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Second Battle of Nagyszeben

Second Battle of Nagyszeben
Part of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848

General Bem at the capture of Nagyszeben - unknown author 1849
Date11 March 1849
Location
Result Hungarian victory
the Hungarians chase the Austrian and Russian troops out of Transylvania
Belligerents
 Hungarian Revolutionary Army  Russian Empire
 Austrian Empire
* Transylvanian Saxons
Commanders and leaders
 Józef Bem Grigory Skariatin
Anton Puchner
Strength
Total: 4674 + ? men
30-36 cannons
6000 + ? men
29 cannons
(8 field cannons[1]
21 castle cannons[2])
Did not participate:
8676 men
36 cannons[3]
Casualties and losses
Total: 40-138 men
5-40 dead
35-98 wounded
Total: 239-401 men
99-97 dead
105-150 wounded
35-154 missing and captive
17-24 cannons[1][4]

The Second Battle of Nagyszeben (or Sibiu, or Hermannstadt) was a battle in the Hungarian war of Independence of 1848-1849 fought on 11 March 1849 between the Hungarian army led by the Polish General Józef Bem and the garrison of Nagyszeben, the Habsburg headquarters of Transylvania, composed by the Russian detachment led by Colonel Grigory Skariatin Austrian troops led by Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann, and Transylvanian Saxon national guards. Before the battle, Bem managed to make the commander of the Austrian main Commander-in-Chief of Transylvania, Lieutenant General Anton Puchner think that he barricaded himself at Segesvár, while he escaped, heading to Nagyszeben. While Puchner was trying to encircle Segesvár where he thought that Bem was hiding, the latter headed through a quick march to Nagyszeben, where he defeated the Ruso-Austro-Saxon garrison led by General Skariatin, and captured the city. Hearing about this, Puchner suffered a mental collapse, as a result of which, the still much superior Austrian and Russian troops retreated from Transylvania. Thanks to this victory Bem reinstalled the Hungarian rule over the province. This victory was the overture of the victorious Hungarian Spring Campaign which leberated almost all the territories of Hungary from the imperial rule.

Background edit

After the Battle of Piski on 9 February, Major General Józef Bem was informed that the Austrian imperial troops had again invaded Northern Transylvania, threatening the Hungarian possession of this part of the province.[5] Bem responded to this threat quickly, by bypassing Puchner, who prepared him a trap at Szászsebes, and then he quickly reached North Transylvania and drove out the imperial troops led by Lieutenant General Ignaz von Malkowski.[5]

Meanwhile, the main commander of the imperial armies of Transylvania, Lieutenant General Anton Puchner was in a state of near lethargy after the defeats of Piski and Alvinc, suffered against Bem.[5] He had waited nearly a week to write his official report on the events of the week which passed between the battles of Vízakna and Alvinc, and he had no mindset to dictate it all at once: on 15 February he wrote a chronicle of the successes between 4–8 February, and only the next day pulled himself together to report to the main commander of the imperial forces from Hungary, Field Marshal Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz about the battles of Piski and Alvinc; although from these reports it was hard to understand if they were victories or defeats.[5] He felt that fate had once again done him an injustice. His losses so far had been 1,600 soldiers, 1,000 of whom were recovering their injuries in hospitals, writing to Windisch-Grätz, that he had captured 21 guns with the heroism and blood loss of his soldiers.[5] Bem had remained - as Puchner claimed - with 3,000 men and 2 cannons after Vízakna, and at the moment when he thought he had been annihilated, a single Hungarian relief force reinforced him, not only replacing his losses, but increasing them two or three times as they were before, while his forces were diminishing day by day, and under such circumstances the most brilliant victory won - I mean in its immediate consequences - will be a real defeat.[6] He believed that Bem now had 6–8,000 men and 25-30 guns, so he did not want to attack until he had received reinforcements. He asked for help from both Windisch-Grätz and from the Austrian garrison of Temesvár.[7] His officers had previously tried in vain to persuade him to attack immediately, but only on 28 February - having been informed of Malkowski's attack in northern Transylvania - he finally moved out of his headquarters from Nagyszeben, marching northwards. His intention was to clear the valley of the Küküllő, beat Bem at Medgyes and then take Marosvásárhely. He asked Malkowski to advance from Beszterce to Marosvásárhely.[7]

 
Józef Bem

On 1 March Bem arrived in Medgyes. The next day, on 2 March, the imperial attack began at Kiskapus, which was initially successful, but then the Hungarian troops retook their previous positions. We ran out of ammunition, so we were forced to retreat until we were resupplied, finally they [those whose job was to supply the soldiers] stopped us, but they did not supply us with ammunition, because there was none in the whole camp, but [they told us that] we had to attack [only] with bayonets and drive the enemy away, which we finally did, in the evening with a great noise, because we could make a noise better [scream louder] than they could, and we chased them all the way to Asszonyfalva, [but] we did not chase them any further - wrote a participating soldier.[7] Both sides suffered heavy losses in the fierce fighting, and the Hungarian artillery fired almost all its ammunition.[8]

 
The Campaign of the Hungarian army of Transylvania under General Józef Bem after the Battle of Piski (9 February 1849) and the Battle of Medgyes (2-3 March 1849)

On 3 March, all of Puchner's troops arrived on the battlefield and attacked with a considerable advantage.[9] At first the Hungarian troops held against their fire well, but the artillery of the imperial army inflicted increasingly heavy losses on the Hungarian artillery.[9] Puchner's left wing pushed back the Hungarian right wing, forcing the artillery to retreat.[9] Bem attempted to regroup his troops, but Puchner's infantry soon broke through the weakened Hungarian army center, and Bem ordered a retreat.[9] Towards evening Bem received reinforcements, which stopped the advance of the imperials. Bem ordered an attack, but the enemy infantry repulsed it and forced the Hungarian infantry to flee. Bem was then forced to retreat towards Segesvár.[9] The Hungarian losses were at least as high as at Piski - i.e. about 700.[2]

After the battle, in order to successfully resist an attack from Medgyes, Bem took position in the defensive earth works he had already built between Segesvár and Dános.[10] Bem now had some time to reorganize his troops, and also received new reinforcements in Segesvár, which made him to plan again to attack Nagyszeben, this time hoping to finally occupy the Austrian headquarters from Transylvania, after his insuccess from 21 January.[9]

Puchner did not pursue the retreating Hungarian army. The Austrian corps was very exhausted from the two days of fighting, which is why Puchner wanted to rest his troops on 4 and 5 March before moving on to strike a decisive blow at Bem.[10]

Puchner, as he had received no reinforcements from anywhere, now had only the troops he had fought with in the Battle of Medgyes, whose order of battle, according to Philipp August Joachim Freiherr von der Heydte - was this. The corps was divided into three brigades. The division commander was József Kalliány, the only general in the mobile corps other than Puchner.[10]

1st Brigade
Commander: Colonel Van der Nüll:

Total: 4 battalions. 2 cavalry regiments, 2 batteries. (2480 infantry, 180 cavalry, 12 guns).

2nd Brigade
Commander: Baron Colonel Stutterheim:

  • 3d Battalion of the 51st ("Karl Ferdinand") Infantry Regiment,
  • 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 63rd ("Bianchi") Infantry Regiment,
  • 3d battalion of the 16th (1st Romanian) Border Guard Infantry Regiment,
  • two companies of the 11th (Székely) Border Guard Hussars Regiment,
  • one six-pounder infantry battery of the 5th ("Bervaldo") Artillery Regiment,
  • one three-pounder infantry battery of the 5th ("Bervaldo") Artillery Regiment.

Total: 4 battalions, 2 cavalry regiments, 2 batteries (2530 infantry, 166 cavalry, 12 guns).

Reserve Brigade
Commander: Baron Lieutenant Colonel Uracca:

  • 3rd Battalion of the 24th ("Parma") Infantry Regiment,
  • 3rd and Reserve Battalion of the 62nd ("Tursky") Infantry Regiment,
  • one "Uracca” Grenadier Battalion.
  • 1/3 Battalion of the Bukovina Border Guards,
  • 2/3 battalion of Saxon Kaiserjägers,
  • eight companies of the 3rd ("E. H. Max") Chevau-léger Cavalry Regiment,
  • one six-pounder infantry battery of the 5th ("Bervaldo") Artillery Regiment.

Total: 5 battalions, 8 cavalry companies, 2 batteries. (2740 infantry, 580 cavalry, 12 guns).[11]

So the whole corps consisted of 13 battalions, 12 cavalry companies, and 6 batteries (36 guns). The total number of its personnel (without the artillerymen and carters) was 8676 soldiers.[3][a] From this figure, however, must be deducted the losses caused by the battle of Medgyes, which were 322 men. Thus, the Austrian troops under Puchner, without the artillerymen and charioteers, numbered 8354, but with them, they could have reached 9000.[3]

His victory at Medgyes made Puchner to make a bold to surround and destroy Bem's troops with attacks from several directions.[9] The military operation plan of Puchner's army was prepared by the chief of staff of the Corps - Major Maroičić.[10] Its basic idea was that a stronger detachment under the leadership of Major August von Heydte would feign an attack in the direction of the Medgyes-Segesvár road through Berethalom-Váldhíd-Erzsébetváros-Holdvilág-Dános,[12] make Bem to think that the main imperial troops are coming from there, thus luring him into the aforementioned defensive position.[10] Meanwhile, the rest of the corps would start its march on 6 March, bypassing Segesvár from the south, via Riomfalva (today a village of the municipality of Berethalom)-Bürkös-Szentágota-Hégen-Apold-Segesd (today a village of the municipality of Apold),[13] cutting off the Hungarian army from the main source of its strength, Székely Land.[10] At that time, Maroičić was still counting on the support of Lieutenant-General Malkowski's troops from Bukovina, which, he thought, by the time Puchner reached Segesvár, should have reached Marosvásárhely (he did not know that Bem already had driven Malkowski out of Transylvania),[10] thus tying up part of the Hungarian forces in Székely Land, from where Bem expected his reinforcements.[9][14] Captain Count Alberti, with 1 1/2 companies of the 3rd Chevau-léger Regiment, starting from Medgyes, will reconnoitre the right bank of the Nagyküküllő and seek a connection to Marosvásárhely with the division of Lieutenant General Malkowski.[15] The plan had one, but very serious flaw: it had too many uncertainties. If Malkowski didn't attack, if any of the encircling columns were late, if Bem detected the encirclement attempt, the whole plan could fall apart.[9]

 
Anton Freiherr von Puchner Litho

The quicker Puchner made his encircling movement, the less the Hungarian army could reorganize itself from the damages suffered at Medgyes, and the less he could strengthen itself by picking up reinforcements.[15] But it was also certain that, it would have been inadvisable to attack Bem with a worn-out, exhausted Austrian army, after they covered the distance of 92 kilometers over hills and valleys on unmaintained bad roads, as it was planned.[15] But, as we have seen above, this - and the waiting for Malkowski - was the main reason that caused Puchner to lose two days, and thus to lose the advantage won at Medgyes.[16]

The weather was also the worst possible: rain and melting snow, blizzard and frost alternated constantly.[17] The road, which had been passable enough a day before, had now become a thick mortar, in which man, horse, cannon, and cart alike could only move forward with bitter agony.[17] The retreating Hungarians' guns were also stuck in the mud on the Medgyes-Segesvár road, and it was only due to the sluggishness of the pursuers that they did not fall into the hands of the Austrians.[17] Thus it was easily conceivable, therefore, that on the side roads, which were isolated from the heavier traffic and not sufficiently prepared, even greater obstacles were placed in the way of the Austrian corps.[17] The malnourished and exhausted traction horses were soon exhausted, so that 6 pairs of oxen had to pull each cannon out of the mud.[17]

 
The Transylvanian campaign of the Hungarian War of Independence, between 4 - 8 March 1849.
Red: Hungarians,
Blue: Austrians,
Green: Russians

Heydte reached Dános on 7 March, carried out the demonstration attack, but then, on the night of 7 to 8 March, on Puchner's orders, he marched from Dános via the Holdvilág-Erzsébetváros-Szászsáros route to Bese (today part of Dános) to cover the left flank of the main column during the planned attack on Segesvár.[13] As Puchner had ordered three companies of the 62nd Infantry Regiment to occupy Medgyes,[15] and Heydte had a battalion of infantry, two companies of border guards, five companies of the National Guards from Segesvár and one and a half companies of cavalry if he had remained in his original position, he could have formed a considerable obstacle to Bem's march towards Medgyes.[13] However, Heydte's departure from Dános left the Medgyes-Segesvár-Nagyszeben route essentially uncovered.[13]

Heydte's appearance did indeed alarm the Hungarian corps at Segesvár, but after no battle occurred, and the enemy retreated at midnight, only his abandoned campfires glowed in the night until they too went out towards dawn.[18]

As seen above, Maroičić's operation plan was for Heydte's demonstrating detachment to lure Bem to a position between Dános and Segesvár, while Puchner's corps, behind the back of the Hungarians, would take Segesvár.[19]

But for this to succeed, the demonstration at Dános should have taken place on the 8th, and not on the 7th, but before Bem could get news of the Austrian corps' approach.[19] If the Hungarians didn't send scouts towards the south, Puchner might have been able to slip behind them undetected.[19] But Bem was not so careless.[19]

