania agreed to marry Queen Jadwiga of Poland in the Union of Kreva Jogaila converted to Christianity and was crowned King of Poland and became known as Wladyslaw II Jagiello thus creating a personal union between the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania The official Lithuanian conversion to Christianity removed the religious rationale for the order s activities in the area 21 Its grand master Conrad Zollner von Rothenstein supported by Hungarian King Sigismund of Luxemburg responded by publicly contesting the sincerity of Jogaila s conversion bringing the charge to a papal court 21 The territorial disputes continued over Samogitia which had been in Teutonic hands since the Peace of Raciaz in 1404 Poland also had territorial claims against the order in Dobrzyn Land and Gdansk Danzig but the two states had been largely at peace since the Treaty of Kalisz 1343 22 The conflict was also motivated by trade considerations the order controlled the lower reaches of the three largest rivers the Neman Vistula and Daugava in Poland and Lithuania 23 War truce and preparations Edit Territory of the State of the Teutonic Order between 1260 and 1410 the locations and dates of major battles including the Battle of Grunwald are indicated by crossed red swords Lithuanians fighting with Teutonic knights 14th century bas relief from the Castle of Marienburg In May 1409 an uprising in Teutonic held Samogitia started Lithuania supported it and the order threatened to invade Poland announced its support for the Lithuanian cause and threatened to invade Prussia in return As Prussian troops evacuated Samogitia Teutonic Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen declared war on the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania on 6 August 1409 24 The order hoped to defeat Poland and Lithuania separately and began by invading Greater Poland and Kuyavia catching the Poles by surprise 25 The order burned the castle at Dobrin Dobrzyn nad Wisla captured Bobrowniki after a 14 day siege conquered Bydgoszcz Bromberg and sacked several towns 26 The Poles organized counterattacks and recaptured Bydgoszcz 27 The Samogitians attacked Memel Klaipeda 25 However neither side was ready for a full scale war Wenceslaus King of the Romans agreed to mediate the dispute A truce was signed on 8 October 1409 and was set to expire on 24 June 1410 28 Both sides used this time to prepare for war gathering troops and engaging in diplomatic maneuvering Both sides sent letters and envoys accusing each other of various wrongdoings and threats to the Christendom Wenceslaus who received a gift of 60 000 florins from the order declared that Samogitia rightfully belonged to the order and only Dobrzyn Land should be returned to Poland 29 The order also paid 300 000 ducats to Sigismund of Hungary who had ambitions regarding the Principality of Moldavia for mutual military assistance 29 Sigismund attempted to break the Polish Lithuanian alliance by offering Vytautas a king s crown Vytautas acceptance would have violated the terms of the Ostrow Agreement and created Polish Lithuanian discord 30 At the same time Vytautas managed to obtain a truce from the Livonian Order 31 By December 1409 Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Vytautas had agreed on a common strategy their armies would unite into a single massive force and march together towards Marienburg Malbork capital of the Teutonic Order 32 The order who took a defensive position did not expect a joint attack and were preparing for a dual invasion by the Poles along the Vistula River towards Danzig Gdansk and the Lithuanians along the Neman River towards Ragnit Neman 1 To counter this perceived threat Ulrich von Jungingen concentrated his forces in Schwetz Swiecie a central location from where troops could respond to an invasion from any direction rather quickly 33 Sizable garrisons were left in the eastern castles of Ragnit Rhein Ryn near Lotzen Gizycko and Memel Klaipeda 1 To keep their plans secret and mislead the order Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Vytautas organized several raids into border territories thus forcing the order to keep their troops in place 32 Opposing forces EditFurther information List of banners in the Battle of Grunwald Various estimates of opposing forces 6 Historian Polish Lithuanian TeutonicKarl Heveker and Hans Delbruck 34 10 500 6 000 11 000Eugene Razin 35 16 000 17 000 11 000Max Oehler 23 000 15 000Jerzy Ochmanski 22 000 27 000 12 000Sven Ekdahl 34 20 000 25 000 12 000 15 000Andrzej Nadolski 20 000 10 000 15 000Jan Dabrowski 15 000 18 000 8 000 11 000 19 000Zigmantas Kiaupa 36 18 000 11 000 15 000 21 000Marian Biskup 19 000 20 000 10 000 11 000 21 000Daniel Stone 21 27 000 11 000 21 000Stefan Kuczynski 39 000 27 000James Westfall Thompson and Edgar Nathaniel Johnson 37 100 000 35 000Alfred Nicolas Rambaud 38 163 000 86 000The precise number of soldiers involved has proven difficult to establish 39 None of the contemporary sources provided reliable troop counts Jan Dlugosz provided the number of banners the principal unit of each cavalry 51 for the Teutons 50 for the Poles and 40 for the Lithuanians 40 However it is unclear how many men were under each banner The structure and number of infantry units pikemen archers crossbowmen and artillery units is unknown Estimates often biased by political and nationalistic considerations were produced by various historians 39 German historians tend to present lower numbers while Polish historians tend to use higher estimates 6 The high end estimates by Polish historian Stefan Kuczynski of 39 000 Polish Lithuanian and 27 000 Teutonic men 40 have been cited in Western literature as commonly accepted 5 10 39 While outnumbered the Teutonic army had advantages in discipline military training and equipment 35 They were