Maroičić, as can be seen from the plan, wanted to deploy Heydte's detachment in two directions, namely at Dános and Bese, but which, in the end, could not be sent either here or there, all the less so because he had not received any new orders to postpone the feigned attack until 8 March.[19]

Puchner's bypassing column was thus thoroughly delayed on unpaved roads, in terrible weather conditions, thus on 8 March its brigades only reached Hégen and Apold.[13] Because of the exhaustion of the soldiers, Puchner gave his troops a rest, and the two brigades at Hégen did not leave for Segesvár until the morning of the 9th, and Van der Nüll's advance brigade from Apold departed only after their arrival at noon that day.[13]

Prelude edit

On the 8th, Bem had a clear view of the situation, which showed that the Austrians would not attack from Medgyes with any greater force, because according to the reports he received, most of Puchner's corps was approaching from the south.[19]

Bem now was certain that, the nearest part of Puchner's corps was 15 1/2 and its farthest part 22 kilometers from Segesvár, so he decided to undertake the daring operation of leaving the town, marching through Medgyes and Szelindek, and quickly attacking and occupying Nagyszeben before Puchner could intervene.[19] Puchner, because to the aforementioned rest from exhaustion of his troops, started his march on the morning of the 9th, just as Bem was leaving Segesvár. Without this rest he might have succeeded in surrounding Bem.[20]

The Hungarian success depended primarily on how fast the corps was moving, whether the enemy was directly behind it, and how long it would take to occupy Nagyszeben.[20]

So on the morning of 9 March Bem's troops left Segesvár.[21]

The Van der Nüll brigade left Apóld at noon on the 8th, where it waited for the other two brigades to approach, and therefore did not arrive to the vicinity of Segesvár until late afternoon, towards dusk: here it exchanged a few shots with the remaining Hungarian troops.[20] The brigade's Staff Officer writes that Colonel Van der Nüll wanted to persuade the Corps' Chief of Staff to occupy Segesvár immediately.[20] The latter, however, perhaps because Puchner had also held it back, was reluctant, and so the brigade received orders only at 9 p.m. to push into the town, which, according to the news received, had already been abandoned by the Hungarians that morning.[20] Puchner with the Stutterheim brigade did not enter Segesvár until 2 a.m. on the 10th, and the Uracca brigade, together with the cavalry, moved in at 4 a.m., while the small Hungarian guard retreated towards Székelykeresztúr.[22] Puchner did not understand the gravity of the situation at all.[22] According to the military historian Jenő Gyalókay, when it turned out that there were no Hungarian soldiers in Segesvár, at 10 a.m. on 10 March Puchner was still of the opinion that Bem was either marching to Medgyes, to Kolozsvár or to Marosvásárhely, and therefore he did not decide anything for the time being, because he was waiting for news of the approach of the troops of Malkowski and Colonel Karl von Urban and wanted to plan his further actions in concordance to their positions.[22] But also on 10 March at 5 p.m., he wrote to Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann von Eichtal, head of the garrison from Nagyszeben, that according to the latest reports, part of the Hungarian army was moving towards Medgyes and that it may happen that Bem wanted to scare the garrison of Nagyszeben.[22] So, as he wrote further, to prevent this very unlikely event to happen, he will march with his whole army through Riomfalva towards Nagyszeben.[22]

 
The Transylvanian campaign of the Hungarian War of Independence, between 9 - 13 March 1849.
Red: Hungarians,
Blue: Austrians,
Green: Russians

According to Puchner's calculation, Bem could not attack this city before 12 March; and its Russian and Austrian garrisons could successfully defend it for at least 24 hours.[23]

According to Heydte, the Austrian corps left Segesvár at 11 o'clock at night on the 10th, while according to Kalliány, 2 hours later.[23] However, the Van der Nüll brigade, which was again put as advance guard, had already reached Dános during the morning.[23] There the whole corps turned off the road from Segesvár to Medgyes and headed for Újegyház via Berethalom and Riomfalva, partly because this road was somewhat shorter than the other, and partly because the Austrians feared that Bem had destroyed the bridges behind him and tried to hold up Puchner's corps by occupying certain strategic points.[23] The question was whether the Hungarian army would be able to take Nagyszeben before the pursuers arrived, or whether it would be destroyed in the ring of the defenders and pursuers.[9]

Bem's troops reached Baráthely in torrential rain, drenched to the skin, at 2 a.m. on the 10th, and at 8 a.m. Medgyes, where three companies of the Austrian 62nd Infantry Regiment remained after Puchner's victory from 3 March.[21] This garrison was joined, on the evening of the 9th, by Captain Alberti's scout troop.[21] The Austrian outposts were stationed between Medgyes and Baráthely, and here they had a small skirmish with the Hungarian advance unit; but no serious fighting took place, for the Austrian troops withdrew from Medgyes towards Nagyszeben at 7 o'clock on the morning of the 10th.[21] However, First Lieutenant Henter, who had been sent to Nagyekemező, was taken prisoner by the Hungarians along with 30 of his men.[21]

 
Franz Neuhauser Nagyszeben (Hermannstadt-Sibiu) 1840

Bem left behind 1000 rearguards at Medgyes,[9] while others say 1500 soldiers and 4 guns, led by Lieutenant Colonel Pereczy.[24] In addition, as a mobile flank defence, Bem sent a detachment led by Lieutenant-Colonel Count Gergely Bethlen towards Dános-Váldhíd-Berethalom-Musna-Ivánfalva-Kiskapus at noon on the 9th.[24] Bem's army arrived at Nagyselyk at 1 a.m. on 11 March, and after some rest continued on its way to Szelindek. From here he departed at noon, on the way he scattered a Russian Cossack troop and reached Nagycsűr.[25] Towards 4 p.m. he marched out from Nagycsűr, at its southern exit, behind the Alter Berg (Old Hill), which separates this village from Nagyszeben, and here he deployed his army in battle formation.[26][27]

In 1849, Nagyszeben was the most important city in Transylvania for the imperials. It was the headquarters of the Austrian troops from Transylvania called General-Commando and the main armament and equipment depot of the Transylvanian K.u.K. Corps, where a lot of clothing, weapons and ammunition, as well as all kinds of other war material were stockpiled.[26] The Königsboden (King's Land) where the most Transylvanian Saxons lived, and which's center was Nagyszeben, also provided plenty of men for the war, and so this region was in fact the base of operations for the Austrian corps in Transylvania.[26] Its importance was increased by the fact that at the beginning of February Windisch-Grätz authorized Puchner to retreat to Wallachia if necessary.[26] The Vöröstorony (Red Tower) Pass, the most easily accessible link between Transylvania and Wallachia, has its northern entrance below Nagyszeben: the loss of this city could cut off this route and force the Austrian army, which might be forced to leave Transylvania, to take the Törcsvár or Tömös Pass by a long detour.[26]

On 10 March, in the afternoon, Puchner himself had already thought - though he did not really believe - that Bem could attack Nagyszeben.[26] He, therefore, marched towards it, confident that the city was adequately prepared and well-equipped for defense, and would be able to defend itself until the arrival of the Austrian relief corps.[28] It was surrounded by a strong and high circular wall, interrupted by towers, and in 1702 King Leopold I ordered the construction of a citadel with a bastioned façade.[29] By 1777, only traces of this fortress, built of earth, remained. In the course of time, parts of the city walls were demolished and it was only in November 1848 that the reconstruction of Nagyszeben was started, in order to become a defensible fortress.[29]

It was no perimeter wall on the southeast side of the town. A temporary fortification - with an earth and pile wall - compensated for its absence.[29] The Szeben river, which flows on one side of the city center, replaced the main ditch.[29] The suburbs were surrounded by earthworks and their surroundings were artificially flooded, where it was possible, with the swollen water of the river.[29] Every street in the town leading to the defenses was blocked off with a pile barrier or barricade.[29] The perimeter walls were equipped for the positioning of cannons on them; defensive corridors were built around them and embrasures were cut into them.[29]

So everything seemed to be in place for the successful defense of the city, and Puchner was not unreasonably confident that Bem would not be able to take Nagyszeben in less than 24 hours.[29]

 
Grigory Skaryatin

The battlefield of 11 March was divided into three distinct parts. The first is the Alter Berg and its immediate surroundings, the second was the small plain between the Alter Berg and Nagyszeben, and the third was the city itself.[30]

Nagycsűr was built in the Krummbach stream's valley. On its southern side, Alter Berg rose more than 100 meters above the village, and the slope towards Nagyszeben was covered with vineyards. The rest of the hill was barren.[31] The plain at the southern foothills, interspersed with small willows and serving mainly as a pasture, in addition to several waterways, was crisscrossed by draining ditches in all directions, which were hindering, in particular, the rapid movement of cavalry and artillery.[31]

On the afternoon of March 10, the Austrian troops retreating from Medgyes brought the alarming news of Bem's approach.[31] The leader of the Russian troops at Nagyszeben, Colonel Grigory Skariatin, at 5 p.m. that afternoon, launched a battalion and two cannons each at Szelindek and Vízakna, not being sure of the direction of Bem's attack. At the same time, he ordered his troops stationed at Nagytalmács to come to Nagyszeben, and they arrived during the night.[31] On the 11th the Russian battalion sent to Szelindek withdrew from the Hungarians without a fight, and together with the battalion sent to Vízakna retreated towards Nagyszeben.[31]

At the same time, Pfersmann urgently wrote to Puchner that the situation in Nagyszeben was indeed critical and that the city would not be able to resist Bem's army for long. He, therefore, asked for urgent help.[32]

However, Lieutenant-General Pfersmann and Colonel Grigory Skariatin did not seem too worried about Bem's troops, and, somewhat overconfident, instead of remaining behind the city walls, they marched out in front of them, did not occupy the city defenses, nor did they use the artillery on the walls.[9] This may have been due to the fact that the commanders of the forces defending Nagyszeben, hearing of Bem's defeat at Medgyes, believed that the disorganized units of the defeated army had arrived in front of the city, and they hoped to give them the coup de grâce.[2]

The Hungarian army that arrived under Nagyszeben had covered 85 kilometers in 53 hours, so they could not be called well-rested by any meaning.[9]

Opposing forces edit

Bem had around 4500-4700 soldiers, the total number of the army defending the city was around 6000.[1]

The composition of the Troops from Nagyszeben, as can be seen from the official report of 1 April 1849, was as follows:[33]

Russian detachment Leader: Colonel Grigory Skariatin

  • 3 companies of the Modlin infantry regiment;
  • 6 companies of the Lublin infantry regiment;
  • 4 companies of the Zamoście infantry regiment;
  • 2 1/2 Cossack companies;
  • 7th light battery;
  • 8th light battery.

Total: 2000 infantry, 350 cavalry, 8 cannons.[34]

Austrian troops: Leader: Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann

  • 2 rookie companies of the 31 infantry regiment;
  • 6 reserve companies of the 51 infantry regiment;
  • 3 companies of the 62 infantry regiment;
  • 1 rookie company of the 16 border guard regiment;
  • 1 company of the 3rd chevau-léger regiment;
  • 2 platoons of the 11. Székely hussar regiment.

Total: 3000 infantry, 40 + ? cavalry.[34]

Saxon national guards:

  • 2 battalions of the Saxon national guards;

Total: 650 infantry.[34]

There were at least 21 cannons for the defense of the walls of the inner city.[2]

Garrison total: cc. 6000 soldiers, 4 cavalry companies, 29 cannons.[34][2]

The Hungarian army was composed as it follows:

Army section Unit Infantry company Cavalry company Cannons Men

Bem's main column

  • 3. battalion of the 37. (Michael) Line Infantry Regiment
6 - - 800
  • 24. Honvéd battalion
6 - - ?
  • 55. Honvéd battalion
6 - - 800
  • 72. Honvéd battalion (Torontál mobile national guard battalion)
4 - - 533
  • 2. battalion of the 14. infantry regiment (later 77. Honvéd battalion)
5 - - 712
  • 3. battalion of the 14. infantry regiment (later 78. Honvéd battalion)
1 - - 132
1 - - ?
  • 8. (Koburg) Hussar Regiment
- 2 - 300
  • 10. (Wilhelm) Hussar Regiment
- 1 - 120
  • 15. (Mátyás) Hussar Regiment
- 1 - 100
  • Artillery
? - 26-30 -

Total

29 4 26-32 3497 + ?

Lieutenant Colonel Gergely Bethlen's detachment

  • 11. Honvéd battalion
6 - - 350
  • 5–6. companies of the 1. Honvéd Jäger battalion
2 - - ?
  • 6. (Württenberg) Hussar Regiment
- 2 - 300
  • 1. Székely six-pounder battery
- - 4 ?

Total

8 2 4 650 + ?