particularly noted for their heavy cavalry although only a small percentage of the Order s army at Grunwald were heavily armoured knights 41 The Teutonic army was also equipped with bombards that could shoot lead and stone projectiles 35 Both armies were composed of troops from several states and lands including numerous mercenaries primarily from Silesia and Bohemia Bohemian mercenaries fought on both sides 41 The Silesian mercenaries were led in battle by Duke Konrad VII the White of Oels who was supported by knights from the Silesian nobility including Dietrich von Kottulin and Hans von Motschelnitz 42 Soldiers from twenty two different states and regions mostly Germanic joined the Order s army 43 Teutonic recruits known as guest crusaders included soldiers from Westphalia Frisia Austria Swabia Bavaria 41 and Stettin Szczecin 44 Two Hungarian nobles Nicholas II Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz brought 200 men for the Order 45 but support from Sigismund of Hungary was disappointing 31 Poland brought mercenaries from Moravia and Bohemia The Czechs produced two full banners under the command of John Sokol of Lamberg 3 Serving among the Czechs was possibly Jan Zizka future commander of the Hussites 46 Alexander I of Moldavia commanded an expeditionary corps and the Moldavian king was so brave that the Polish troops and their king honoured him with a royal sword the Szczerbiec 2 Vytautas gathered troops from Lithuanian and Ruthenian lands present day Belarus and Ukraine Among them were three banners from Smolensk led by Wladyslaw II Jagiello s brother Lengvenis and the Tatar contingent of the Golden Horde under the command of the future Khan Jalal ad Din 4 The overall commander of the joint Polish Lithuanian force was King Wladyslaw II Jagiello however he did not directly participate in the battle The Lithuanian units were commanded directly by Grand Duke Vytautas who was second in command and helped design the grand strategy of the campaign Vytautas actively participated in the battle managing both Lithuanian and Polish units 47 Jan Dlugosz stated that the low ranking swordbearer of the Crown Zyndram of Maszkowice commanded the Polish army but that is highly doubtful 48 More likely marshal of the Crown Zbigniew of Brzezia commanded the Polish troops in the field Course of the battle Edit Map of army movements in the Grunwald campaign March into Prussia Edit The first stage of the Grunwald campaign was the gathering of all Polish Lithuanian troops at Czerwinsk a designated meeting point about 80 km 50 mi from the Prussian border where the joint army crossed the Vistula over a pontoon bridge 49 This maneuver which required precision and intense coordination among multi ethnic forces was accomplished in about a week from 24 to 30 June 1 Polish soldiers from Greater Poland gathered in Poznan and those from Lesser Poland in Wolborz On 24 June Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Czech mercenaries arrived in Wolborz 1 Three days later the Polish army was already at the meeting place The Lithuanian army marched out from Vilnius on 3 June and joined the Ruthenian regiments in Hrodna 1 They arrived in Czerwinsk on the same day the Poles crossed the river After the crossing Masovian troops under Siemowit IV and Janusz I joined the Polish Lithuanian army 1 The massive force began its march north towards Marienburg Malbork capital of Prussia on 3 July The Prussian border was crossed on 9 July 49 The river crossing remained secret until Hungarian envoys who were attempting to negotiate a peace informed the Grand Master 50 As soon as Ulrich von Jungingen grasped the Polish Lithuanian intentions he left 3 000 men at Schwetz Swiecie under Heinrich von Plauen 51 and marched the main force to organize a line of defense on the Drewenz River Drweca near Kauernik Kurzetnik 52 The river crossing was fortified with stockades 53 On 11 July after meeting with his eight member war council 48 Wladyslaw II Jagiello decided against crossing the river at such a strong defensible position The army would instead bypass the river crossing by turning east towards its sources where no other major rivers separated his army from Marienburg 52 The march continued east towards Soldau Dzialdowo although no attempt was made to capture the town 54 The Teutonic army followed the Drewenz River north crossed it near Lobau Lubawa and then moved east in parallel with the Polish Lithuanian army According to the Order s propaganda the latter ravaged the village of Gilgenburg Dabrowno 55 Later in the self serving testimonies of the survivors before the Pope the order claimed that Von Jungingen was so enraged by the alleged atrocities that he swore to defeat the invaders in battle 56 Battle preparations Edit See also Grunwald Swords Teutonic Order presents Grunwald Swords as gift to King Wladyslaw II Jagiello painting by Wojciech Kossak In the early morning of 15 July both armies met in an area covering approximately 4 km2 1 5 sq mi between the villages of Grunwald Tannenberg Stebark and Ludwigsdorf Lodwigowo 57 The armies formed opposing lines along a northeast southwest axis The Polish Lithuanian army was positioned in front and east of Ludwigsdorf and Tannenberg 58 Polish heavy cavalry formed the left flank Lithuanian light cavalry the right flank and various mercenary troops made up the center Their men were organized in three lines of wedge shaped formations about 20 men deep 58 The Teutonic forces concentrated their elite heavy cavalry commanded by Grand Marshal Frederic von Wallenrode against the Lithuanians 57 The order which was the first to organize their army for the battle hoped to provoke the Poles or Lithuanians into attacking first Their troops wearing heavy armor had to stand in the scorching sun for several hours waiting for an attack 59 One chronicle