Major Károly Kabos's detachment

  • 3. battalion of the 14. infantry regiment (later 78. Honvéd battalion)
4 - - 527
Grand total 41 6 30-36 4674 + ?[35]

Battle edit

The open battle edit

Skariatin himself now set off with the rest of his troops to occupy the top of the Alten Berg; but he was too late, and settled at the foot of the hill, instead of taking the roof.[31] Only a single line of skirmishers pushed up the slope into the vineyards; but the bulk of the infantry, with their right flank against the base of the hill, was on the eastern side of the highway to Nagycsűr.[31] The artillery was deployed near the highway, with the Cossacks on the left, near the Krummbach.[32] The second battle line, in Pfersmann's report, was formed by the combined Austrian battalion led by Captain Count Heusenstamm.[32] The defenders were thus developed to fight on the plain to the north of the city, at the bottom of the heights of Nagycsűr, with the Imperial troops to the east of the main road.[27]

 
Transylvanian Panorama depircting the Second Battle of Nagyszeben - Jan Styka

The Saxon National Guards remained in the town as a reserve, and defense force of the city[27] for the protection of which, as Pfersmann claimed in his report, all the measures were taken.[32] The Saxon National Guard was united in the main square of the town and the castle cannons were provided with cannoneers.[32] The ammunition stored in the warehouses was placed on the ammunition carts, just in case, and the war chest was sent towards the Vöröstorony Pass.[32]

It was 4 o'clock in the afternoon when Bem's infantry, having reached the top of the Alter Berg Hill from Nagycsűr, caught sight of the enemy in battle formation.[32]

 
Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11.03.1849. The situation between 4-5 p.m

Bem, who deployed his artillery on the high ground along the highway,[27] as usual, poured in a tremendous artillery barrage on the enemy troops positioned in front of the town. The Russian infantry withstood this relatively well,[9] and for the moment his skirmish line between the vines has not faltered either. Skariatin sent his Cossacks to attack the Hungarian right flank, in order to bypass it from the rear,[36] but the grapeshot of the Hungarian artillery put them in disorder, causing them to flee in panic.[9] The Hungarian artillery inflicted so much damage on the Cossacks that they could not be used against the Hungarians in the rest of the battle.[27] Bem now ordered the center and right wing to advance[2] and pressed more and more infantry against the enemy's left flank, advancing on the slope of the Pfaffenbrunn hill, intending to bypass it.[36] However, Skariatin saw what was happening and before the encirclement could take place, at 5 p.m., he retreated to a second position between Alten Berg and Nagyszeben.[36] Bem's troops immediately descended from the hill, then the artillery duel started again.[36]

 
Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11.03.1849. The situation between 5-7 p.m

On Bem's orders, the Mátyás hussars attacked in the direction of Szenterzsébet (Hammersdorf), the Koburg and Wilhelm hussars led by Lieutenant-Colonel Kiss, attacked the left flank of the Russian army,[27] while the rookie Székely infantry, some of whom, because of the shortage of riffles, had only spears, launched a bayonet charge against the enemy's center.[37]

Seeing that both of his flanks were threatened by encirclement, as early as 6 a.m., Skariatin ordered the retreat to the entrenched suburbs.[36]

 
Battle of Hermannstadt - sketched by Capt. Ed. Scheifele

At the same time, Lieutenant-Colonel Sándor Kiss with the Coburg and Wilhelm Hussars attacked the Russian battery which was covering the retreat of the troops, and forced it to withdraw.[38]

Major General Artur Nepokoychitsky describes the retreat of the Russian troops as follows: The retreat was carried out in exemplary order despite the persistent pursuit of the Hungarians. The infantry stopped several times and charged the enemy with bayonets. In the meantime, it had become so dark that the enemy's columns could no longer be seen, and even the line of attack was only indicated by rifle fire. It was feared that our columns, bravely repulsing the advancing enemy with their bayonets, would become so involved in the fight that the enemy would cut them off, so Colonel Skariatin himself led the bayonet charges, and did not allow our soldiers to venture too far.[2]

The combined Austrian battalion led by Lieutenant General Pfersmann, apart from a few aimless movements behind the front line, had done nothing so far. Now, however, the 20th Company of the 51st Infantry Regiment occupied the barricaded eastern gate of the suburb, while the 19th Company, which was slightly behind, stood in reserve.[39]

The Siege edit

The battle continued at the suburb's defenses, the Hungarians trying to enter the city. After an hour's fighting - at 7 pm - despite the Hungarian troops had taken the outlying houses, their attack had stalled there for the time being.[38] The Honvéds were exhausted by the long march, followed by the battle, and the darkness prevented any orientation; and Gergely Bethlen's long-awaited detachment, which had arrived at Kiskapus only on the morning of the 11th, was nowhere to be seen.[38] Hosszabb szünet állott be.[38]

 
Siege of Nagyszeben - postcard from the Period of the Dualism

In the meantime, Bem's artillery was shelling the city.[40] Bem was about to postpone the siege until the next day, when the reserve brigade of about 850-1000 men and 4 guns, led by Colonel Gergely Bethlen, finally arrived,[41] with a Székely battalion, the 11th Honvéd battalion and a Jäger squadron.[27] Mr. Major, do you want to sleep in Nagyszeben today? asked Bem to the unit's commander, Olivér Bethlen. Yes, and my battalion has the same wish, Bethlen replied. Well, then, go on the attack with your battalion and stand up in the square, Bem said, as if nothing could be more normal.[42]

 
Heinrich Gerhart - Battle of Nagyszeben 11 March 1849 - Wien Museum Online Sammlung 88629 1-2

Bem immediately directed Bethlen's detachment to the left flank of the Hungarian army, and then ordered his troops to attack the outskirts.[38] But here there was a near-fatal mix-up among the troops. For in the total darkness, it was impossible to distinguish friend from foe, and so it happened that some of the left wing's troops which remained behind blindly shot into Bethlen's battalions, which were ahead of them, thinking that they were enemy soldiers.[38] Fortunately, Hussar Colonel Sándor Kiss, who recognized the danger that could result from this, somehow brought order and calm among the troops, by stopping the senseless shooting.[38]

In the meantime, some houses in the suburbs had been set on fire by the Hungarian grenades, so due to this, now it was easier to see.[38] But now the firelight also benefited the city's defenders by illuminating the attackers.[43] But this could not stop the assault troops, which had gained new momentum and were led by the 11th Honvéd Battalion. It was joined by the Máriássy Battalion, a Székely battalion, and part of the Debrecen Jägers.[44] Soon the 4 companies of the 3rd Battalion of the 14th Border Guard Regiment, about 520-530 men, led by Major Károly Kabos, arrived and they also joined the attack.[41]

The veteran soldiers of the 11th and the Máriássy battalions went on the attack, singing war songs and showing death-defying courage.[37] On two occasions, the attack was repulsed by the defenders' rifle fire, until finally a third time, which succeeded.[44] Captain Miklós Szigeti, commander of the 11th (Kolozsvár) battalion, distinguished for their bravery shown in numerous earlier battles, with the red caps which they wore, wrote the following about their decisive attack: "Let's go, Hungarian! Long live the homeland!" - rang out in the darkness painted red by flames, and with this cry the whole mass rushed forward with their bayonets, climbing the ramparts with incredible speed, breaking the main gate, mowing down the enemy gunners beside their guns (...) and all this happened as if by magic.[2] Skariatin renounced to further defense of the suburbs, and evacuated them, retreating to the upper town.[44] There, at the great barracks, at the outer end of the street towards Vöröstorony, he gathered his troops, joined also by the Austrian soldiers.[44]

 
The capture of Nagyszeben on 11 March 1849 - György Gracza

To the success of the Hungarian assault also contributed the fact that the stalemate of Bem's troops at 7 pm and the temporary cessation of the attacks led the defenders to wrongly believe, that the siege would continue the next day. It was precisely for this reason that the Saxon National Guard was dispersed and the city walls were not properly defended.[44] The Saxon garrison in the walled inner city, which was destined to defend the main square, was sent home, allegedly on the news that Bem's 7 o'clock attack on the city had failed, without any provision being made for closing and guarding the gates.[45]

 
Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11.03.1849. The situation between 7-12 p.m

Thus the Hungarians were able to enter the inner city through two gates without any resistance.[44]

Major General Artur Nepokoychitsky describes the retreat as follows: The detachment, which had been hard pressed all the time, reached the gate towards Vízakna at 10 o'clock in the evening... Shortly afterward, flames broke out in several places in the suburbs, and even in our rear, on the other side of the town, on the road to Vöröstorony, which forced Colonel Skariatin to march quickly through the town towards [the city's entrance from the direction of] Vöröstorony. The commander of the detachment, after sending the artillery under the cover of ten infantry regiments, himself remained behind with a battalion in the rearguard, and engaged the advancing enemy, first at the city gate and then in pursuit [by the Hungarians] through the suburbs towards Vízakna, sometimes with bayonets and sometimes in hand-to-hand combat.[2]

The retreat, in the narrow streets of the city, soon degenerated into a dangerous stampede.[46] The darkness, dispersed from time to time only by the flash of shells exploding here and there and the flames from burning houses, was not a source of encouragement. Skariatin's troops did not want to remain in the rear; this undesirable role was intended for the Austrian soldiers, whom the Russians, therefore, sought to bypass, even by force.[46] Only on the other side of the city was the order restored, but there was no question of either the Russians or the Austrians trying to resist there.[46]

On the following morning, the Russo-Austrian troops retreated as far as Nagytalmács, at the narrow entrance to the Vöröstorony Pass, and smaller Imperial detachments as far as Zóod and Talmacsel (today parts of the same city), where they remained, without being attacked, until 16 March.[27] Nagyszeben was in Bem's hands already between 9 and 10 p.m.[44]

Aftermath edit

In terms of casualties, Bem's report seems completely unbelievable, as it indicates that only 5 soldiers of the Hungarian corps were killed and 35 wounded in the battle, which lasted more than 5 hours.[4] Other sources put Hungarian casualties at 40 dead and 98 wounded, which may be closer to the truth.[4] By their own account, the Russians had 99 dead and 104 wounded.[4] The British Consul-General in Bucharest Robert Gilmour Colquhoun reports 97 dead, 150 wounded, and 154 missing Russians.[4] The, probably smaller, losses of the Austrians and the Saxon National Guards are unknown.[4]

The booty taken by the Hungarians was very considerable. According to the contemporary historian László Kővári, 21 cannons, 1 million rifle cartridges, 6,000 cannonballs, 5,000 small guns (probably riffles), 150 hundredweight of gunpowder, large quantities of food and clothing, and among other things the cannon battery that the Hungarians lost at Vízakna. Lieutenant-Colonel B. Berger and Major Teichert, 14 officers, 115 enlisted men were taken prisoners; 850 sick [soldiers] were left behind in the hospitals, among them 123 wounded Russians."[2]

Besides this, Nagyszeben was also the headquarters of the General-Commando, the Saxon movement, and of the Romanian National Committee, both hostiles to the Hungarian revolutionary government.[47] Therefore the documents left behind of all of these fell prey to the Hungarians.[2]

In addition to these, Hungarian men and women prisoners and hostages, who had been rounded up by the Austrians during the Austrian rule in Transylvania and held as prisoners in the monasteries and convents of the city, were also freed.[2]

The mayor of the town had previously offered a 3000 forint bounty on Bem's head, and now Bem went to him, offering himself for the reward: Well, Mr. Mayor, here I am, I brought myself here, I want the three thousand forints. The [frightened] mayor half-consciously paid the sum to the commander-in-chief, who then distributed the money among his soldiers.[2] Nagyszeben did not get away that easily. It had to pay 100,000 silver forints for military uniforms, to provide 50 pairs of equipped horses, and to produce the following items of uniform: 3,600 atillas, 5,700 trousers, and the same number of pairs of boots, 6,000 hats, and 10,000 shirts and underpants.[2]

So the victory also had the character of avengement. For Bem for the defeat on 21 January, for the Hungarian army for the fall of the city that had joined forces with all the enemies of the Hungarian revolution, not only the Habsburg power but also Tsarist Russia.[48] Bem also reprimanded Nagyszeben for calling in the Russian troops, but, true to his well-known amnesty policy, he promised that the Hungarian government would "cast a veil of oblivion over the past".[48]

Bem, in his appeal to the people of Nagyszeben, written on 12 March, pointed out that the support of the Austrian army, the call-up of the Russian army, and the propaganda spread from the city, which was defamatory of the Hungarians, containing slanders and untruths, and the understandable anger of the soldiers who finally took the city, led to some robberies and atrocities[49] (for example the killing by a hussar, "in unknown circumstances", of Joseph Benigni, the editor of the leading newspaper of Nagyszeben, the Siebenbürger Bote, who consistently called Hungarians rebels and used derogatory terms against the Hungarian army)[48] but from now on he forbids any further violence under the most severe penalty.[49] He also pointed out that during the previous battles, all the towns whose Saxon inhabitants, who, despite not having a positive view of the Hungarians but did not attack the Hungarian soldiers (Beszterce, Medgyes, Segesvár, Szászváros) were spared, and that the reason for the brief robberies in Nagyszeben, which lasted until his forceful intervention, was the justified anger of his soldiers at the invitation of the Russians.[49] The appeal also stated that the Hungarian army is fighting for the freedom not only of Hungarians but also of other nationalities living in the country and that this is shown by the fact that not only Hungarians but also a large number of nationalities of all languages and religions are fighting in its ranks.[49] You called for Russian help. This is a disgrace to the whole of Europe and a stamp of justice on our cause. This could not have been the wish of all the Transylvanian Saxons, who had been such Russophobes even a short time before. You can only clear yourselves of the accusation of this despicable act by publicly withdrawing it.[49] Finally, he promises to "cast a veil of oblivion over the past" and to give the people of Nagyszeben the freedom to choose their officials, but they must accept the Union with Hungary, which he says meant a choice between the freedom and the knout, and promise not to invite the Russians in again.[49] The Saxons in Nagyszeben have promised everything, including a formal protest against the Russian intervention.[50]

 
The liberation of southern Traansylvania from the Austrian and Russian forces by the Hungarian army after the Battle of Nagyszeben from 11 March 1849

Bem wanted to bring order and restore everyday life as quickly as possible, so he promised protection to all residents who were harmed, and he would bring the perpetrators of robbery or pillage to justice in a court-martial.[48]

The new commander-in-chief of the city, Colonel Bánffy, appointed by Bem, promised, in the spirit of Bem, to protect the safety of persons and property, which he considered his main task, and asked the population that had fled to return to their homes in the city.[48]

Before he moved out from Segesvár to Nagyszeben Bem had to expect the dangers which this bold action could bring. He had to anticipate three possible outcomes. The first was that Puchner would arrive before the assault on Nagyszeben; the second, that he would arrive during the battle; and the third, that he would arrive after the capture of the city.[51] The first two possibilities, though unlikely, would have posed a threat to his armies, but in the end the third, the most likely, was the one that materialised.[4]

Bem's plan of operations was based on the assumption that Puchner - either because he was late or because his fatigued troops needed rest - would not be able to intervene in time.[4] He did not think that his opponent would be in Nagyszeben before him, nor did he expect even his arrival on the 12th, which is evident from the fact that seeing his attack losing its strength on the evening of the 11th, he was already thinking of postponing the capture of Nagyszeben until the next day.[4]

Even if Bem had not succeeded in taking the city, his advance on Segesvár-Nagyszeben would still have had an important strategic result: to turn Puchner back towards Nagyszeben.[52]

The main source of Bem's strength was Székely land, and as events have shown, he tried his best to keep the enemy away from this territory until the very end of the war.[52] Puchner, on the other hand, relied on Königsboden (Királyföld), the region of Fogaras, and the Barcaság. It was Königsboden he feared the most to lose.[52] thus, the fact that Bem, who had slipped away from Segesvár, and was marching towards Nagyszeben, forced Puchner to turn on his heel and rush to the defense of his base of operations, which was now under imminent threat.[52] In other words, the Austrian commander did what Bem forced him to do.[53]

And since Bem had already driven the Austrians out of the Borgó Pass, after Puchner's return the enemy no longer threatened Székely land from either direction. In contrast, the Austrian corps had to march almost 200 kilometers from Medgyes to Segesvár and from there to Nagyszeben - and all this in vain.[53] Twice as much as Bem, who started from Segesvár with rested troops, on a much better road than the Austrians.[53] Puchner's army was therefore much more tired, and even if he would have scored a decisive victory against Bem on 11 March, due to the exhaustion of his troops, he would have been unable to launch a major offensive operation immediately after it, which could have end the war in his favor.[53]

All the less so because Bem's army kept growing, while his army kept shrinking.[53] Bem did not take with him the whole Transylvanian army under Nagyszeben, and thus only a part of it, in the worst case, could be destroyed in an eventual defeat, as happened earlier in the battle of Vízakna, and later at Segesvár.[53] However fatal a crushing defeat at Nagyszeben would have been for a part of the Transylvanian army of Bem, the fate of the campaign could not have been decided by this, but only by a successful attack on the rest of the Transylvanian army that followed immediately afterwards.[53] Puchner, however, could not do such a thing, with his ever-dwindling army.[53] It was only strong enough when it was in the immediate vicinity of Nagyszeben or Brassó, where it could count on the support of the Russians who did not want to venture too far from those cities.[53]

It should be mentioned that Austrian officers involved in the campaign attributed Bem's rapid success not only to Puchner's delay but also to the serious omissions made in the defense of Nagyszeben.[54] According to them, the city would certainly have been defensible until the arrival of the relief corps.[45] It also appears from the description of the eyewitness Captain Rästle that not everything was done to defend Nagyszeben.[45]

At the time, when the attacking Hungarians were stalled for lack of reinforcements, there was just enough time to pack the city walls with soldiers.[45] Indeed, it is hard to believe that Bem could so easily overpower Nagyszeben if the defenders did not stop fighting after the first success of Gergely Bethlen's attack.[45] Every hour that the resistance was prolonged brought the relief corps closer, so that the struggle, which was so soon interrupted, did not seem hopeless.[45]

However, Bem had no offensive intentions until the newly recruited battalions that came with him were armed and the situation was sufficiently clarified.[55]

On 12 March, the bulk of Puchner's army which was following Bem, reached as far as Újegyház, his vanguard as far as Alzen. Puchner himself learned of the fall of Nagyszeben in Alzen.[42] Ironically, Lieutenant General Puchner was appointed Field Marshal on 11 March, on the very same day his career as an army leader collapsed.[37] The news of the loss of Nagyszeben made him quite sick, so he handed over command to Major General József Kalliány. Kalliány's plan was to join forces with Skariatin to retake Nagyszeben.[42] He therefore sent his troops to Felek and Fenyőfalva (today part of Felek) on the 13th.[42]

Bem was right to fear that the Austrians would try to retake Nagyszeben. In his report on the battle to Lajos Kossuth, Bem wrote that he feared that Puchner would try to retake the city. He was also aware that the Austrians still had a superior force in Transylvania.[50]

On the night following the battle, Bem equipped his around 2,000 Szekler volunteers, who had until then only spears, with bayonet riffles and supplemented from among them the 11th Honvéd and the Máriássy battalions to 1360 soldiers.[27] In addition to this, he called to him the troops of Bánffy and Pereczy, who had been sent out earlier with about 4,000 men, the detachment of Major Herkalovics with the 32nd and 50th Honvéd Battalions, whom he had sent to Kolozsvár, and a squadron of the 15th (Matthias) Hussar Regiment, formed in Kolozsvár,[27][55] increasing his army to 14–15,000 men.[42] On 12 March in the same afternoon, with his army, thus increased in size and reorganized, he then set up camp between Nagyszeben and Sellenberk,[55] Lieutenant-Colonel Károlyi occupied Vesztény (today part of Sellenberk) to prevent any attempt of Russian counterattack,[55] and also sent Lieutenant-Colonel Bethlen with a small detachment to find the bulk of the Imperial Army under Puchner, via Dolmány, Holcmány and Leschkirch (today both are parts of Újegyház), towards Erzsébetváros and Segesvár.[27]

According to Czetz, Bethlen wanted to fight with the approaching Austrian army, but according to Kalliány, some Hungarian prisoners of war said that he wanted to return to Székely land.[55]

The total force at Kalliány's disposal was 8,000 soldiers, not counting the Gyulafehérvár garrison and the thousands of Romanian insurgents.[42] Skariatin was at the Vöröstorony Strait with 4,200 men, and Engelhardt at Brassó with 4,800.[42] So he had still a much stronger force than Bem's troops. But the Russians could only be counted on in defensive fighting.[42]

Bem left 2,000 soldiers in Nagyszeben as a garrison,[49] and then led a brigade under Colonel János Bánffy against Skariatin in the Vöröstorony Pass.[42] János Czetz's brigade was given the task of occupying the bridge from Felek and cutting off the connection of the K.u.K. detachment there with Skariatin.[42] On 15 March, this order was carried out. On that day, the Bánffy Brigade led by Bem attacked the Imperial troops defending the Vöröstorony Pass, which was the rearguard of the Russians, and drove them out of Transylvania.[42]

By 16 March, the entire Russo-Austrian from the Vöröstorony pass was already camped south to the Carpathians in Wallachia.[42] On 16 March Czetz's brigade reached Fogaras. Kalliány regrouped his troops west of Brassó.[42] Soon, however, he received a message from Major General Engelhardt, commander of the Russian troops in Brassó, telling him that if he was threatened by a force larger than his own, he would have to retreat to Wallachia.[42] Kalliány then withdrew his troops to the immediate vicinity of Brassó, and decided to defend the city together with the Russians.[42] However, when Engelhardt saw the exhausted, worn-out imperial troops, he announced that he would retreat to Wallachia, and demanded that Kalliány occupy the Tömös Strait with two brigades to ensure this. Kalliány complied with the request but weakened his main forces at Feketehalom.[42]

The next battle took place there on 19 March.[42] Czetz's artillery repulsed the attempts of the Imperial Infantry to attack, and after the reinforcements led by Bem broke the resistance of his left flank, the Imperial Army retreated to Brassó.[42] During the pursuit, the imperial troops suffered heavy losses. On 20 March, the allies evacuated Brassó and retreated toward the Strait of Tömös. Bem occupied the city the same day and ordered the pursuit of the retreating troops.[42]

On 21 March, the detachment of Lieutenant Colonel József Beke and Major Nándor Szabó caught up with the Imperial troops and made their retreat, already torturous in cold, snowy, and icy weather, even more difficult.[56] On the same day, Major August Heydte's detachment left Transylvania through the Törcsvár Strait.[57]

After the occupation of Brassó, Bem returned to Nagyszeben because he had received news that Skariatin was trying to invade again.[57] On 28 March, he attacked the Russian detachment stationed at the quarantine house in the Vöröstorony strait (a building used for the medical isolation of arrivals in case of customs and epidemic danger) and drove it to Wallachia.[57] This meant that now almost all Transylvania - with the exception of the Austrian garrisons from the fortress of Gyulafehervár, the castle of Déva, and the Érchegység Mountains in the hands of the Romanian insurrection - was in the hands of the Hungarian troops.[57] For his triumphs Bem was awarded the First Class of the Hungarian Military Order of Merit and the rank of Lieutenant General.[57]

The success was undoubtedly impressive, since Bem had achieved it while the opposing Austrian and Russian troops were outnumbering his troops.[57] It is true, that the imperials could only count on the Russians in defensive battles, but Bem didn't known this.[57] With his lightning-quick moves he divided and defeated in detail the troops of Puchner, then Kalliány, and after his defeat at Medgyes, he completely turned the tide of the war in less than two weeks.[57] At the same time, the imperial command completely lost its head, and although the troops fought with the tenacity expected of them, they could only ameliorate the disastrous consequences of the commanders' precipitated and contradictory decisions.[57]

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Puchner's report to Field Marshal Alfred I, Prince of Windisch-Grätz, mentions only 7452 soldiers, but Heydte's figures seem more likely, because Puchner, by talking about fewer soldiers, may have been trying to convince the main commander to send him more reinforcements.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hermann 2013, pp. 82–83.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Babucs Zoltán: „Most pedig megyünk Nagyszebenbe!” Magyarságkutató Intézet, 21 March 2021
  3. ^ a b c d Gyalókay 1931, pp. 57.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gyalókay 1931, pp. 80.
  5. ^ a b c d e Hermann 2004, pp. 192.
  6. ^ Hermann 2004, pp. 192–193.
  7. ^ a b c Hermann 2004, pp. 193.
  8. ^ Hermann 2004, pp. 193–194.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hermann 2004, pp. 194.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Gyalókay 1931, pp. 55.
  11. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 56–57.
  12. ^ Hermann 2013, pp. 77–78.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Hermann 2013, pp. 78.
  14. ^ Hermann 2013, pp. 77.
  15. ^ a b c d Gyalókay 1931, pp. 62.
  16. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 62–63.
  17. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 63.
  18. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 63–64.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Gyalókay 1931, pp. 64.
  20. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 65.
  21. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 68.
  22. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 66.
  23. ^ a b c d Gyalókay 1931, pp. 67.
  24. ^ a b Gyalókay 1931, pp. 69.
  25. ^ Hermann 2013, pp. 79.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Gyalókay 1931, pp. 70.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bánlaky József: Nagy-Szeben bevétele. 1849. március 11-én. A magyar nemzet hadtörténete XXI Arcanum Adatbázis Kft. 2001
  28. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 70–71.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h Gyalókay 1931, pp. 71.
  30. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 73–74.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g Gyalókay 1931, pp. 74.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g Gyalókay 1931, pp. 76.
  33. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 72.
  34. ^ a b c d Hermann 2013, pp. 83.
  35. ^ Hermann 2013, pp. 82.
  36. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 77.
  37. ^ a b c Bóna Gábor: A magyar forradalom és szabadságharc három pillanata. Nagyszeben bevétele, Erdély felszabadítása Háromszék. 2015. március 14., szombat
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h Gyalókay 1931, pp. 78.
  39. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 77–78.
  40. ^ Hermann 2004, pp. 194–195.
  41. ^ a b Hermann 2013, pp. 80.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Hermann 2004, pp. 195.
  43. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 78–79.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g Gyalókay 1931, pp. 79.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Gyalókay 1931, pp. 84.
  46. ^ a b c Gyalókay 1931, pp. 85.
  47. ^ Egyed Ákos: Nagyszeben bevétele 1849. március 11-én Várak, kastélyok, templomok. 9. évf. 4. sz. / 2013, pp. 14
  48. ^ a b c d e Egyed Ákos: Nagyszeben bevétele 1849. március 11-én Várak, kastélyok, templomok. 9. évf. 4. sz. / 2013, pp. 15
  49. ^ a b c d e f g Egyed 2010, pp. 369.
  50. ^ a b Egyed 2010, pp. 368.
  51. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 81.
  52. ^ a b c d Gyalókay 1931, pp. 82.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h i Gyalókay 1931, pp. 83.
  54. ^ Gyalókay 1931, pp. 83–84.
  55. ^ a b c d e Gyalókay 1931, pp. 86.
  56. ^ Hermann 2004, pp. 195–196.
  57. ^ a b c d e f g h i Hermann 2004, pp. 196.