suggested that they had dug pits that an attacking army would fall into 60 They also attempted to use field artillery but a light rain dampened their powder and only two cannon shots were fired 59 As Wladyslaw II Jagiello delayed the Grand Master sent messengers with two swords to assist Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Vytautas in battle The swords were meant as an insult and a provocation 61 Known as the Grunwald Swords they became one of the national symbols of Poland Battle begins Lithuanian attack and retreat maneuver Edit Retreat of Lithuanian light cavalry battle location and initial army positions according to a 1836 map by Johannes Voigt and contradicted by archaeological excavations in 2014 2017 62 Right flank Polish Lithuanian assault Polish heavy cavalry break throughVytautas supported by the Polish banners started an assault on the left flank of the Teutonic forces 59 After more than an hour of heavy fighting the Lithuanian light cavalry began a full retreat Jan Dlugosz described this development as a complete annihilation of the entire Lithuanian army According to Dlugosz the order assumed that victory was theirs broke their formation for a disorganized pursuit of the retreating Lithuanians and gathered much loot before returning to the battlefield to face the Polish troops 63 He made no mention of the Lithuanians who later returned to the battlefield Thus Dlugosz portrayed the battle as a single handed Polish victory 63 This view contradicted Cronica conflictus and has been challenged by modern historians Starting with an article by Vaclaw Lastowski in 1909 they proposed that the retreat had been a planned maneuver borrowed from the Golden Horde 64 A feigned retreat had been used in the Battle of the Vorskla River 1399 when the Lithuanian army had been dealt a crushing defeat and Vytautas himself had barely escaped alive 65 This theory gained wider acceptance after the discovery and publication in 1963 by Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl de of a German letter 66 67 Written a few years after the battle it cautioned the new Grand Master to look out for feigned retreats of the kind that had been used in the Great Battle 20 Stephen Turnbull asserts that the Lithuanian tactical retreat did not quite fit the formula of a feigned retreat such a retreat was usually staged by one or two units as opposed to almost an entire army and was swiftly followed by a counterattack whereas the Lithuanians had returned late in the battle 68 Battle continues Polish Teutonic fight Edit Muslim Tatar fights a Teutonic knight detail from a painting by Wojciech Kossak While the Lithuanians were retreating heavy fighting broke out between Polish and Teutonic forces Commanded by Grand Komtur Kuno von Lichtenstein the Teutonic forces concentrated on the Polish right flank Six of von Walenrode s banners did not pursue the retreating Lithuanians instead joining the attack on the right flank 36 A particularly valuable target was the royal banner of Krakow It seemed that the order were gaining the upper hand and at one point the royal standard bearer Marcin of Wrocimowice lost the Krakow banner 69 However it was soon recaptured and fighting continued Wladyslaw II Jagiello deployed his reserves the second line of his army 36 Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen then personally led 16 banners almost a third of the original Teutonic strength to the right Polish flank 70 and Wladyslaw II Jagiello deployed his last reserves the third line of his army 36 The melee reached the Polish command and one knight identified as Lupold or Diepold of Kokeritz charged directly against King Wladyslaw II Jagiello 71 Wladyslaw s secretary Zbigniew Olesnicki saved the king s life gaining royal favor and becoming one of the most influential people in Poland 21 Battle ends Teutonic Order defeated Edit After the Battle of Grunwald The Solidarity of the Northern Slavs 1924 by Alfons Mucha The Slav Epic At that time the reorganized Lithuanians returned to the battle attacking von Jungingen from the rear 72 The Teutonic forces were by then becoming outnumbered by the mass of Polish knights and advancing Lithuanian cavalry As von Jungingen attempted to break through the Lithuanian lines he was killed 72 According to Cronica conflictus Dobieslaw of Olesnica thrust a lance through the Grand Master s neck 72 while Dlugosz presented Mszczuj of Skrzynno as the killer Surrounded and leaderless the Teutonic Order began to retreat Part of the routed units retreated towards their camp This move backfired when the camp followers turned against their masters and joined the manhunt 73 The knights attempted to build a wagon fort the camp was surrounded by wagons serving as an improvised fortification 73 However the defense was soon broken and the camp was ravaged According to Cronica conflictus more knights died there than on the battlefield 73 The battle lasted for about ten hours 36 The Teutonic Order attributed the defeat to treason on the part of Nicholas von Renys Mikolaj of Rynsk commander of the Culm Chelmno banner and he was beheaded without a trial 74 He was the founder and leader of the Lizard Union a group of knights sympathetic to Poland According to the order von Renys lowered his banner which was taken as a signal of surrender and led to the panicked retreat 75 The legend that the order was stabbed in the back was echoed in the post World War I stab in the back myth and preoccupied German historiography of the battle until 1945 74 Aftermath EditCasualties and captives Edit The battle as depicted in the Berner Chronik of Diebold Schilling A note sent in August by envoys of King Sigismund of Hungary Nicholas II Garai and Stibor of Stiboricz put total casualties at 8 000 dead on both sides 76 However the wording is vague and it is unclear