Sources edit

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  • Hermann, Róbert (2001), 1848-1849 a szabadságharc hadtörténete ("Military History of 1848-1849") (in Hungarian), Budapest: Korona, ISBN 963-9376-21-3
  • Hermann, Róbert (2004). Az 1848–1849-es szabadságharc nagy csatái ("Great battles of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848-1849") (in Hungarian). Budapest: Zrínyi. p. 408. ISBN 963-327-367-6.
  • Hermann, Róbert (2013). Nagy csaták. 15. A magyar önvédelmi háború ("Great Battles. 15. The Hungarian War od Self Defense") (in Hungarian). Budapest: Duna Könyvklub. p. 88. ISBN 978-615-5013-99-7.

45°47′42.8″N 24°08′56.4″E / 45.795222°N 24.149000°E / 45.795222; 24.149000

second, battle, nagyszeben, part, hungarian, revolution, 1848general, capture, nagyszeben, unknown, author, 1849date11, march, 1849locationnagyszeben, szeben, county, transylvania, kingdom, hungary, sibiu, romania, resulthungarian, victorythe, hungarians, chas. Second Battle of NagyszebenPart of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848General Bem at the capture of Nagyszeben unknown author 1849Date11 March 1849LocationNagyszeben Szeben County Transylvania Kingdom of Hungary now Sibiu Romania ResultHungarian victorythe Hungarians chase the Austrian and Russian troops out of TransylvaniaBelligerents Hungarian Revolutionary Army Russian Empire Austrian Empire Transylvanian SaxonsCommanders and leaders Jozef BemGrigory Skariatin Anton PuchnerStrengthTotal 4674 men 30 36 cannons6000 men 29 cannons 8 field cannons 1 21 castle cannons 2 Did not participate 8676 men 36 cannons 3 Casualties and lossesTotal 40 138 men 5 40 dead 35 98 woundedTotal 239 401 men 99 97 dead 105 150 wounded 35 154 missing and captive 17 24 cannons 1 4 The Second Battle of Nagyszeben or Sibiu or Hermannstadt was a battle in the Hungarian war of Independence of 1848 1849 fought on 11 March 1849 between the Hungarian army led by the Polish General Jozef Bem and the garrison of Nagyszeben the Habsburg headquarters of Transylvania composed by the Russian detachment led by Colonel Grigory Skariatin Austrian troops led by Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann and Transylvanian Saxon national guards Before the battle Bem managed to make the commander of the Austrian main Commander in Chief of Transylvania Lieutenant General Anton Puchner think that he barricaded himself at Segesvar while he escaped heading to Nagyszeben While Puchner was trying to encircle Segesvar where he thought that Bem was hiding the latter headed through a quick march to Nagyszeben where he defeated the Ruso Austro Saxon garrison led by General Skariatin and captured the city Hearing about this Puchner suffered a mental collapse as a result of which the still much superior Austrian and Russian troops retreated from Transylvania Thanks to this victory Bem reinstalled the Hungarian rule over the province This victory was the overture of the victorious Hungarian Spring Campaign which leberated almost all the territories of Hungary from the imperial rule Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 2 1 Opposing forces 3 Battle 3 1 The open battle 3 2 The Siege 4 Aftermath 5 Explanatory notes 6 References 7 SourcesBackground editAfter the Battle of Piski on 9 February Major General Jozef Bem was informed that the Austrian imperial troops had again invaded Northern Transylvania threatening the Hungarian possession of this part of the province 5 Bem responded to this threat quickly by bypassing Puchner who prepared him a trap at Szaszsebes and then he quickly reached North Transylvania and drove out the imperial troops led by Lieutenant General Ignaz von Malkowski 5 Meanwhile the main commander of the imperial armies of Transylvania Lieutenant General Anton Puchner was in a state of near lethargy after the defeats of Piski and Alvinc suffered against Bem 5 He had waited nearly a week to write his official report on the events of the week which passed between the battles of Vizakna and Alvinc and he had no mindset to dictate it all at once on 15 February he wrote a chronicle of the successes between 4 8 February and only the next day pulled himself together to report to the main commander of the imperial forces from Hungary Field Marshal Alfred I Prince of Windisch Gratz about the battles of Piski and Alvinc although from these reports it was hard to understand if they were victories or defeats 5 He felt that fate had once again done him an injustice His losses so far had been 1 600 soldiers 1 000 of whom were recovering their injuries in hospitals writing to Windisch Gratz that he had captured 21 guns with the heroism and blood loss of his soldiers 5 Bem had remained as Puchner claimed with 3 000 men and 2 cannons after Vizakna and at the moment when he thought he had been annihilated a single Hungarian relief force reinforced him not only replacing his losses but increasing them two or three times as they were before while his forces were diminishing day by day and under such circumstances the most brilliant victory won I mean in its immediate consequences will be a real defeat 6 He believed that Bem now had 6 8 000 men and 25 30 guns so he did not want to attack until he had received reinforcements He asked for help from both Windisch Gratz and from the Austrian garrison of Temesvar 7 His officers had previously tried in vain to persuade him to attack immediately but only on 28 February having been informed of Malkowski s attack in northern Transylvania he finally moved out of his headquarters from Nagyszeben marching northwards His intention was to clear the valley of the Kukullo beat Bem at Medgyes and then take Marosvasarhely He asked Malkowski to advance from Beszterce to Marosvasarhely 7 nbsp Jozef BemOn 1 March Bem arrived in Medgyes The next day on 2 March the imperial attack began at Kiskapus which was initially successful but then the Hungarian troops retook their previous positions We ran out of ammunition so we were forced to retreat until we were resupplied finally they those whose job was to supply the soldiers stopped us but they did not supply us with ammunition because there was none in the whole camp but they told us that we had to attack only with bayonets and drive the enemy away which we finally did in the evening with a great noise because we could make a noise better scream louder than they could and we chased them all the way to Asszonyfalva but we did not chase them any further wrote a participating soldier 7 Both sides suffered heavy losses in the fierce fighting and the Hungarian artillery fired almost all its ammunition 8 nbsp The Campaign of the Hungarian army of Transylvania under General Jozef Bem after the Battle of Piski 9 February 1849 and the Battle of Medgyes 2 3 March 1849 On 3 March all of Puchner s troops arrived on the battlefield and attacked with a considerable advantage 9 At first the Hungarian troops held against their fire well but the artillery of the imperial army inflicted increasingly heavy losses on the Hungarian artillery 9 Puchner s left wing pushed back the Hungarian right wing forcing the artillery to retreat 9 Bem attempted to regroup his troops but Puchner s infantry soon broke through the weakened Hungarian army center and Bem ordered a retreat 9 Towards evening Bem received reinforcements which stopped the advance of the imperials Bem ordered an attack but the enemy infantry repulsed it and forced the Hungarian infantry to flee Bem was then forced to retreat towards Segesvar 9 The Hungarian losses were at least as high as at Piski i e about 700 2 After the battle in order to successfully resist an attack from Medgyes Bem took position in the defensive earth works he had already built between Segesvar and Danos 10 Bem now had some time to reorganize his troops and also received new reinforcements in Segesvar which made him to plan again to attack Nagyszeben this time hoping to finally occupy the Austrian headquarters from Transylvania after his insuccess from 21 January 9 Puchner did not pursue the retreating Hungarian army The Austrian corps was very exhausted from the two days of fighting which is why Puchner wanted to rest his troops on 4 and 5 March before moving on to strike a decisive blow at Bem 10 Puchner as he had received no reinforcements from anywhere now had only the troops he had fought with in the Battle of Medgyes whose order of battle according to Philipp August Joachim Freiherr von der Heydte was this The corps was divided into three brigades The division commander was Jozsef Kalliany the only general in the mobile corps other than Puchner 10 1st Brigade Commander Colonel Van der Null 3d Battalion of the 31st Leiningen Infantry Regiment 1st and 3d Battalions 41th Sivkovich Infantry Regiment one battalion of the 16th 1st Romanian Border Guard Infantry Regiment 2 companies of the 5th Prinz von Savoyen Dragoon Regiment one three pounder infantry battery of the 5th Bervaldo Artillery Regiment one six pounder infantry battery of the 5th Bervaldo Artillery Regiment Total 4 battalions 2 cavalry regiments 2 batteries 2480 infantry 180 cavalry 12 guns 2nd Brigade Commander Baron Colonel Stutterheim 3d Battalion of the 51st Karl Ferdinand Infantry Regiment 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 63rd Bianchi Infantry Regiment 3d battalion of the 16th 1st Romanian Border Guard Infantry Regiment two companies of the 11th Szekely Border Guard Hussars Regiment one six pounder infantry battery of the 5th Bervaldo Artillery Regiment one three pounder infantry battery of the 5th Bervaldo Artillery Regiment Total 4 battalions 2 cavalry regiments 2 batteries 2530 infantry 166 cavalry 12 guns Reserve Brigade Commander Baron Lieutenant Colonel Uracca 3rd Battalion of the 24th Parma Infantry Regiment 3rd and Reserve Battalion of the 62nd Tursky Infantry Regiment one Uracca Grenadier Battalion 1 3 Battalion of the Bukovina Border Guards 2 3 battalion of Saxon Kaiserjagers eight companies of the 3rd E H Max Chevau leger Cavalry Regiment one six pounder infantry battery of the 5th Bervaldo Artillery Regiment Total 5 battalions 8 cavalry companies 2 batteries 2740 infantry 580 cavalry 12 guns 11 So the whole corps consisted of 13 battalions 12 cavalry companies and 6 batteries 36 guns The total number of its personnel without the artillerymen and carters was 8676 soldiers 3 a From this figure however must be deducted the losses caused by the battle of Medgyes which were 322 men Thus the Austrian troops under Puchner without the artillerymen and charioteers numbered 8354 but with them they could have reached 9000 3 His victory at Medgyes made Puchner to make a bold to surround and destroy Bem s troops with attacks from several directions 9 The military operation plan of Puchner s army was prepared by the chief of staff of the Corps Major Maroicic 10 Its basic idea was that a stronger detachment under the leadership of Major August von Heydte would feign an attack in the direction of the Medgyes Segesvar road through Berethalom Valdhid Erzsebetvaros Holdvilag Danos 12 make Bem to think that the main imperial troops are coming from there thus luring him into the aforementioned defensive position 10 Meanwhile the rest of the corps would start its march on 6 March bypassing Segesvar from the south via Riomfalva today a village of the municipality of Berethalom Burkos Szentagota Hegen Apold Segesd today a village of the municipality of Apold 13 cutting off the Hungarian army from the main source of its strength Szekely Land 10 At that time Maroicic was still counting on the support of Lieutenant General Malkowski s troops from Bukovina which he thought by the time Puchner reached Segesvar should have reached Marosvasarhely he did not know that Bem already had driven Malkowski out of Transylvania 10 thus tying up part of the Hungarian forces in Szekely Land from where Bem expected his reinforcements 9 14 Captain Count Alberti with 1 1 2 companies of the 3rd Chevau leger Regiment starting from Medgyes will reconnoitre the right bank of the Nagykukullo and seek a connection to Marosvasarhely with the division of Lieutenant General Malkowski 15 The plan had one but very serious flaw it had too many uncertainties If Malkowski didn t attack if any of the encircling columns were late if Bem detected the encirclement attempt the whole plan could fall apart 9 nbsp Anton Freiherr von Puchner LithoThe quicker Puchner made his encircling movement the less the Hungarian army could reorganize itself from the damages suffered at Medgyes and the less he could strengthen itself by picking up reinforcements 15 But it was also certain that it would have been inadvisable to attack Bem with a worn out exhausted Austrian army after they covered the distance of 92 kilometers over hills and valleys on unmaintained bad roads as it was planned 15 But as we have seen above this and the waiting for Malkowski was the main reason that caused Puchner to lose two days and thus to lose the advantage won at Medgyes 16 The weather was also the worst possible rain and melting snow blizzard and frost alternated constantly 17 The road which had been passable enough a day before had now become a thick mortar in which man horse cannon and cart alike could only move forward with bitter agony 17 The retreating Hungarians guns were also stuck in the mud on the Medgyes Segesvar road and it was only due to the sluggishness of the pursuers that they did not fall into the hands of the Austrians 17 Thus it was easily conceivable therefore that on the side roads which were isolated from the heavier traffic and not sufficiently prepared even greater obstacles were placed in the way of the Austrian corps 17 The malnourished and exhausted traction horses were soon exhausted so that 6 pairs of oxen had to pull each cannon out of the mud 17 nbsp The Transylvanian campaign of the Hungarian War of Independence between 4 8 March 1849 Red Hungarians Blue Austrians Green RussiansHeydte reached Danos on 7 March carried out the demonstration attack but then on the night of 7 to 8 March on Puchner s orders he marched from Danos via the Holdvilag Erzsebetvaros Szaszsaros route to Bese today part of Danos to cover the left flank of the main column during the planned attack on Segesvar 13 As Puchner had ordered three companies of the 62nd Infantry Regiment to occupy Medgyes 15 and Heydte had a battalion of infantry two companies of border guards five companies of the National Guards from Segesvar and one and a half companies of cavalry if he had remained in his original position he could have formed a considerable obstacle to Bem s march towards Medgyes 13 However Heydte s departure from Danos left the Medgyes Segesvar Nagyszeben route essentially uncovered 13 Heydte s appearance did indeed alarm the Hungarian corps at Segesvar but after no battle occurred and the enemy retreated at midnight only his abandoned campfires glowed in the night until they too went out towards dawn 18 As seen above Maroicic s operation plan was for Heydte s demonstrating detachment to lure Bem to a position between Danos and Segesvar while Puchner s corps behind the back of the Hungarians would take Segesvar 19 But for this to succeed the demonstration at Danos should have taken place on the 8th and not on the 7th but before Bem could get news of the Austrian corps approach 19 If the Hungarians didn t send scouts towards the south Puchner might have been able to slip behind them undetected 19 But Bem was not so careless 19 Maroicic as can be seen from the plan wanted to deploy Heydte s detachment in two directions namely at Danos and Bese but which in the end could not be sent either here or there all the less so because he had not received any new orders to postpone the feigned attack until 8 March 19 Puchner s bypassing column was thus thoroughly delayed on unpaved roads in terrible weather conditions thus on 8 March its brigades only reached Hegen and Apold 13 Because of the exhaustion of the soldiers Puchner gave his troops a rest and the two brigades at Hegen did not leave for Segesvar until the morning of the 9th and Van der Null s advance brigade from Apold departed only after their arrival at noon that day 13 Prelude editOn the 8th Bem had a clear view of the situation which showed that the Austrians would not attack from Medgyes with any greater force because according to the reports he received most of Puchner s corps was approaching from the south 19 Bem now was certain that the nearest part of Puchner s corps was 15 1 2 and its farthest part 22 kilometers from Segesvar so he decided to undertake the daring operation of leaving the town marching through Medgyes and Szelindek and quickly attacking and occupying Nagyszeben before Puchner could intervene 19 Puchner because to the aforementioned rest from exhaustion of his troops started his march on the morning of the 9th just as Bem was leaving Segesvar Without this rest he might have succeeded in surrounding Bem 20 The Hungarian success depended primarily on how fast the corps was moving whether the enemy was directly behind it and how long it would take to occupy Nagyszeben 20 So on the morning of 9 March Bem s troops left Segesvar 21 The Van der Null brigade left Apold at noon on the 8th where it waited for the other two brigades to approach and therefore did not arrive to the vicinity of Segesvar until late afternoon towards dusk here it exchanged a few shots with the remaining Hungarian troops 20 The brigade s Staff Officer writes that Colonel Van der Null wanted to persuade the Corps Chief of Staff to occupy Segesvar immediately 20 The latter however perhaps because Puchner had also held it back was reluctant and so the brigade received orders only at 9 p m to push into the town which according to the news received had already been abandoned by the Hungarians that morning 20 Puchner with the Stutterheim brigade did not enter Segesvar until 2 a m on the 10th and the Uracca brigade together with the cavalry moved in at 4 a m while the small Hungarian guard retreated towards Szekelykeresztur 22 Puchner did not understand the gravity of the situation at all 22 According to the military historian Jeno Gyalokay when it turned out that there were no Hungarian soldiers in Segesvar at 10 a m on 10 March Puchner was still of the opinion that Bem was either marching to Medgyes to Kolozsvar or to Marosvasarhely and therefore he did not decide anything for the time being because he was waiting for news of the approach of the troops of Malkowski and Colonel Karl von Urban and wanted to plan his further actions in concordance to their positions 22 But also on 10 March at 5 p m he wrote to Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann von Eichtal head of the garrison from Nagyszeben that according to the latest reports part of the Hungarian army was moving towards Medgyes and that it may happen that Bem wanted to scare the garrison of Nagyszeben 22 So as he wrote further to prevent this very unlikely event to happen he will march with his whole army through Riomfalva towards Nagyszeben 22 nbsp The Transylvanian campaign of the Hungarian War of Independence between 9 13 March 1849 Red Hungarians Blue Austrians Green RussiansAccording to Puchner s calculation Bem could not attack this city before 12 March and its Russian and Austrian garrisons could successfully defend it for at least 24 hours 23 According to Heydte the Austrian corps left Segesvar at 11 o clock at night on the 10th while according to Kalliany 2 hours later 23 However the Van der Null brigade which was again put as advance guard had already reached Danos during the morning 23 There the whole corps turned off the road from Segesvar to Medgyes and headed for Ujegyhaz via Berethalom and Riomfalva partly because this road was somewhat shorter than the other and partly because the Austrians feared that Bem had destroyed the bridges behind him and tried to hold up Puchner s corps by occupying certain strategic points 23 The question was whether the Hungarian army would be able to take Nagyszeben before the pursuers arrived or whether it would be destroyed in the ring of the defenders and pursuers 9 Bem s troops reached Barathely in torrential rain drenched to the skin at 2 a m on the 10th and at 8 a m Medgyes where three companies of the Austrian 62nd Infantry Regiment remained after Puchner s victory from 3 March 21 This garrison was joined on the evening of the 9th by Captain Alberti s scout troop 21 The Austrian outposts were stationed between Medgyes and Barathely and here they had a small skirmish with the Hungarian advance unit but no serious fighting took place for the Austrian troops withdrew from Medgyes towards Nagyszeben at 7 o clock on the morning of the 10th 21 However First Lieutenant Henter who had been sent to Nagyekemezo was taken prisoner by the Hungarians along with 30 of his men 21 nbsp Franz Neuhauser Nagyszeben Hermannstadt Sibiu 1840Bem left behind 1000 rearguards at Medgyes 9 while others say 1500 soldiers and 4 guns led by Lieutenant Colonel Pereczy 24 In addition as a mobile flank defence Bem sent a detachment led by Lieutenant Colonel Count Gergely Bethlen towards Danos Valdhid Berethalom Musna Ivanfalva Kiskapus at noon on the 9th 24 Bem s army arrived at Nagyselyk at 1 a m on 11 March and after some rest continued on its way to Szelindek From here he departed at noon on the way he scattered a Russian Cossack troop and reached Nagycsur 25 Towards 4 p m he marched out from Nagycsur at its southern exit behind the Alter Berg Old Hill which separates this village from Nagyszeben and here he deployed his army in battle formation 26 27 In 1849 Nagyszeben was the most important city in Transylvania for the imperials It was the headquarters of the Austrian troops from Transylvania called General Commando and the main armament and equipment depot of the Transylvanian K u K Corps where a lot of clothing weapons and ammunition as well as all kinds of other war material were stockpiled 26 The Konigsboden King s Land where the most Transylvanian Saxons lived and which s center was Nagyszeben also provided plenty of men for the war and so this region was in fact the base of operations for the Austrian corps in Transylvania 26 Its importance was increased by the fact that at the beginning of February Windisch Gratz authorized Puchner to retreat to Wallachia if necessary 26 The Vorostorony Red Tower Pass the most easily accessible link between Transylvania and Wallachia has its northern entrance below Nagyszeben the loss of this city could cut off this route and force the Austrian army which might be forced to leave Transylvania to take the Torcsvar or Tomos Pass by a long detour 26 On 10 March in the afternoon Puchner himself had already thought though he did not really believe that Bem could attack Nagyszeben 26 He therefore marched towards it confident that the city was adequately prepared and well equipped for defense and would be able to defend itself until the arrival of the Austrian relief corps 28 It was surrounded by a strong and high circular wall interrupted by towers and in 1702 King Leopold I ordered the construction of a citadel with a bastioned facade 29 By 1777 only traces of this fortress built of earth remained In the course of time parts of the city walls were demolished and it was only in November 1848 that the reconstruction of Nagyszeben was started in order to become a defensible fortress 29 It was no perimeter wall on the southeast side of the town A temporary fortification with an earth and pile wall compensated for its absence 29 The Szeben river which flows on one side of the city center replaced the main ditch 29 The suburbs were surrounded by earthworks and their surroundings were artificially flooded where it was possible with the swollen water of the river 29 Every street in the town leading to the defenses was blocked off with a pile barrier or barricade 29 The perimeter walls were equipped for the positioning of cannons on them defensive corridors were built around them and embrasures were cut into them 29 So everything seemed to be in place for the successful defense of the city and Puchner was not unreasonably confident that Bem would not be able to take Nagyszeben in less than 24 hours 29 nbsp Grigory SkaryatinThe battlefield of 11 March was divided into three distinct parts The first is the Alter Berg and its immediate surroundings the second was the small plain between the Alter Berg and Nagyszeben and the third was the city itself 30 Nagycsur was built in the Krummbach stream s valley On its southern side Alter Berg rose more than 100 meters above the village and the slope towards Nagyszeben was covered with vineyards The rest of the hill was barren 31 The plain at the southern foothills interspersed with small willows and serving mainly as a pasture in addition to several waterways was crisscrossed by draining ditches in all directions which were hindering in particular the rapid movement of cavalry and artillery 31 On the afternoon of March 10 the Austrian troops retreating from Medgyes brought the alarming news of Bem s approach 31 The leader of the Russian troops at Nagyszeben Colonel Grigory Skariatin at 5 p m that afternoon launched a battalion and two cannons each at Szelindek and Vizakna not being sure of the direction of Bem s attack At the same time he ordered his troops stationed at Nagytalmacs to come to Nagyszeben and they arrived during the night 31 On the 11th the Russian battalion sent to Szelindek withdrew from the Hungarians without a fight and together with the battalion sent to Vizakna retreated towards Nagyszeben 31 At the same time Pfersmann urgently wrote to Puchner that the situation in Nagyszeben was indeed critical and that the city would not be able to resist Bem s army for long He therefore asked for urgent help 32 However Lieutenant General Pfersmann and Colonel Grigory Skariatin did not seem too worried about Bem s troops and somewhat overconfident instead of remaining behind the city walls they marched out in front of them did not occupy the city defenses nor did they use the artillery on the walls 9 This may have been due to the fact that the commanders of the forces defending Nagyszeben hearing of Bem s defeat at Medgyes believed that the disorganized units of the defeated army had arrived in front of the city and they hoped to give them the coup de grace 2 The Hungarian army that arrived under Nagyszeben had covered 85 kilometers in 53 hours so they could not be called well rested by any meaning 9 Opposing forces edit Bem had around 4500 4700 soldiers the total number of the army defending the city was around 6000 1 The composition of the Troops from Nagyszeben as can be seen from the official report of 1 April 1849 was as follows 33 Russian detachment Leader Colonel Grigory Skariatin 3 companies of the Modlin infantry regiment 6 companies of the Lublin infantry regiment 4 companies of the Zamoscie infantry regiment 2 1 2 Cossack companies 7th light battery 8th light battery Total 2000 infantry 350 cavalry 8 cannons 34 Austrian troops Leader Lieutenant General Alois Pfersmann 2 rookie companies of the 31 infantry regiment 6 reserve companies of the 51 infantry regiment 3 companies of the 62 infantry regiment 1 rookie company of the 16 border guard regiment 1 company of the 3rd chevau leger regiment 2 platoons of the 11 Szekely hussar regiment Total 3000 infantry 40 cavalry 34 Saxon national guards 2 battalions of the Saxon national guards Total 650 infantry 34 There were at least 21 cannons for the defense of the walls of the inner city 2 Garrison total cc 6000 soldiers 4 cavalry companies 29 cannons 34 2 The Hungarian army was composed as it follows Army section Unit Infantry company Cavalry company Cannons MenBem s main column 3 battalion of the 37 Michael Line Infantry Regiment 6 80024 Honved battalion 6 55 Honved battalion 6 80072 Honved battalion Torontal mobile national guard battalion 4 5332 battalion of the 14 infantry regiment later 77 Honved battalion 5 7123 battalion of the 14 infantry regiment later 78 Honved battalion 1 132Vienna Legion 1 8 Koburg Hussar Regiment 2 30010 Wilhelm Hussar Regiment 1 12015 Matyas Hussar Regiment 1 100Artillery 26 30 Total 29 4 26 32 3497 Lieutenant Colonel Gergely Bethlen s detachment 11 Honved battalion 6 3505 6 companies of the 1 Honved Jager battalion 2 6 Wurttenberg Hussar Regiment 2 3001 Szekely six pounder battery 4 Total 8 2 4 650 Major Karoly Kabos s detachment 3 battalion of the 14 infantry regiment later 78 Honved battalion 4 527Grand total 41 6 30 36 4674 35 Battle editThe open battle edit Skariatin himself now set off with the rest of his troops to occupy the top of the Alten Berg but he was too late and settled at the foot of the hill instead of taking the roof 31 Only a single line of skirmishers pushed up the slope into the vineyards but the bulk of the infantry with their right flank against the base of the hill was on the eastern side of the highway to Nagycsur 31 The artillery was deployed near the highway with the Cossacks on the left near the Krummbach 32 The second battle line in Pfersmann s report was formed by the combined Austrian battalion led by Captain Count Heusenstamm 32 The defenders were thus developed to fight on the plain to the north of the city at the bottom of the heights of Nagycsur with the Imperial troops to the east of the main road 27 nbsp Transylvanian Panorama depircting the Second Battle of Nagyszeben Jan StykaThe Saxon National Guards remained in the town as a reserve and defense force of the city 27 for the protection of which as Pfersmann claimed in his report all the measures were taken 32 The Saxon National Guard was united in the main square of the town and the castle cannons were provided with cannoneers 32 The ammunition stored in the warehouses was