whether it meant a total of 8 000 or 16 000 dead 77 A papal bull from 1412 mentioned 18 000 dead Christians 76 In two letters written immediately after the battle Wladyslaw II Jagiello mentioned that Polish casualties were small paucis valde and modico and Jan Dlugosz listed only 12 Polish knights who had been killed 76 A letter by a Teutonic official from Tapiau Gvardeysk mentioned that only half of the Lithuanians returned but it is unclear how many of those casualties are attributable to the battle and how many to the later siege of Marienburg 76 The defeat of the Teutonic Order was resounding According to Teutonic payroll records only 1 427 men reported back to Marienburg to claim their pay 78 Of 1 200 men sent from Danzig only 300 returned 44 Between 203 and 211 brothers of the Order were killed out of 270 that participated in battle 7 including much of the Teutonic leadership Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen Grand Marshal Friedrich von Wallenrode Grand Komtur Kuno von Lichtenstein Grand Treasurer Thomas von Merheim Marshal of Supply Forces Albrecht von Schwartzburg and ten of the komturs 79 Marquard von Salzbach Komtur of Brandenburg Ushakovo and Heinrich Schaumburg voigt of Sambia were executed by order of Vytautas after the battle 78 The bodies of von Jungingen and other high ranking officials were transported to Marienburg Castle for burial on 19 July 80 The bodies of lower ranking Teutonic officials and 12 Polish knights were buried at the church in Tannenberg 80 The rest of the dead were buried in several mass graves The highest ranking Teutonic official to escape the battle was Werner von Tettinger Komtur of Elbing Elblag 78 Polish and Lithuanian forces took several thousand captives Among these were Dukes Konrad VII of Oels Olesnica and Casimir V of Pomerania 81 Most of the commoners and mercenaries were released shortly after the battle on condition that they report to Krakow on 11 November 1410 82 Only those who were expected to pay ransom were kept Considerable ransoms were recorded for example the mercenary Holbracht von Loym had to pay 150 kopas of Prague groschen amounting to more than 30 kg 66 lb of silver 83 Further campaign and peace Edit Main articles Siege of Marienburg 1410 and Peace of Thorn 1411 After the battle the Castle of Marienburg which served as the Teutonic capital was unsuccessfully besieged for two months by the Polish Lithuanian forces After the battle the Polish and Lithuanian forces delayed their attack on the Teutonic capital in Marienburg Malbork remaining on the battlefield for three days and then marching an average of only about 15 km 9 3 mi per day 84 The main forces did not reach heavily fortified Marienburg until 26 July This delay gave Heinrich von Plauen enough time to organize a defense Wladyslaw II Jagiello also sent his troops to other Teutonic fortresses which often surrendered without resistance 85 including the major cities of Danzig Gdansk Thorn Torun and Elbing Elblag 86 Only eight castles remained in Teutonic hands 87 The besiegers of Marienburg expected a speedy capitulation and were not prepared for a long siege suffering from lack of ammunition low morale and an epidemic of dysentery 88 The order appealed to their allies for help and Sigismund of Hungary Wenceslaus King of the Romans and the Livonian Order promised financial aid and reinforcements 89 The siege of Marienburg was lifted on 19 September The Polish Lithuanian forces left garrisons in the fortresses they had taken and returned home However the order quickly recaptured most of the castles By the end of October only four Teutonic castles along the border remained in Polish hands 90 Wladyslaw II Jagiello raised a fresh army and dealt another defeat to the order in the Battle of Koronowo on 10 October 1410 Following other brief engagements both sides agreed to negotiate The Peace of Thorn was signed in February 1411 Under its terms the order ceded the Dobrin Land Dobrzyn Land to Poland and agreed to resign their claims to Samogitia during the lifetimes of Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Vytautas 91 although another two wars the Hunger War of 1414 and the Gollub War of 1422 would be waged before the Treaty of Melno permanently resolved the territorial disputes 92 The Poles and Lithuanians were unable to translate the military victory into territorial or diplomatic gains However the Peace of Thorn imposed a heavy financial burden on the order from which they never recovered They had to pay an indemnity in silver in four annual installments 91 To meet these payments the order borrowed heavily confiscated gold and silver from churches and increased taxes Two major Prussian cities Danzig Gdansk and Thorn Torun revolted against the tax increases 93 The defeat at Grunwald left the Teutonic Order with few forces to defend their remaining territories Since Samogitia became officially christened as both Poland and Lithuania were for a long time the order had difficulties recruiting new volunteer crusaders 94 The Grand Masters then needed to rely on mercenary troops which proved an expensive drain on their already depleted budget The internal conflicts economic decline and tax increases led to unrest and the foundation of the Prussian Confederation or Alliance against Lordship in 1441 This in turn led to a series of conflicts that culminated in the Thirteen Years War 1454 95 Battlefield memorials Edit Memorials at the battlefield built in 1960 Ruins of the Chapel of St Mary Ideas about commemorating the battle rose right after the event Wladyslaw II Jagiello wanted to build a monastery dedicated to Saint Bridget of Sweden who had prophesied the downfall of the Teutonic Order at the location of the battle 96 When the order regained the territory of the battlefield the new grand master Heinrich von Plauen built a chapel dedicated to Saint Mary and it was consecrated in March 1413 97 It was destroyed by the Poles when they invaded during the Hunger War of 1414 but it was quickly rebuilt The chapel fell to ruins during the Protestant Reformation and was demolished in 1720 98 99 Over time the location of the chapel became associated with the location where Grand Master Ulrich von Jungingen was killed In 1901 a large memorial stone was erected for the fallen Grand Master in the midst of the chapel ruins for the 200th anniversary of the coronation of King Frederick I of Prussia The inscription was chiseled in 1960 and the stone was removed from the chapel ruins and placed inscription facing down in 1984 100 In 1960 for the 550th anniversary a museum and monuments were constructed a little northeast of the chapel ruins in 1960 101 The grounds were designed by sculptor Jerzy Bandura and architect Witold Ceckiewicz pl The monuments included an obelisk of Silesian granite depicting two faces of knights a bundle of eleven 30 metre 98 ft high flagpoles with emblems of the Polish Lithuanian army and a sculptural map depicting the supposed positions of the armies before the battle 101 Presumed locations where Wladyslaw II Jagiello and Vytautas had their main camps were marked with artificial mounds and flagpoles 101 The battle site is one of Poland s national Historical Monuments as designated on 4 October 2010 and tracked by the National Institute of Cultural Heritage The museum which is open during summers has an exhibition space of 275 square metres 2 960 sq ft in which it displays archaeological finds from the battlefield original and reproduced medieval weapons reconstructed flags from the battle as well as various maps drawings and documents related to the battle 102 In 2018 the museum was visited by about 140 000 people 103 Construction of a larger year round museum at an estimated cost of 30 million Polish zloty 6 5 million euros started in April 2019 104 In July 2020 a large stone with engraved Vytis was erected by the Lithuanians near the monument site to commemorate the 610th anniversary of the battle The monument was unveiled by Lithuanian and Polish presidents Gitanas Nauseda and Andrzej Duda 105 Archaeological excavations Edit Traditional view of army movements and battlefield location according to descriptions by Jan Dlugosz and map first published by Johannes Voigt in 1836 13 Army movements and battlefield location according to Sven Ekdahl which were proven correct by archaeological excavations 13 Several artifacts from the battlefield are known from historical record for example stone balls in the church of Stebark Tannenberg and a metal helmet with holes in the church of Mielno which was gifted to Frederick William IV of Prussia when he visited the battlefield in 1842 but they have not survived to the present day 106 107 The first amateur archeological research was carried out in 1911 in hopes of finding the mass graves mentioned by Jan Dlugosz at the church of Stebark 107 The church was surveyed with ground penetrating radar in 2013 but little evidence of the mass graves was found 108 The first more thorough archaeological excavations of the battlefield were carried out in 1958 1960 in connection with the construction of the memorial site and museum The government showed great interest in the excavations and sent helicopters and 160 soldiers to help 107 Research continued in later decades but yielded very little results with the exception of the area around the ruined chapel 109 98 Several mass graves were found at the chapel remains of six people in the vestibule 30 people next to the southern wall more than 130 people in three pits adjacent to the chapel and about 90 people in the sacristy Many remains showed signs of traumatic injuries Some skeletons showed signs of being burned and moved 107 Mass burials including of women and children were also found in the villages of Gilgenburg Dabrowno and Faulen Ulnowo The massacre in Gilgenburg was known from written sources but the burial in Faulen was unexpected 107 In the fields very few items of militaria were found In 1958 1990 only 28 artifacts were found connected to the battle ten crossbow bolts five arrowheads a javelin head two sword pieces two gun bullets six pieces of gauntlets and two small arms bullets 107 Swedish historian Sven Ekdahl de formulated hypothesis that the traditionally identified location of the battlefield is not correct in 1960s but published it only in 2000s According to him the main battlefield was located northeast of the road between Grunwald and Lodwigowo i e about 2 kilometres 1 2 mi southwest of the memorial site 110 Archaeologists from Scandinavia and Poland investigated an area of approximately 450 hectares 1 100 acres with metal detectors in 2014 2017 and located the main battle site according to Ekdahl s predictions 111 In 2017 the team found approximately 65 crossbow bolts and 20 arrowheads as well as parts of spurs stirrups gauntlets etc 112 The research is ongoing As of 2020 archaeologists discovered about 1 500 artifacts of which about 150 are linked to the battle Among them are a Teutonic clasp to fasten coat with the Gothic inscription Ave Maria a seal with the image of a pelican feeding its young with blood two well preserved axes and Teutonic coins 113 Legacy Edit Military parade of the 1st Infantry Regiment of the Lithuanian Grand Duke Gediminas during commemoration of the battle of Zalgiris in Ukmerge on 15 July 1930 In William Urban s summary almost all accounts of the battle made before the 1960s were more influenced by romantic legends and nationalistic propaganda than by fact 74 Historians have since made progress towards dispassionate scholarship and reconciliation of the various national accounts of the battle 11 Grunwald Monument was erected in Krakow