placed on the ammunition carts just in case and the war chest was sent towards the Vorostorony Pass 32 It was 4 o clock in the afternoon when Bem s infantry having reached the top of the Alter Berg Hill from Nagycsur caught sight of the enemy in battle formation 32 nbsp Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11 03 1849 The situation between 4 5 p mBem who deployed his artillery on the high ground along the highway 27 as usual poured in a tremendous artillery barrage on the enemy troops positioned in front of the town The Russian infantry withstood this relatively well 9 and for the moment his skirmish line between the vines has not faltered either Skariatin sent his Cossacks to attack the Hungarian right flank in order to bypass it from the rear 36 but the grapeshot of the Hungarian artillery put them in disorder causing them to flee in panic 9 The Hungarian artillery inflicted so much damage on the Cossacks that they could not be used against the Hungarians in the rest of the battle 27 Bem now ordered the center and right wing to advance 2 and pressed more and more infantry against the enemy s left flank advancing on the slope of the Pfaffenbrunn hill intending to bypass it 36 However Skariatin saw what was happening and before the encirclement could take place at 5 p m he retreated to a second position between Alten Berg and Nagyszeben 36 Bem s troops immediately descended from the hill then the artillery duel started again 36 nbsp Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11 03 1849 The situation between 5 7 p mOn Bem s orders the Matyas hussars attacked in the direction of Szenterzsebet Hammersdorf the Koburg and Wilhelm hussars led by Lieutenant Colonel Kiss attacked the left flank of the Russian army 27 while the rookie Szekely infantry some of whom because of the shortage of riffles had only spears launched a bayonet charge against the enemy s center 37 Seeing that both of his flanks were threatened by encirclement as early as 6 a m Skariatin ordered the retreat to the entrenched suburbs 36 nbsp Battle of Hermannstadt sketched by Capt Ed ScheifeleAt the same time Lieutenant Colonel Sandor Kiss with the Coburg and Wilhelm Hussars attacked the Russian battery which was covering the retreat of the troops and forced it to withdraw 38 Major General Artur Nepokoychitsky describes the retreat of the Russian troops as follows The retreat was carried out in exemplary order despite the persistent pursuit of the Hungarians The infantry stopped several times and charged the enemy with bayonets In the meantime it had become so dark that the enemy s columns could no longer be seen and even the line of attack was only indicated by rifle fire It was feared that our columns bravely repulsing the advancing enemy with their bayonets would become so involved in the fight that the enemy would cut them off so Colonel Skariatin himself led the bayonet charges and did not allow our soldiers to venture too far 2 The combined Austrian battalion led by Lieutenant General Pfersmann apart from a few aimless movements behind the front line had done nothing so far Now however the 20th Company of the 51st Infantry Regiment occupied the barricaded eastern gate of the suburb while the 19th Company which was slightly behind stood in reserve 39 The Siege edit The battle continued at the suburb s defenses the Hungarians trying to enter the city After an hour s fighting at 7 pm despite the Hungarian troops had taken the outlying houses their attack had stalled there for the time being 38 The Honveds were exhausted by the long march followed by the battle and the darkness prevented any orientation and Gergely Bethlen s long awaited detachment which had arrived at Kiskapus only on the morning of the 11th was nowhere to be seen 38 Hosszabb szunet allott be 38 nbsp Siege of Nagyszeben postcard from the Period of the DualismIn the meantime Bem s artillery was shelling the city 40 Bem was about to postpone the siege until the next day when the reserve brigade of about 850 1000 men and 4 guns led by Colonel Gergely Bethlen finally arrived 41 with a Szekely battalion the 11th Honved battalion and a Jager squadron 27 Mr Major do you want to sleep in Nagyszeben today asked Bem to the unit s commander Oliver Bethlen Yes and my battalion has the same wish Bethlen replied Well then go on the attack with your battalion and stand up in the square Bem said as if nothing could be more normal 42 nbsp Heinrich Gerhart Battle of Nagyszeben 11 March 1849 Wien Museum Online Sammlung 88629 1 2Bem immediately directed Bethlen s detachment to the left flank of the Hungarian army and then ordered his troops to attack the outskirts 38 But here there was a near fatal mix up among the troops For in the total darkness it was impossible to distinguish friend from foe and so it happened that some of the left wing s troops which remained behind blindly shot into Bethlen s battalions which were ahead of them thinking that they were enemy soldiers 38 Fortunately Hussar Colonel Sandor Kiss who recognized the danger that could result from this somehow brought order and calm among the troops by stopping the senseless shooting 38 In the meantime some houses in the suburbs had been set on fire by the Hungarian grenades so due to this now it was easier to see 38 But now the firelight also benefited the city s defenders by illuminating the attackers 43 But this could not stop the assault troops which had gained new momentum and were led by the 11th Honved Battalion It was joined by the Mariassy Battalion a Szekely battalion and part of the Debrecen Jagers 44 Soon the 4 companies of the 3rd Battalion of the 14th Border Guard Regiment about 520 530 men led by Major Karoly Kabos arrived and they also joined the attack 41 The veteran soldiers of the 11th and the Mariassy battalions went on the attack singing war songs and showing death defying courage 37 On two occasions the attack was repulsed by the defenders rifle fire until finally a third time which succeeded 44 Captain Miklos Szigeti commander of the 11th Kolozsvar battalion distinguished for their bravery shown in numerous earlier battles with the red caps which they wore wrote the following about their decisive attack Let s go Hungarian Long live the homeland rang out in the darkness painted red by flames and with this cry the whole mass rushed forward with their bayonets climbing the ramparts with incredible speed breaking the main gate mowing down the enemy gunners beside their guns and all this happened as if by magic 2 Skariatin renounced to further defense of the suburbs and evacuated them retreating to the upper town 44 There at the great barracks at the outer end of the street towards Vorostorony he gathered his troops joined also by the Austrian soldiers 44 nbsp The capture of Nagyszeben on 11 March 1849 Gyorgy GraczaTo the success of the Hungarian assault also contributed the fact that the stalemate of Bem s troops at 7 pm and the temporary cessation of the attacks led the defenders to wrongly believe that the siege would continue the next day It was precisely for this reason that the Saxon National Guard was dispersed and the city walls were not properly defended 44 The Saxon garrison in the walled inner city which was destined to defend the main square was sent home allegedly on the news that Bem s 7 o clock attack on the city had failed without any provision being made for closing and guarding the gates 45 nbsp Second Battle of Nagyszeben 11 03 1849 The situation between 7 12 p mThus the Hungarians were able to enter the inner city through two gates without any resistance 44 Major General Artur Nepokoychitsky describes the retreat as follows The detachment which had been hard pressed all the time reached the gate towards Vizakna at 10 o clock in the evening Shortly afterward flames broke out in several places in the suburbs and even in our rear on the other side of the town on the road to Vorostorony which forced Colonel Skariatin to march quickly through the town towards the city s entrance from the direction of Vorostorony The commander of the detachment after sending the artillery under the cover of ten infantry regiments himself remained behind with a battalion in the rearguard and engaged the advancing enemy first at the city gate and then in pursuit by the Hungarians through the suburbs towards Vizakna sometimes with bayonets and sometimes in hand to hand combat 2 The retreat in the narrow streets of the city soon degenerated into a dangerous stampede 46 The darkness dispersed from time to time only by the flash of shells exploding here and there and the flames from burning houses was not a source of encouragement Skariatin s troops did not want to remain in the rear this undesirable role was intended for the Austrian soldiers whom the Russians therefore sought to bypass even by force 46 Only on the other side of the city was the order restored but there was no question of either the Russians or the Austrians trying to resist there 46 On the following morning the Russo Austrian troops retreated as far as Nagytalmacs at the narrow entrance to the Vorostorony Pass and smaller Imperial detachments as far as Zood and Talmacsel today parts of the same city where they remained without being attacked until 16 March 27 Nagyszeben was in Bem s hands already between 9 and 10 p m 44 Aftermath editIn terms of casualties Bem s report seems completely unbelievable as it indicates that only 5 soldiers of the Hungarian corps were killed and 35 wounded in the battle which lasted more than 5 hours 4 Other sources put Hungarian casualties at 40 dead and 98 wounded which may be closer to the truth 4 By their own account the Russians had 99 dead and 104 wounded 4 The British Consul General in Bucharest Robert Gilmour Colquhoun reports 97 dead 150 wounded and 154 missing Russians 4 The probably smaller losses of the Austrians and the Saxon National Guards are unknown 4 The booty taken by the Hungarians was very considerable According to the contemporary historian Laszlo Kovari 21 cannons 1 million rifle cartridges 6 000 cannonballs 5 000 small guns probably riffles 150 hundredweight of gunpowder large quantities of food and clothing and among other things the cannon battery that the Hungarians lost at Vizakna Lieutenant Colonel B Berger and Major Teichert 14 officers 115 enlisted men were taken prisoners 850 sick soldiers were left behind in the hospitals among them 123 wounded Russians 2 Besides this Nagyszeben was also the headquarters of the General Commando the Saxon movement and of the Romanian National Committee both hostiles to the Hungarian revolutionary government 47 Therefore the documents left behind of all of these fell prey to the Hungarians 2 In addition to these Hungarian men and women prisoners and hostages who had been rounded up by the Austrians during the Austrian rule in Transylvania and held as prisoners in the monasteries and convents of the city were also freed 2 The mayor of the town had previously offered a 3000 forint bounty on Bem s head and now Bem went to him offering himself for the reward Well Mr Mayor here I am I brought myself here I want the three thousand forints The frightened mayor half consciously paid the sum to the commander in chief who then distributed the money among his soldiers 2 Nagyszeben did not get away that easily It had to pay 100 000 silver forints for military uniforms to provide 50 pairs of equipped horses and to produce the following items of uniform 3 600 atillas 5 700 trousers and the same number of pairs of boots 6 000 hats and 10 000 shirts and underpants 2 So the victory also had the character of avengement For Bem for the defeat on 21 January for the Hungarian army for the fall of the city that had joined forces with all the enemies of the Hungarian revolution not only the Habsburg power but also Tsarist Russia 48 Bem also reprimanded Nagyszeben for calling in the Russian troops but true to his well known amnesty policy he promised that the Hungarian government would cast a veil of oblivion over the past 48 Bem in his appeal to the people of Nagyszeben written on 12 March pointed out that the support of the Austrian army the call up of the Russian army and the propaganda spread from the city which was defamatory of the Hungarians containing slanders and untruths and the understandable anger of the soldiers who finally took the city led to some robberies and atrocities 49 for example the killing by a hussar in unknown circumstances of Joseph Benigni the editor of the leading newspaper of Nagyszeben the Siebenburger Bote who consistently called Hungarians rebels and used derogatory terms against the Hungarian army 48 but from now on he forbids any further violence under the most severe penalty 49 He also pointed out that during the previous battles all the towns whose Saxon inhabitants who despite not having a positive view of the Hungarians but did not attack the Hungarian soldiers Beszterce Medgyes Segesvar Szaszvaros were spared and that the reason for the brief robberies in Nagyszeben which lasted until his forceful intervention was the justified anger of his soldiers at the invitation of the Russians 49 The appeal also stated that the Hungarian army is fighting for the freedom not only of Hungarians but also of other nationalities living in the country and that this is shown by the fact that not only Hungarians but also a large number of nationalities of all languages and religions are fighting in its ranks 49 You called for Russian help This is a disgrace to the whole of Europe and a stamp of justice on our cause This could not have been the wish of all the Transylvanian Saxons who had been such Russophobes even a short time before You can only clear yourselves of the accusation of this despicable act by publicly withdrawing it 49 Finally he promises to cast a veil of oblivion over the past and to give the people of Nagyszeben the freedom to choose their officials but they must accept the Union with Hungary which he says meant a choice between the freedom and the knout and promise not to invite the Russians in again 49 The Saxons in Nagyszeben have promised everything including a formal protest against the Russian intervention 50 nbsp The liberation of southern Traansylvania from the Austrian and Russian forces by the Hungarian army after the Battle of Nagyszeben from 11 March 1849Bem wanted to bring order and restore everyday life as quickly as possible so he promised protection to all residents who were harmed and he would bring the perpetrators of robbery or pillage to justice in a court martial 48 The new commander in chief of the city Colonel Banffy appointed by Bem promised in the spirit of Bem to protect the safety of persons and property which he considered his main task and asked the population that had fled to return to their homes in the city 48 Before he moved out from Segesvar to Nagyszeben Bem had to expect the