Poland for the battle s 500th anniversary It was destroyed during World War II by the Germans and rebuilt in 1976 Poland and Lithuania Edit The Battle of Grunwald is regarded as one of the most important in the histories of Poland and Lithuania 10 In Lithuania the victory is synonymous with the Grand Duchy s political and military peak It was a source of national pride during the age of Romantic nationalism and inspired resistance to the Germanization and Russification policies of the German and Russian Empires The Teutonic Order was portrayed as bloodthirsty invaders and Grunwald as a just victory achieved by a small oppressed nation 10 In 1910 to mark the 500th anniversary of the battle a monument by Antoni Wiwulski was unveiled in Krakow during a three day celebration attended by some 150 000 people 114 About 60 other towns and villages in Galicia also erected Grunwald monuments for the anniversary 115 About the same time Nobel Prize winner Henryk Sienkiewicz wrote the novel The Knights of the Cross Polish Krzyzacy prominently featuring the battle in one of the chapters In 1960 Polish filmmaker Aleksander Ford used the book as the basis for his film Knights of the Teutonic Order At the 1939 New York World s Fair Poland exhibited the King Jagiello Monument which commemorated the battle and was later installed in the Central Park New York City 116 The battle has lent its name to military decorations Order of the Cross of Grunwald sports teams BC Zalgiris FK Zalgiris and various organizations 72 streets in Lithuania are named after the battle 117 A re enactor dressed as King Wladyslaw II Jagiello left during the annual recreation of the battle in 2003 An annual battle re enactment takes place on 15 July In 2010 a pageant reenacting the event and commemorating the battle s 600th anniversary was held It attracted 200 000 spectators who watched 2 200 participants playing the role of knights in a re enactment of the battle An additional 3 800 participants played peasants and camp followers The pageant s organisers believe that the event has become the largest re enactment of medieval combat in Europe 118 The reenactment attracts about 60 000 to 80 000 visitors annually 119 Belarusian stamp for the 600th anniversary of the battle The battle is also commemorated in Ukraine and Belarus In 2010 the National Bank of Ukraine released a jubilee coin of 20 hryvnia commemorated to the 600 anniversary of the battle At least three cities in Ukraine Lviv Drohobych and Ivano Frankivsk have a street named after the battle 120 121 In Belarus interest in the battle began to grow in the late 1980s and early 1990s 122 In 2010 Belarus issued postage stamps for the 600th anniversary 123 Since 2008 Our Grunwald Festival is hosted by a private museum of medieval culture near Minsk and includes battle reenactment 124 A German National People s Party propaganda poster from 1920 depicts a Teutonic knight threatened by a Pole and a socialist Germany and Russia Edit Germans generally saw the Teutonic knights as heroic and noble men who brought Christianity and civilization to the east although many came to the region with more material motives 10 In August 1914 during World War I Germany won a battle against Russia near the site When the Germans realized its propaganda potential they named the battle the Battle of Tannenberg 125 despite it having actually taken place much closer to Allenstein Olsztyn and framed it as revenge for the Polish Lithuanian victory 504 years earlier To cement this symbolism Germany built the Tannenberg Memorial which became the tomb of the national hero Paul von Hindenburg 126 Nazi Germany later exploited the sentiment by portraying their Lebensraum policies as a continuation of the order s historical mission 11 For example SS Chief Heinrich Himmler told Nazi Germany s leader Adolf Hitler on the first day of the Warsaw Uprising in August 1944 After five six weeks we shall leave But by then Warsaw the capital the head the intelligence of this former 16 17 million Polish people will be extinguished this Volk that has blocked our way to the east for 700 years and has stood in our way ever since the First Battle of Tannenberg 127 128 Due to the participation of the three Smolensk banners Russians saw the battle as a victory of a Polish Lithuanian Russian coalition against invading Germans However ethnic composition of men under these banners cannot be determined as Smolensk had rebelled against Vytautas in 1404 and 1408 129 Chronicler Jan Dlugosz praised the Smolensk banners who fought bravely and according to him were the only banners from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania not to retreat In Soviet historiography the Battle of Grunwald was styled as an ethnic struggle between Slavs and Germanics 130 The Teutonic Order was portrayed as the medieval forerunners of Hitler s armies while the battle itself was seen as the medieval counterpart to the Battle of Stalingrad 10 130 In 2014 the Russian Military Historical Society stated that Russian troops and their allies defeated the German knights in the Battle of Grunwald 131 though evidence that the Grand Duchy of Moscow was involved with this battle is lacking In July 2017 billboards appeared on the streets of Russian cities with statements that seemed to attribute the victory in the battle of Grunwald to Russia 132 References EditNotes Edit a b c d e f g Jucas 2009 p 75 a b Urban 2003 p 138 a b c d e f Turnbull 2003 p 26 a b Turnbull 2003 p 28 a b Davies 2005 p 98 a b c d Jucas 2009 pp 57 58 a b Frost 2015 pp 106 107 a b Ekdahl 2008 p 175 Turnbull 2003 p 92 a b c d e f Johnson 1996 p 43 a b c Johnson 1996 p 44 a b Jucas 2009 p 8 a b c Ekdahl 2018 Suziedelis 2011 p 123 Evans 1970 p 3 a b Jucas 2009 p 9 a b Jucas 2009 p 10 Dlugosz Jan 1448 Banderia Prutenorum in Latin Jagiellonian Digital