dangers which this bold action could bring He had to anticipate three possible outcomes The first was that Puchner would arrive before the assault on Nagyszeben the second that he would arrive during the battle and the third that he would arrive after the capture of the city 51 The first two possibilities though unlikely would have posed a threat to his armies but in the end the third the most likely was the one that materialised 4 Bem s plan of operations was based on the assumption that Puchner either because he was late or because his fatigued troops needed rest would not be able to intervene in time 4 He did not think that his opponent would be in Nagyszeben before him nor did he expect even his arrival on the 12th which is evident from the fact that seeing his attack losing its strength on the evening of the 11th he was already thinking of postponing the capture of Nagyszeben until the next day 4 Even if Bem had not succeeded in taking the city his advance on Segesvar Nagyszeben would still have had an important strategic result to turn Puchner back towards Nagyszeben 52 The main source of Bem s strength was Szekely land and as events have shown he tried his best to keep the enemy away from this territory until the very end of the war 52 Puchner on the other hand relied on Konigsboden Kiralyfold the region of Fogaras and the Barcasag It was Konigsboden he feared the most to lose 52 thus the fact that Bem who had slipped away from Segesvar and was marching towards Nagyszeben forced Puchner to turn on his heel and rush to the defense of his base of operations which was now under imminent threat 52 In other words the Austrian commander did what Bem forced him to do 53 And since Bem had already driven the Austrians out of the Borgo Pass after Puchner s return the enemy no longer threatened Szekely land from either direction In contrast the Austrian corps had to march almost 200 kilometers from Medgyes to Segesvar and from there to Nagyszeben and all this in vain 53 Twice as much as Bem who started from Segesvar with rested troops on a much better road than the Austrians 53 Puchner s army was therefore much more tired and even if he would have scored a decisive victory against Bem on 11 March due to the exhaustion of his troops he would have been unable to launch a major offensive operation immediately after it which could have end the war in his favor 53 All the less so because Bem s army kept growing while his army kept shrinking 53 Bem did not take with him the whole Transylvanian army under Nagyszeben and thus only a part of it in the worst case could be destroyed in an eventual defeat as happened earlier in the battle of Vizakna and later at Segesvar 53 However fatal a crushing defeat at Nagyszeben would have been for a part of the Transylvanian army of Bem the fate of the campaign could not have been decided by this but only by a successful attack on the rest of the Transylvanian army that followed immediately afterwards 53 Puchner however could not do such a thing with his ever dwindling army 53 It was only strong enough when it was in the immediate vicinity of Nagyszeben or Brasso where it could count on the support of the Russians who did not want to venture too far from those cities 53 It should be mentioned that Austrian officers involved in the campaign attributed Bem s rapid success not only to Puchner s delay but also to the serious omissions made in the defense of Nagyszeben 54 According to them the city would certainly have been defensible until the arrival of the relief corps 45 It also appears from the description of the eyewitness Captain Rastle that not everything was done to defend Nagyszeben 45 At the time when the attacking Hungarians were stalled for lack of reinforcements there was just enough time to pack the city walls with soldiers 45 Indeed it is hard to believe that Bem could so easily overpower Nagyszeben if the defenders did not stop fighting after the first success of Gergely Bethlen s attack 45 Every hour that the resistance was prolonged brought the relief corps closer so that the struggle which was so soon interrupted did not seem hopeless 45 However Bem had no offensive intentions until the newly recruited battalions that came with him were armed and the situation was sufficiently clarified 55 On 12 March the bulk of Puchner s army which was following Bem reached as far as Ujegyhaz his vanguard as far as Alzen Puchner himself learned of the fall of Nagyszeben in Alzen 42 Ironically Lieutenant General Puchner was appointed Field Marshal on 11 March on the very same day his career as an army leader collapsed 37 The news of the loss of Nagyszeben made him quite sick so he handed over command to Major General Jozsef Kalliany Kalliany s plan was to join forces with Skariatin to retake Nagyszeben 42 He therefore sent his troops to Felek and Fenyofalva today part of Felek on the 13th 42 Bem was right to fear that the Austrians would try to retake Nagyszeben In his report on the battle to Lajos Kossuth Bem wrote that he feared that Puchner would try to retake the city He was also aware that the Austrians still had a superior force in Transylvania 50 On the night following the battle Bem equipped his around 2 000 Szekler volunteers who had until then only spears with bayonet riffles and supplemented from among them the 11th Honved and the Mariassy battalions to 1360 soldiers 27 In addition to this he called to him the troops of Banffy and Pereczy who had been sent out earlier with about 4 000 men the detachment of Major Herkalovics with the 32nd and 50th Honved Battalions whom he had sent to Kolozsvar and a squadron of the 15th Matthias Hussar Regiment formed in Kolozsvar 27 55 increasing his army to 14 15 000 men 42 On 12 March in the same afternoon with his army thus increased in size and reorganized he then set up camp between Nagyszeben and Sellenberk 55 Lieutenant Colonel Karolyi occupied Veszteny today part of Sellenberk to prevent any attempt of Russian counterattack 55 and also sent Lieutenant Colonel Bethlen with a small detachment to find the bulk of the Imperial Army under Puchner via Dolmany Holcmany and Leschkirch today both are parts of Ujegyhaz towards Erzsebetvaros and Segesvar 27 According to Czetz Bethlen wanted to fight with the approaching Austrian army but according to Kalliany some Hungarian prisoners of war said that he wanted to return to Szekely land 55 The total force at Kalliany s disposal was 8 000 soldiers not counting the Gyulafehervar garrison and the thousands of Romanian insurgents 42 Skariatin was at the Vorostorony Strait with 4 200 men and Engelhardt at Brasso with 4 800 42 So he had still a much stronger force than Bem s troops But the Russians could only be counted on in defensive fighting 42 Bem left 2 000 soldiers in Nagyszeben as a garrison 49 and then led a brigade under Colonel Janos Banffy against Skariatin in the Vorostorony Pass 42 Janos Czetz s brigade was given the task of occupying the bridge from Felek and cutting off the connection of the K u K detachment there with Skariatin 42 On 15 March this order was carried out On that day the Banffy Brigade led by Bem attacked the Imperial troops defending the Vorostorony Pass which was the rearguard of the Russians and drove them out of Transylvania 42 By 16 March the entire Russo Austrian from the Vorostorony pass was already camped south to the Carpathians in Wallachia 42 On 16 March Czetz s brigade reached Fogaras Kalliany regrouped his troops west of Brasso 42 Soon however he received a message from Major General Engelhardt commander of the Russian troops in Brasso telling him that if he was threatened by a force larger than his own he would have to retreat to Wallachia 42 Kalliany then withdrew his troops to the immediate vicinity of Brasso and decided to defend the city together with the Russians 42 However when Engelhardt saw the exhausted worn out imperial troops he announced that he would retreat to Wallachia and demanded that Kalliany occupy the Tomos Strait with two brigades to ensure this Kalliany complied with the request but weakened his main forces at Feketehalom 42 The next battle took place there on 19 March 42 Czetz s artillery repulsed the attempts of the Imperial Infantry to attack and after the reinforcements led by Bem broke the resistance of his left flank the Imperial Army retreated to Brasso 42 During the pursuit the imperial troops suffered heavy losses On 20 March the allies evacuated Brasso and retreated toward the Strait of Tomos Bem occupied the city the same day and ordered the pursuit of the retreating troops 42 On 21 March the detachment of Lieutenant Colonel Jozsef Beke and Major Nandor Szabo caught up with the Imperial troops and made their retreat already torturous in cold snowy and icy weather even more difficult 56 On the same day Major August Heydte s detachment left Transylvania through the Torcsvar Strait 57 After the occupation of Brasso Bem returned to Nagyszeben because he had received news that Skariatin was trying to invade again 57 On 28 March he attacked the Russian detachment stationed at the quarantine house in the Vorostorony strait a building used for the medical isolation of arrivals in case of customs and epidemic danger and drove it to Wallachia 57 This meant that now almost all Transylvania with the exception of the Austrian garrisons from the fortress of Gyulafehervar the castle of Deva and the Erchegyseg Mountains in the hands of the Romanian insurrection was in the hands of the Hungarian troops 57 For his triumphs Bem was awarded the First Class of the Hungarian Military Order of Merit and the rank of Lieutenant General 57 The success was undoubtedly impressive since Bem had achieved it while the opposing Austrian and Russian troops were outnumbering his troops 57 It is true that the imperials could only count on the Russians in defensive battles but Bem didn t known this 57 With his lightning quick moves he divided and defeated in detail the troops of Puchner then Kalliany and after his defeat at Medgyes he completely turned the tide of the war in less than two weeks 57 At the same time the imperial command completely lost its head and although the troops fought with the tenacity expected of them they could only ameliorate the disastrous consequences of the commanders precipitated and contradictory decisions 57 Explanatory notes edit Puchner s report to Field Marshal Alfred I Prince of Windisch Gratz mentions only 7452 soldiers but Heydte s figures seem more likely because Puchner by talking about fewer soldiers may have been trying to convince the main commander to send him more reinforcements 3 References edit a b c Hermann 2013 pp 82 83 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Babucs Zoltan Most pedig megyunk Nagyszebenbe Magyarsagkutato Intezet 21 March 2021 a b c d Gyalokay 1931 pp 57 a b c d e f g h i Gyalokay 1931 pp 80 a b c d e Hermann 2004 pp 192 Hermann 2004 pp 192 193 a b c Hermann 2004 pp 193 Hermann 2004 pp 193 194 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Hermann 2004 pp 194 a b c d e f g Gyalokay 1931 pp 55 Gyalokay 1931 pp 56 57 Hermann 2013 pp 77 78 a b c d e f Hermann 2013 pp 78 Hermann 2013 pp 77 a b c d Gyalokay 1931 pp 62 Gyalokay 1931 pp 62 63 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 63 Gyalokay 1931 pp 63 64 a b c d e f g Gyalokay 1931 pp 64 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 65 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 68 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 66 a b c d Gyalokay 1931 pp 67 a b Gyalokay 1931 pp 69 Hermann 2013 pp 79 a b c d e f Gyalokay 1931 pp 70 a b c d e f g h i j k Banlaky Jozsef Nagy Szeben bevetele 1849 marcius 11 en A magyar nemzet hadtortenete XXI Arcanum Adatbazis Kft 2001 Gyalokay 1931 pp 70 71 a b c d e f g h Gyalokay 1931 pp 71 Gyalokay 1931 pp 73 74 a b c d e f g Gyalokay 1931 pp 74 a b c d e f g Gyalokay 1931 pp 76 Gyalokay 1931 pp 72 a b c d Hermann 2013 pp 83 Hermann 2013 pp 82 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 77 a b c Bona Gabor A magyar forradalom es szabadsagharc harom pillanata Nagyszeben bevetele Erdely felszabaditasa Haromszek 2015 marcius 14 szombat a b c d e f g h Gyalokay 1931 pp 78 Gyalokay 1931 pp 77 78 Hermann 2004 pp 194 195 a b Hermann 2013 pp 80 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Hermann 2004 pp 195 Gyalokay 1931 pp 78 79 a b c d e f g Gyalokay 1931 pp 79 a b c d e f Gyalokay 1931 pp 84 a b c Gyalokay 1931 pp 85 Egyed Akos Nagyszeben bevetele 1849 marcius 11 en Varak kastelyok templomok 9 evf 4 sz 2013 pp 14 a b c d e Egyed Akos Nagyszeben bevetele 1849 marcius 11 en Varak kastelyok templomok 9 evf 4 sz 2013 pp 15 a b c d e f g Egyed 2010 pp 369 a b Egyed 2010 pp 368 Gyalokay 1931 pp 81 a b c d Gyalokay 1931 pp 82 a b c d e f g h i Gyalokay 1931 pp 83 Gyalokay 1931 pp 83 84 a b c d e Gyalokay 1931 pp 86 Hermann 2004 pp 195 196 a b c d e f g h i Hermann 2004 pp 196 Sources editBabucs Zoltan 2021 Most pedig megyunk Nagyszebenbe Now we go to Nagyszeben Magyarsagkutato Intezet 11 March 2021 in Hungarian Banlaky Jozsef 2001 A magyar nemzet hadtortenelme The Military History of the Hungarian Nation in Hungarian Budapest Arcanum Adatbazis Bona Gabor 2015 A magyar forradalom es szabadsagharc harom pillanata Nagyszeben bevetele Erdely felszabaditasa Three Moments of the Hungarian Revolution and War of Independence The Capture of Nagyszeben the Liberation of Transylvania Haromszek 14 March 2015 in Hungarian Bona Gabor 1987 Tabornokok es torzstisztek a szabadsagharcban 1848 49 Generals and Staff Officers in the War of Freedom 1848 1849 in Hungarian Budapest Zrinyi Katonai Kiado p 430 ISBN 963 326 343 3 Egyed Akos 2010 Erdely 1848 1849 Transylvania in 1848 1849 in Hungarian Csikszereda Pallas Akademia Konyvkiado p 616 ISBN 978 973 665 312 4 Egyed Akos 2013 Nagyszeben bevetele 1849 marcius 11 en The Capture of Nagyszeben on 11 March 1849 PDF Varak kastelyok templomok 9 evf 4 sz 2013 in Hungarian Gyalokay Jeno 1931 Az elso orosz megszallas es Erdely felszabaditasa The First Russian Occupation and the Liberation of Transylvania in Hungarian Budapest Magyar Tudomanyos Akademia Hermann Robert 2001 1848 1849 a szabadsagharc hadtortenete Military History of 1848 1849 in Hungarian Budapest Korona ISBN 963 9376 21 3 Hermann Robert 2004 Az 1848 1849 es szabadsagharc nagy csatai Great battles of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 1849 in Hungarian Budapest Zrinyi p 408 ISBN 963 327 367 6 Hermann Robert 2013 Nagy csatak 15 A magyar onvedelmi haboru Great Battles 15 The Hungarian War od Self Defense in Hungarian Budapest Duna Konyvklub p 88 ISBN 978 615 5013 99 7 45 47 42 8 N 24 08 56 4 E 45 795222 N 24 149000 E 45 795222 24 149000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Second Battle of Nagyszeben amp oldid 1173846992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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