Library Retrieved 21 September 2021 Jucas 2009 p 11 a b Ekdahl 1963 a b c d Stone 2001 p 16 Urban 2003 p 132 Kiaupa Kiaupiene amp Kuncevicius 2000 p 137 Turnbull 2003 p 20 a b Ivinskis 1978 p 336 Urban 2003 p 130 Kuczynski 1960 p 614 Jucas 2009 p 51 a b Turnbull 2003 p 21 Kiaupa Kiaupiene amp Kuncevicius 2000 p 139 a b Christiansen 1997 p 227 a b Turnbull 2003 p 30 Jucas 2009 p 74 a b Frost 2015 p 106 a b c Razin 1999 p 486 a b c d e Kiaupa 2002 Thompson amp Johnson 1937 p 940 Rambaud 1898 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 25 a b Ivinskis 1978 p 338 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 29 Ekdahl 2010b p page needed Razin 1999 pp 485 486 a b Jucas 2009 p 56 Urban 2003 p 139 Richter 2010 Jucas 2009 p 64 a b Jucas 2009 p 63 a b Turnbull 2003 p 33 Urban 2003 p 141 Urban 2003 p 142 a b Turnbull 2003 p 35 Jucas 2009 p 76 Turnbull 2003 p 36 Turnbull 2003 pp 36 37 Urban 2003 pp 148 149 a b Jucas 2009 p 77 a b Turnbull 2003 p 44 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 45 Urban 2003 p 149 Turnbull 2003 p 43 Ekdahl 2018 pp 243 256 257 a b Jucas 2009 p 78 Baranauskas 2011 p 25 Suziedelis 1976 p 337 Urban 2003 pp 152 153 Ekdahl 2010a Turnbull 2003 pp 48 49 Jucas 2009 p 83 Turnbull 2003 p 53 Turnbull 2003 p 61 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 64 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 66 a b c Urban 2003 p 168 Turnbull 2003 p 79 a b c d Bumblauskas 2010 p 74 Bumblauskas 2010 pp 74 75 a b c Turnbull 2003 p 68 Jucas 2009 pp 85 86 a b Jucas 2009 p 87 Turnbull 2003 p 69 Jucas 2009 p 88 Pelech 1987 pp 105 107 Urban 2003 p 162 Urban 2003 p 164 Stone 2001 p 17 Ivinskis 1978 p 342 Turnbull 2003 p 75 Turnbull 2003 p 74 Urban 2003 p 166 a b Christiansen 1997 p 228 Kiaupa Kiaupiene amp Kuncevicius 2000 pp 142 144 Turnbull 2003 p 78 Christiansen 1997 pp 228 230 Stone 2001 pp 17 19 Petrauskas 2010 p 224 Ekdahl 2019 p 45 a b Knoll 1983 p 72 Odoj 2014 p 64 Ekdahl 2019 pp 45 46 a b c Ekdahl 2008 p 186 Historia Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem w Stebarku in Polish Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem w Stebarku Retrieved 17 September 2021 Kruczek Zygmunt 2019 Frekwencja w atrakcjach turystycznych w latach 2016 2018 PDF in Polish Polska Organizacja Turystyczna p 69 Libudzka Agnieszka Wmurowano kamien wegielny pod budowe calorocznego Muzeum Bitwy pod Grunwaldem in Polish Dzieje pl Retrieved 17 September 2021 Memorial stone to mark Lithuanian Polish victory against Teutonic crusaders LRT 29 May 2020 Odoj 2014 p 58 a b c d e f Drej Szymon 2015 Z dziejow badan archeologicznych pol grunwaldzkich jandlugosz edu pl in Polish Polish Historical Society and the Historical Magazine Mowia wieki Retrieved 18 September 2021 Tanajewski et al 2014 Odoj 2014 p 62 Ekdahl 2018 pp 241 246 Ekdahl 2018 p 265 Ekdahl 2018 p 258 Boguszewski Marcin 2 September 2020 Two axes from the Battle of 1410 found near Grunwald PAP Science in Poland Retrieved 18 September 2021 Dabrowski 2004 pp 164 165 Ekdahl 2008 p 179 Ekdahl 2008 p 183 Pumprickaite Nemira 15 July 2020 VU rektorius apie Zalgirio musį ir istorinį luzį regione atsirado nauja valdzia ir galybe Lietuva ir Lenkija in Lithuanian LRT lt Fowler 2010 Kruczek 2015 p 52 The holiday of the street Svyato vulici video News IF 28 July 2010 Ivasiv Natalia The holiday of Hriunvaldska vulytsia Svyato Gryunvaldskoyi vulici Zakhidny Kuryer 15 July 2010 Saganovich Gennady 2002 Grunvald u belaruskaj gistaryyagrafii Belaruski Gistarychny Aglyad in Belarusian 9 1 2 152 168 Cajcyc Alexander 15 July 2010 Grunwald the Great Belarusian Victory Belarus Digest Retrieved 16 September 2021 Our Grunwald Festival to be held for 10th time Belteleradio 20 July 2018 Burleigh 1985 p 27 Symes 2016 p 86 Wlodzimierz Borodziej Der Warschauer Aufstand 1944 Fischer Frankfurt am Main 2004 p 121 Richie Alexandra 2013 Warsaw 1944 Hitler Himmler and the Warsaw Uprising Farrar Straus and Giroux p 242 ISBN 978 1466848474 Bumblauskas 2010 pp 82 83 a b Davies 2005 p 99 Prodolzhaetsya realizaciya proekta Pamyatnye daty voennoj istorii The implementation of the project Memorable Dates of Military History continues histrf ru 3 July 2014 Archived from the original on 18 November 2014 25 iyulya Pamyatnaya data voennoj istorii Rossii V etot den v 1410 godu russkie vojska i ih soyuzniki oderzhali pobedu nad nemeckimi rycaryami v Gryunvaldskoj bitve Pobeda Rossii v Gryunvaldskoj bitve novyj istoricheskij fakt Russia s victory in the Battle of Grunwald is a new historical fact Republic com ua in Ukrainian 16 July 2017 Archived from the original on 24 June 2018 Bibliography Edit Baranauskas Tomas 2011 Zalgirio musis Lietuvos istoriku darbuose PDF Istorija in Lithuanian 1 81 ISSN 1392 0456 Archived from the original PDF on 4 June 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2019 Batura Romas 2010 2010 Places of Fighting for Lithuania s Freedom In the Expanse of Nemunas Vistula and Dauguva rivers PDF English ed Vilnius The General Jonas Zemaitis Military Academy of Lithuania ISBN 978 9955 423 91 1 Bumblauskas Alfredas 2010 Zalgiris neatsakyti klausimai Lietuvos Istorijos Studijos in Lithuanian 26 ISSN 1392 0448 Burleigh Michael June 1985 The German Knight Making of A Modern Myth History Today 6 35 ISSN 0018 2753 Christiansen Eric 1997 The Northern Crusades 2nd ed Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 026653 5 Dabrowski Patrice M 2004 Commemorations and the shaping of modern Poland Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34429 8 Davies Norman 2005 God s Playground A History of Poland The Origins to 1795 Vol I Revised ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925339 5 Ekdahl Sven 1963 Die Flucht der Litauer in der Schlacht bei Tannenberg Zeitschrift fur Ostforschung in German 1 12 Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Ekdahl Sven 2008 The Battle of Tannenberg Grunwald Zalgiris 1410 as reflected in Twentieth Century monuments In Mallia Milanes Victor ed The Military Orders History and Heritage Vol 3 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 6290 7 Ekdahl Sven Summer 2010a The Turning Point in the Battle of Tannenberg Grunwald Zalgiris in 1410 Lituanus 2 56 ISSN 0024 5089 Ekdahl Sven ed 2010b Das Soldbuch des Deutschen Ordens Teil II Indices mit personengeschichtlichen Kommentaren in German Bohlau Veroffentlichungen aus den Archiven Preussischer Kulturbesitz Ekdahl Sven 2018 Battlefield Archaeology at Grunwald Tannenberg Zalgiris A Polish Scandinavian Research Project during the period 2014 2017 PDF Przeglad Historyczny CIX 2 ISSN 0033 2186 Ekdahl Sven 2019 Different points of view on the Battle of Grunwald Tannenberg 1410 from Poland and Germany and their roots in handwritten and printed traditions PDF Z Badan nad Ksiazka i Ksiegozbiorami Historycznymi 13 41 65 doi 10 33077 uw 25448730 zbkh 2019 157 ISSN 2544 8730 Evans Geoffrey Charles 1970 Tannenberg 1410 1914 Hamilton OCLC 468431737 Fowler Jonathan 17 July 2010 Tabards on visors down fans relive 1410 Battle of Grunwald AFP Frost Robert 2015 The Oxford History of Poland Lithuania The Making of the Polish Lithuanian Union 1385 1569 Vol 1 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198208693 Ivinskis Zenonas 1978 Lietuvos istorija iki Vytauto Didziojo mirties in Lithuanian Rome Lietuviu kataliku mokslo akademija OCLC 70309981 Johnson Lonnie 1996 Central Europe Enemies Neighbors Friends Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 510071 6 Jucas Mecislovas 2009 The Battle of Grunwald Vilnius National Museum Palace of the Grand Dukes of Lithuania ISBN 978 609 95074 5 3 Kiaupa Zigmantas 2002 Didysis karas su Kryziuociais Gimtoji istorija Nuo 7 iki 12 klases in Lithuanian Vilnius Elektronines leidybos namai ISBN 978 9986 9216 9 1 Archived from the original on 3 March 2008 Retrieved 31 May 2010 Kiaupa Zigmantas Kiaupiene Jurate Kuncevicius Albinas 2000 The History of Lithuania Before 1795 Vilnius Lithuanian Institute of History ISBN 978 9986 810 13 1 Kruczek Zygmunt November 2015 Analysis of Visitor Attendance at Polish Tourism Attractions Tourism 25 1 47 56 doi 10 2478 tour 2014 0019 hdl 11089 18348 S2CID 130962104 Knoll Paul W 1983 In Search of the Battle of Grunwald Review of Die Schlacht bei Tannenberg 1410 Quellenkritische Untersuchungen vol I Einfuhrung und Quellenlage by S Ekdahl The Polish Review 28 3 67 76 JSTOR 25777993 Kuczynski Stephen M 1960 The Great War with the Teutonic Knights in the years 1409 1411 Ministry of National Defence OCLC 20499549 Mickunaite Giedre 2006 Making a great ruler Grand Duke Vytautas of Lithuania Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 7326 58 5 Odoj Romuald 2014 Archaologische Forschungen auf dem Schlachtfeld von Grunwald Tannenberg 1410 Fasciculi Archaeologiae Historicae in German 27 ISSN 2719 7069 Petrauskas Rimvydas 2010 Zalgirio musis ir lietuviu istorine tradicija Naujasis Zidinys Aidai in Lithuanian 7 8 ISSN 1392 6845 Pelech Markian 1987 W sprawie okupu za jencow krzyzackich z Wielkiej Wojny 1409 1411 Zapiski Historyczne in Polish 2 52 Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 1 June 2010 Razin E A 1999 Istoriya voennogo iskusstva VI XVI vv in Russian Vol 2 Izdatelstvo Poligon ISBN 978 5 89173 041 0 Rambaud Alfred Nicolas 1898 History of Russia Vol 1 Translated by Leonora B Lang New York Peter Fenelon Collier Richter Jan 16 July 2010 Jan Zizka at Grunwald from mercenary to Czech national hero Radio Prague Retrieved 16 August 2012 Stone Daniel 2001 The Polish Lithuanian state 1386 1795 University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 98093 5 Suziedelis Saulius 2011 Battle of Grunwald Historical Dictionary of Lithuania 2nd ed Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0810849143 Suziedelis Simas ed 1976 Tatars Encyclopedia Lituanica Vol V Boston Massachusetts Juozas Kapocius OCLC 95559 Symes Carol 2016 Medieval Battlefields and National Narratives 1830 1918 In Plain Gill ed Myth Memory and the First World War in Scotland The Legacy of Bannockburn Lewisburg Bucknell University Press ISBN 9781611487763 Tanajewski Dariusz Odoj Romuald Oszczak Bartlomiej Godlewska Patrycja Grazawski Kazimierz Mockun Slawomir Drej Szymon June 2014 Ground penetrating radar data acquisition and analyses at the Most Holy Trinity Church in Stebark Poland 14th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM 2014 14th SGEM GeoConference on SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGIES IN GEOLOGY EXPLORATION AND MINING Book 1 volume 1 doi 10 5593 SGEM2014 B11 S5 063 ISBN 978 619 7105 07 0 Thompson James Westfall Johnson Edgar Nathaniel 1937 An Introduction to Medieval Europe 300 1500 W W Norton amp Company Inc OCLC 19683883 Turnbull Stephen 2003 Tannenberg 1410 Disaster for the Teutonic Knights Campaign Series Vol 122 London Osprey ISBN 978 1 84176 561 7 Urban William 2003 Tannenberg and After Lithuania Poland and the Teutonic Order in Search of Immortality Revised ed Chicago Lithuanian Research and Studies Center ISBN 978 0 929700 25 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Grunwald Wikiquote has quotations related to Battle of Grunwald Cronica conflictus Wladislai regis Poloniae cum cruciferi sanno Christi 1410 Chronicle of the battle written in 1410 1411 just after the battle in Latin Photos of Banderia Prutenorum a catalog of captured Teutonic banners Account by Jan Dlugosz written sixty years after the battle Museum of the Battle of Grunwald Battle of Grunwald re enactment every year on 15 July 600th anniversary celebrations in 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Grunwald amp oldid 1138675136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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